Opinion
BORDEN, J.
The principal issue in this appeal is whether the claims commissioner has jurisdiction, pur
suant to General Statutes § 4-160,
to waive the state’s sovereign immunity and grant a claimant permission to file an apportionment complaint, pursuant to General Statutes § 52-102b,
against the state of Connecticut in the Superior Court. We conclude that the claims com
missioner does not have such jurisdiction. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the trial court to the contrary.
The plaintiffs, Gerald Bloom and Sandra Bloom, brought this medical malpractice action against the defendant radiologists, Julie Gershon, Alisa Siegfeld and Mandell and Blau, P.C. (radiologists). The radiologists subsequently filed apportionment complaints against Henry Maresh and Kevin Shea, both of whom also had provided medical treatment to Gerald Bloom. The plaintiffs
then filed direct complaints against both Maresh and Shea, and Maresh, in turn, filed an appor
tionment complaint against Shea. Shea responded by filing an affidavit with the trial court stating that, at the time he provided medical treatment to Gerald Bloom, he was an employee of the state. Shea also filed motions to dismiss the apportionment complaints of the apportionment plaintiffs, Maresh and the radiologists, as well as the plaintiffs’ direct complaint, on the ground that sovereign immunity barred suit against him. Upon learning that Shea was an employee of the state, Maresh and the radiologists filed notices of claim with the claims commissioner (commissioner) seeking a waiver of sovereign immunity and permission to file their apportionment complaints in the Superior Court. Additionally, Maresh filed a motion requesting a declaratory ruling from the trial court that § 4-160 (b) operates as an automatic waiver of the state’s sovereign immunity, and a writ of mandamus ordering the commissioner to authorize Maresh’s apportionment complaint. The commissioner filed a motion opposing Maresh’s motion for a declar atory ruling and a writ of mandamus. Maresh also filed an apportionment complaint against the state in the trial court, and the state moved to dismiss the complaint on the ground of sovereign immunity. Shea also moved to dismiss all the complaints against him.
The trial court subsequently granted Maresh’s motion for a declaratory ruling and his request for a writ of mandamus, and denied the motions to dismiss filed by the apportionment defendants, the state and Shea. This appeal followed.
The state and Shea, acting in his official capacity as an employee of the state, along with the commissioner appearing as an interested party, appeal from the judgment of the trial court: (1) granting Maresh’s (a) motion
for a declaratory ruling that § 4-160 (b) operates as an automatic waiver of the state’s sovereign immunity, and (b) request for a writ of mandamus ordering the commissioner to authorize Maresh’s apportionment claim against the state; and (2) denying the state’s and Shea’s motions to dismiss Maresh’s and the radiologists’ apportionment complaints on the basis of sovereign immunity. The state and Shea, as well as the commissioner, claim that this court’s recent decision in
Lostritto
v.
Community Action Agency of New Haven, Inc.,
269 Conn. 10, 36-38, 848 A.2d 418 (2004), is dispositive of the question of whether the trial court improperly granted Maresh’s motion for a declaratory ruling and a writ of mandamus, and improperly denied the state’s and Shea’s motions to dismiss.
The facts and procedural history are not in dispute and may be summarized as follows. The claim underlying this case arose out of medical treatment rendered to Gerald Bloom by the radiologists. He developed lung cancer and alleged negligence by the radiologists in failing to diagnose properly his condition. Sandra Bloom also filed a loss of consortium complaint against the radiologists. The radiologists subsequently filed an apportionment complaint in the trial court against Shea and Maresh, pursuant to § 52-102b, alleging negligence against them in separate counts. The plaintiffs then filed direct claims, accompanied by certificates of good faith pursuant to General Statutes § 52-190a (a),
with the
trial court against Shea and Maresh, by way of an amended complaint.
