Mrosek v. MacPherson, No. Sph 89843 (Apr. 7, 1997)
This text of 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 2273 (Mrosek v. MacPherson, No. Sph 89843 (Apr. 7, 1997)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In the meantime, the plaintiff has instituted summary process actions against several of the tenants who complained to the commission. In the instant case, the landlord caused a notice to quit to be served on November 18, 1996, for lapse of time. The complaint, alleging lapse of an oral month to month lease, was served on December 7, 1996. The defendants in this case, along with, apparently, several others, complained to the Fair Rent Commission, which on December 13, 1996, issued a "cease and desist" order against the plaintiff, apparently on the ground that the contemplated eviction was brought in retaliation for the prior complaint to the commission. The plaintiff has appealed from that order to this court; a briefing schedule has not yet been established as to that appeal. No one has specifically sought to enforce the commission's cease and desist order.
The defendants are requesting the court to stay the pending summary process action. At oral argument, defense counsel did not rely solely or specifically on the commission's cease and desist order, but rather stressed the more generalized principles regarding stays as expressed in cases such as Griffin Hospital v.Commission on Hospitals,
The defendants quite correctly do not seem to be arguing that a municipal administrative agency has the power to stay a pending Superior Court case. Agencies in general have "only such powers as are expressly granted or necessarily implied to enable it to carry into effect the objects and purposes of [their] creation."Monroe v. Middlebury Conservation Commission,
The question, then, is whether the action should be stayed in the exercise of discretion. For the resolution of this question, one examines the overall statutory scheme. The goal of statutory construction is to give effect to the intent of the legislature.Vaillancourt v. New Britain Machine/Litton,
Section 7-184d(b) allows the commission to determine, after a hearing, that a particular action of a landlord is retaliatory and may order him to cease and desist from such conduct. No specific definitions of what constitutes retaliation are provided. Title 47a of the General Statutes, on the other hand, which specifically governs summary process actions, also provides for a defense of retaliatory eviction, and prescribes with some specificity what is retaliatory for purposes of such a defense. See, e.g., §§
I find, then, that the legislature has carefully delineated those situations which constitute "retaliation" for purposes of defenses to summary process actions and that an independent method exists to enforce findings of "retaliation" made by the commission. I decline, then, to stay this action pending resolution of the administrative activity, for to grant what amounts to a more or less indefinite stay would, in the specific context of this case, effectively be creating another defense. The defense of retaliation may, of course, be urged by the defendants in this case, and I am expressing no opinion at this point as to the merits of the defense. The motion for stay is denied.
Beach, J.
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