Connecticut Statutes
§ 7-109 — Destruction of documents.
Connecticut § 7-109
This text of Connecticut § 7-109 (Destruction of documents.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Bluebook
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 7-109 (2026).
Text
Any official, board or commissioner of a municipality may, with the approval of the chief administrative officer of such municipality and of the Public Records Administrator, destroy any document in his or its custody relating to any matter which has been disposed of and of which no record is required by law to be kept, after such document has been held for the period of time specified in a retention schedule adopted by the Public Records Administrator. The tax collector may, with like approval, destroy any duplicate record receipt book, duplicate tax receipts or rate bills, at a time specified by the Public Records Administrator. The tax collector may, with like approval, destroy any old age assistance or personal tax records. The town clerk may, with like approval, destroy any liquor per
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Related
Marceline v. Town of Darien
974 F. Supp. 2d 123 (D. Connecticut, 2013)
Legislative History
(1949 Rev., S. 695; 1953, S. 269d; 1957, P.A. 332; 1959, P.A. 144; 1963, P.A. 7; 1967, P.A. 470; P.A. 73-448; P.A. 80-338, S. 6; P.A. 13-276, S. 1.) History: 1959 act added provision for destruction of release of tax lien and copy of writ and added provision regulating destruction of documents which are recorded in town's land records; 1963 act allowed destruction of any tax list after 15 years, former law only permitting destruction of lists dated prior to 1913; 1967 act removed prohibition against clerk or tax collector destroying records of matters not required by law to be kept, allowed such destruction according to schedule published by examiner of public records rather than after 6 years, allowed destruction of duplicate rate bills, personal tax records, abstracts and uncalled for or unclaimed original documents, deleted provisions for destruction of land documents, added provisions re disposition of documents for historical and educational purposes and forbade destruction of original documents dating before 1850; P.A. 73-448 replaced examiner of public records with administrator of public records, deleted specific time periods after which destruction of various records allowed, leaving their destruction subject to times set by public records administrator; P.A. 80-338 replaced “administrative head” with “chief administrative officer” and “state librarian” with “public records administrator” and replaced “1850” with “1900” in prohibition against destruction of old documents; P.A. 13-276 removed exemption for retention of duplicate tax receipts as permanent records for receipts destroyed under section. Duties of town clerk discussed in re zoning regulations. 155 C. 12. Cited. 216 C. 253; 240 C. 824. Cited. 41 CA 641; judgment reversed, see 240 C. 824.
Nearby Sections
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Bluebook (online)
Connecticut § 7-109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/statute/ct/7-109.