Shea subsequently moved to dismiss both the radiologists’ apportionment complaint and the plaintiffs’ direct complaint against him, claiming that he was employed by the state when he treated Gerald Bloom and, therefore, he was immune, pursuant to General Statutes § 4-165,
from direct and apportionment claims unless the complaints against him alleged wanton, reckless or malicious conduct, which they did not. Shea further claimed that he was immune from suit in his capacity as an agent of the state because, pursuant to § 4-160, the commissioner must authorize all actions for monetary damages brought against the state, and the commissioner had not authorized any of the parties’ claims against Shea in his official capacity as an employee of the state. Upon receipt of Shea’s motion to dismiss, Maresh and the radiologists filed notices of claim against Shea in his official capacity with the commis
sioner. Their notices of claim were accompanied by certificates of good faith, as provided for by § 4-160 (b). In addition, Maresh moved the trial court for a declaratory ruling that § 4-160 (b); see footnote 1 of this opinion; operates as an automatic waiver of the state’s sovereign immunity, and an order, in the form of a writ of mandamus, requiring the commissioner to authorize his apportionment claim against Shea in his official capacity. Shea subsequently filed an objection to Maresh’s motion for a writ of mandamus, stating that neither the state nor the commissioner was a party to the action, and reiterating his claim that all complaints against him in his personal capacity—be they direct or apportionment claims—must be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction in the absence of an allegation of wanton, reckless or malicious conduct.
Thereafter, the commissioner filed an appearance as an interested party pursuant to Practice Book § 17-56 (b),
and subsequently filed an objection to Maresh’s motion seeking a declaratory ruling that § 4-160 (b) acts as a waiver of the state’s sovereign immunity and seeking a writ of mandamus ordering the commissioner to authorize suit. Thereafter, Maresh filed an apportionment complaint in the trial court against the state, and the state, in response, moved to dismiss that complaint, claiming that the trial court lacked jurisdiction over the apportionment complaint in the absence of authorization by the commissioner.
The court granted Maresh’s motion for a writ of mandamus ordering the commissioner to authorize all apportionment claims against the state and Shea in his official capacity that were filed with the commissioner
as notices of claim accompanied by certificates of good faith. In the same judgment, the court denied Shea’s motion to dismiss the complaints against him, and denied the state’s motion to dismiss Maresh’s apportionment complaint.
On May 18, 2004, after briefing and oral argument before this court in the present appeal, this court issued its decision in
Lostritto
v.
Community Action Agency of New Haven, Inc.,
supra, 269 Conn. 36-38, in which we held that apportionment claims are not claims for monetary damages, and that, therefore, § 52-190a, which requires the filing of a certificate of good faith for medical malpractice claims for monetary damages, does not apply to apportionment complaints. In light of that decision, we requested the parties in the present case to file supplemental briefs answering the following question: “What effect, if any, does the recent decision in
Lostritto
v.
Community Action Agency of New Haven,
[supra, 10] . . . have on the law to be applied in
Bloom
v.
Gershon
. . . ?”
The state and Shea, as well as the commissioner, in their supplemental briefs, claim, among other things, that § 4-160 (a) permits the commissioner to authorize suit against the state only on claims for which the state may be liable, and that General Statutes § 4-141
defines a claim as “a petition for the payment or refund of money by the state or for permission to sue the state . . . .” The state and Shea, and also the commissioner, further argue that, because § 4-160 (a) extends jurisdiction to the commissioner only to authorize claims for the payment or refund of money or to grant permission to a claimant to sue the state in Superior Court for the
payment or refund of money, and because
Lostritto
held that claims for the apportionment of liability are not claims for monetary damages, the commissioner lacks jurisdiction to review the claims, and, consequently, may not waive the state’s sovereign immunity and authorize suit against the state in the Superior Court. The state and Shea, and the commissioner, claim, therefore, that
Lostritto
dictates that the trial court’s judgment granting of Maresh’s request of a writ of mandamus and denying the motions to dismiss filed by the state and Shea, was improper. We agree.
