State v. Borysewicz, No. Ci 99-7513866 (Dec. 18, 2000)
This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 16191 (State v. Borysewicz, No. Ci 99-7513866 (Dec. 18, 2000)) 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
The thrust of the defendant's motion as to each of the three subsections is that, pursuant to case law, the owner of a legally licensed and zoned dog kennel cannot be prosecuted under Sec.
The defendant relies heavily on Scudder v. Greenwich,
The state, on the other hand, makes the claim that the defendant in the instant case, in the operation of his kennel, created a public nuisance. The case on which the State principally relies does offer some support for the proposition that a commercial kennel, depending on the circumstances, can be deemed a nuisance.3 Herbert v. Smythe,
Nuisances become public when "they violate public rights, and produce a common injury, and where they constitute an obstruction to public rights, that is, the rights enjoyed by citizens as part of the public" [internal quotation marks omitted]. Couture v. Board of Education,
It is the defendant's position that the license issued to operate a commercial kennel pursuant to statute (Sec.
State v. Barnes,"[When a person is authorized by law to engage in a particular business at a designated place, he is not liable to indictment and punishment for the consequences which may flow from the exercise of such authority, provided, always, that he keeps strictly within the terms of his license, or permission, and does only the things contemplated by the act under which he is licensed, in a careful and proper manner. . . .[And] if [parties'] acts create what ordinarily would be a nuisance, and what cannot be clearly shown to be the natural and probable result of the privilege, or if by another method of proceeding the authorized object could have been accomplished without creating the nuisance, they cannot rely for protection upon the statutory authority."
Whether the nuisance allegedly created was a normal and probable result of the license granted; i.e., to maintain and operate a commercial kennel; and whether the defendant conducted the business reasonably and in a proper manner, present issues of fact which are not before this court.4 "Sound may be a nuisance, even in the prosecution of a business lawful per se." Buchanan v. Milford Drive-In Theatre Corp.,
The court finds that the defendants can be charged with creating a public nuisance despite their operation of a lawful business, and, as applied to them, Sec.
Further, the court finds that it may properly exercise subject matter jurisdiction over the matter. Sec.
Accordingly, and for the reasons above set forth, the defendant's motion to dismiss is hereby ordered denied.
Gaffney, J.T.R.
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