Because our conclusion regarding the propriety of the trial court’s issuance of a writ of mandamus necessarily guides our determination regarding the propriety of the trial court’s denial of the state’s and Shea’s motions to dismiss, we begin our analysis by addressing the question of whether the trial court’s granting of Maresh’s request for a writ of mandamus ordering the commissioner to authorize all apportionment claims against the state and Shea was improper. It is well settled that “[m]andamus is an extraordinary remedy, available in limited circumstances for limited purposes. ... It is fundamental that the issuance of the writ rests in the discretion of the court, not an arbitrary discretion exercised as a result of caprice but a sound discretion exercised in accordance with recognized principles of law. . . . That discretion will be exercised in favor of issuing the writ only where the plaintiff has a clear legal right to have done that which he seeks. . . . The writ is proper only when (1) the law imposes on the party against whom the writ would run a duty the performance of which is mandatory and not discretionary; (2) the party applying for the writ has a clear legal right to have the duty performed; and (3) there is no other specific adequate remedy.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Miles
v.
Foley,
253 Conn. 381, 391, 752 A.2d 503 (2000).
We now turn to the issue of whether, in light of
Lostritto,
the trial court improperly ordered, by way of a writ of mandamus, the commissioner to waive the state’s immunity and authorize the apportionment claims of Maresh and the radiologists. “We have long recognized the common-law principle that the state cannot be sued without its consent. . . . We have also recognized that because the state can act only through its officers and agents, a suit against a state officer [or agent] concerning a matter in which the officer [or agent] represents the state is, in effect, against the state. . . . Therefore, we have dealt with such suits as if they were solely against the state and have referred to the state as the defendant. . . .
“The absolute bar of actions against the state on the ground of sovereign immunity has been modified by statute and by judicial decisions. Sovereign immunity does not bar suits against state officials [or agents] acting in excess of their statutory authority or pursuant to an unconstitutional statute. ... In addition, the state cannot use sovereign immunity as a defense in an action for declaratory or injunctive relief. . . . However, [i]n the absence of legislative authority . . . we have declined to permit any monetary award against the state or its officials [or agents]. . . .
“When sovereign immunity has not been waived, the claims commissioner is authorized by statute to hear monetary claims against the state and determine whether the claimant has a cognizable claim. See General Statutes §§ 4-141 through 4-165b. The claims commissioner, if he deems it just and equitable, may sanction suit against the state on any claim which, in his opinion, presents an issue of law or fact under which the state, were it a private person, could be liable. General Statutes § 4-160 (a). This legislation expressly bars suits upon claims cognizable by the claims commissioner except as he may authorize, an indication of the
legislative determination to preserve sovereign immunity as a defense to monetary claims against the state not sanctioned by the commissioner or other statutory provisions.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Krozser
v.
New Haven,
212 Conn. 415, 420-21, 562 A.2d 1080 (1989), cert. denied, 443 U.S. 1036, 110 S. Ct. 757, 107 L. Ed. 2d 774 (1990).
In
Miller
v.
Egan,
265 Conn. 301, 318, 828 A.2d 549 (2003), we explained the legislative history and purpose of chapter 53; General Statutes §§ 4-141 through 4-165b; which is entitled “Claims Against the State.” “The office of the claims commissioner was created by Public Acts 1959, No. 685. Prior to 1959, a claimant who sought to sue the state for monetary damages, in the absence of a statutory waiver by the state, had but one remedy— namely, to seek relief from the legislature, either in the form of a monetary award or permission to sue the state. See Conn. Joint Standing Committee Hearings, Appropriations, Pt. 3, 1959 Sess., pp. 919-20. In discussing the need for the claims commission, George Oberst, the director of the legislative council, explained that the commission was intended to ease the legislature’s burden in handling claims for monetary relief. Id., p. 920 . . . .” (Citation omitted.)
Miller
v.
Egan,
supra, 318.
Also, in
Miller
v.
Egan,
supra, 265 Conn. 318-20, we set forth the process by which a claimant may file a claim for monetary damages against the state through the commissioner. “The procedure for claims that must proceed through the claims commissioner is well delineated. The commissioner has jurisdiction, pursuant to General Statutes § 4-158 (a), to approve immediate payment of just claims not exceeding seven thousand five hundred dollars. Any person who has brought a claim for more than $7500 may waive immediate payment and the claims commissioner, pursuant to General Statutes § 4-159, shall submit the claim to the General
Assembly with recommendations . . . for the payment or rejection of amounts exceeding seven thousand five hundred dollars. In addition to granting direct monetary relief, the claims commissioner may authorize suit against the state on any claim which, in his opinion, presents an issue of law or fact under which the state, were it a private person, could be liable. General Statutes § 4-160 (a).” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Miller
v.
Egan,
supra, 319-20. This language permits the claimant, upon obtaining the commissioner’s authorization pursuant to § 4-160 (a), to file his claim directly in the Superior Court.
Section 4-160 (b), moreover, explicitly permits claims alleging medical malpractice against the state or against a physician employed by the state to be filed with the commissioner, who, in turn, may waive the state’s sovereign immunity and permit the claimant to file his claim in the Superior Court. Section 4-160 (b) also provides that such claims filed with the commissioner may be accompanied by a certificate of good faith in accordance with § 52-190a, which sets forth the process by which a plaintiff may sue a private individual for medical malpractice. When a claim is accompanied by a certificate of good faith, § 4-160 (b) provides that the commissioner “shall authorize suit against the state on such claim.”
In the present case, it is undisputed that Maresh and the radiologists sought to apportion liability to the state potentially in excess of $7500. It is also undisputed that they filed apportionment claims, accompanied by certificates of good faith, as provided for by § 4-160 (b), with the commissioner. What is disputed, however, are: (1) whether § 4-160 (b) pertains to claims for the apportionment of liability; (2) whether claims for the apportionment of liability, as opposed to direct claims for monetary damages, may be filed with the commissioner; and (3) whether, upon receipt of a certificate of good
faith in conjunction with an apportionment claim, the commissioner may be compelled to waive the state’s sovereign immunity and authorize the claim. The reasoning in
Lostritto
v.
Community Action Agency of New Haven, Inc.,
supra, 269 Conn. 10, is dispositive of these issues, and requires that they each be answered in the negative.
In
Lostritto,
this court was presented with the question of whether an apportionment complaint, filed pursuant to § 52-102b against a private party, must be accompanied by a certificate of good faith, as is required of plaintiffs seeking to file a direct malpractice claim for monetary damages pursuant to § 52-190a. Id., 36. We held that it did not. Id., 36-38. In so doing, we concluded that § 52-102b, which permits a defendant to file a claim against a nonparty defendant for the apportionment of any liability resulting from the plaintiffs direct claim, does not implicate monetary damages, but rather merely the apportionment of liability. Id., 36. In other words, apportionment claims are claims for the apportionment of liability and are, therefore, separate and distinct from claims for monetary damages. Id. Because § 52-190a pertains only to plaintiffs seeking monetary damages, it does not apply to apportionment plaintiffs, who seek only the apportionment of liability. Id., 36-37.
The significance, for the present case, of Lostritto’s holding that apportionment claims are not claims for monetary damages is that, because the commissioner’s jurisdiction to authorize suit against the state extends only to claims for monetary damages, the commissioner lacks the statutory jurisdiction under the provisions of chapter 53 to review or authorize apportionment claims. As we have already stated, chapter 53 delegated to the commissioner the duty formerly held by the legislature to review all claims against the state for monetary damages and either recommend or reject requests for payment of claims not exceeding $7500, or waive the state’s sovereign immunity and permit the claimant to file a complaint for monetary damages in excess of $7500 in the Superior Court. Because the commissioner has jurisdiction only over claims for monetary damages, and because we held in
Lostritto
that apportionment claims are not claims for money damages, we conclude that the commissioner lacked jurisdiction over the apportionment claims of Maresh and the radiologists. We further conclude, therefore, that the trial court’s decision ordering the commissioner, by way of a writ of mandamus, to waive the state’s sovereign immunity and permit the apportionment claims to be filed with the trial court was improper. See
Miles
v.
Foley,
supra, 253 Conn. 391.
Maresh and the radiologists claim that our holding in
Lostritto,
which dealt exclusively with apportionment claims against private parties, should not dictate the outcome in the present case, because the apportionment claims in the present case are against the state, and not a private party. Specifically, they point out that
§ 4-160 (a) permits the commissioner to “authorize suit against the state on any claim which, in his opinion, presents an issue of law or fact under which the state, were it a private person, could be hable.” This language, they argue, does not limit the definition of “claim” in § 4-160 (a) to claims for monetary damages; rather, the statute specifically refers to
“any
claim,” and, therefore, can encompass claims for the apportionment of liability as weh as claims for monetary damages. (Emphasis added.) Maresh and the radiologists further assert that the language of § 4-141, which defines the word “claim” for the purposes of chapter 53, supports their argument that § 4-160 (a) pertains to both claims for the apportionment of liability and for monetary damages. Section 4-141 provides that a claim “means a petition for the payment or refund of money by the state or for
permission to sue the state
. . . .” (Emphasis added.) Maresh and the radiologists argue that the language, “permission to sue the state,” is not expressly limited to suits for monetary damages and, therefore, can be read to encompass suits for the apportionment of liability.
This argument, however, fails to take into account that chapter 53 pertains exclusively to claims for monetary damages against the state, and, therefore, any reference to the word “claim” in chapter 53 must be read to refer to claims for monetary damages. Thus, the language in § 4-141, “permission to sue the state,” refers to the commissioner’s alternate power involving claims of more than $7500. The provision of § 4-160 (a), therefore, which permits the commissioner to “authorize suit against the state on any claim which, in his opinion, presents an issue of law or fact under which the state, were it a private person, could be hable,” pertains to claims for money damages. Similarly, § 4-141, which defines the word “claim” as a petition “for permission to sue the state,” as weh as a petition for the payment or refund of money by the state, by virtue of pertaining
to the provisions of chapter 53, necessarily means a petition for permission to sue the
state for the payment or refund of money.
On the basis of this conclusion, we further conclude that the trial court should have granted the motions to dismiss filed by the state and Shea. “[T]he doctrine of sovereign immunity implicates subject matter jurisdiction and is therefore a basis for granting a motion to dismiss. ... A determination regarding a trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction is a question of law. When . . . the trial court draws conclusions of law, our review is plenary and we must decide whether its conclusions are legally and logically correct and find support in the facts that appear in the record.” (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Miller
v.
Egan,
supra, 265 Conn. 313.
There were several motions to dismiss before the trial court in the present case. Shea sought a dismissal of the plaintiffs’ and the radiologists’ complaints against him on the ground that, as an individual employed by the state, he is immune from suit in both his personal capacity, in the absence of allegations that his conduct was wanton, reckless, or malicious,
and his official capacity as an agent of the state. The state also filed a motion to dismiss Maresh’s apportionment complaint on the ground of sovereign immunity. The trial court predicated its denial of both the state’s and Shea’s motions to dismiss on its decision declaring that § 4-160 (b) acts as a waiver of the state’s sovereign immunity and issuing a writ of mandamus ordering the commissioner to authorize the apportionment complaints of Maresh and the radiologists. The state and Shea argue that, in light of
Lostritto,
the trial court’s denial of their motions to dismiss was improper.
As we have determined, the commissioner lacked jurisdiction under chapter 53 to authorize apportionment complaints. Therefore, the state’s immunity was not waived in regard to the apportionment complaints of Maresh and the radiologists. The state’s sovereign immunity, therefore, is still intact, and because § 52-102b (c) explicitly provides that “[n]o person who is immune from liability shall be made an apportionment defendant,” the trial court’s denial of the state’s and Shea’s motions to dismiss the complaints against them was improper.
Maresh and the radiologists contend, nonetheless, that a conclusion that the commissioner lacks jurisdiction to authorize apportionment claims would effectively render the state absolutely immune from apportionment claims, and, furthermore, that such an outcome would frustrate the stated legislative purposes behind both Tort Reform Act I and Tort Reform Act II, which seek to promote the equitable apportionment of liability between multiple tortfeasors. The simple answer is that, by virtue of both the general statutory scheme governing the commissioner’s jurisdiction, and the provision in § 52-102b (c) that apportionment claims may not be filed against any party who is immune from liability, the legislature already has made that set of policy determinations.
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded to the trial court with direction to deny Maresh’s motions for a declaratory ruling and for a writ of manda
mus, and to grant the state’s and Shea’s motions to dismiss the apportionment complaints.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.