551 A.2d 781 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1988
This is an action for a writ of mandamus. The complaint raises two issues: (1) whether the plaintiffs have standing to prosecute this claim, and (2) whether the state treasurer is subject to a mandamus writ under General Statutes §
A hearing was held on May 25, 1988, at which time the parties agreed, with the court's approval, to try the *91
plaintiffs' motions for a temporary and permanent mandamus in a consolidated fashion.1 At this hearing both sides presented argument on the defendants' motion to dismiss, which was based on lack of standing and mootness. In their request for a writ of mandamus, the plaintiffs petition the court to issue an order directing the named defendant, Francisco L. Borges, as treasurer of the state of Connecticut, to expend a sum exceeding $63,000,000 in accordance with General Statutes §
The statute at issue reads in toto, as follows: "[General Statutes] Sec.
"(b) Moneys in said budget reserve fund shall be expended only as provided in this subsection. When in any fiscal year the comptroller has determined the amount of a deficit applicable with respect to the immediately preceding fiscal year, to the extent necessary, the amount of funds credited to said budget reserve fund shall be deemed to be appropriated for purposes of funding such deficit.
"(c) The treasurer is authorized to invest all or any part of said fund in accordance with the provisions of section
The plaintiffs contend that under this statute the amount in excess of the prescribed budget reserve fund, $63,026,530, must be spent in accordance with §
The defendants have moved to dismiss this action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The defendants initially argue that the plaintiffs lack standing to bring this suit in any capacity alleged. Second, the defendants assert that the question of whether the court should order the selection and implementation of some form or forms of debt reduction as delineated in §
The defendants further maintain that mandamus does not lie because there is no clear legal right to the relief requested. This argument is based primarily on the contention that there is no mandatory time period within which the excess funds "deemed to be appropriated" are to be allocated to and expended in the various forms of debt reduction enunciated.
Lack of standing is properly raised in a motion to dismiss because "[s]tanding goes to the court's subject matter jurisdiction." Reitzer v. Board of Trustees ofState Colleges,
This standard requires that the plaintiffs allege and prove that the challenged activity or transaction will "probably `result, directly or indirectly, in an increase in his taxes or would, in some other fashion cause him irreparable injury,' " or " `great injury,' as our law requires." American-Republican, Inc. v. Waterbury,
supra, 526; Alarm Applications Co. v. Simsbury VolunteerFire Co.,
Furthermore, even if it could be said that the plaintiffs have properly pleaded their standing as taxpayers, they have failed to prove it. At the hearing the plaintiffs called both the state treasurer's and the state comptroller's representatives. Testimony was elicited from each regarding the use or nonuse of the funds at issue in accordance with §
Bald assertions of citizen and legislator standing are similarly of no avail to the plaintiffs. "Standing is that doctrine which affords a party the right to request an adjudication of issues which affect him and his rightin particular." (Emphasis added.) Kaplan v. Ellis, *96
The plaintiffs also have failed to make the proper allegations or predicate to establish standing in their capacity as legislators of this state. While the court has found no state court cases addressing legislator standing, the reasoning of the federal courts is cogent on this point. It is generally held that, in the absence of statutory directive, a legislator may sue only to challenge misconduct or illegality in the legislative process itself. See e.g., Coleman v. Miller,
Confronted with myriad defenses to their right to maintain this action, the plaintiffs suggest that the doctrine of standing is an artifice and that the public's welfare can be protected only by approval of citizens' lawsuits. The statement from Schlesinger v. ReservistsCommittee To Stop The War, supra, 227, that "[t]he assumption that if respondents have no standing to sue, no one would have standing, is not a reason to find standing," is an admittedly unsatisfactory answer. Of utmost importance in this matter, however, is the recognition in Schlesinger that "[o]ur system of government leaves many crucial decisions to the political processes." Id.
With this lawsuit the plaintiffs, coincidentally members of the legislature, seek an order from the judicial branch to force action by the executive branch. This alignment alone reeks with separation of powers concerns. See Conn. Const., art.
Despite the Connecticut constitution's lack of a "case or controversy" requirement as enunciated in article three of the United States constitution, Connecticut courts have attributed state standing principles to this concept. Alarm Applications Co. v. Simsbury VolunteerFire Co., supra, 546; see also, Manchester Environmental *98 Coalition v. Stockton, supra, 65 (recognizing that standing is a rule of judicial administration). Standing rules are set to protect the integrity not only of the judicial branch, but also of the system of government as a whole. The importance of the justiciability limitations on what cases and parties the courts should entertain is seen in playing out the judicial resolution of this intragovernmental dispute. To grant the relief requested could place the judiciary in the antagonistically anomalous posture of employing the executive to enforce judicially mandated writs against the executive. It is because of these real concerns for political balance that the courts, both federal and state, have developed the doctrine of standing. Accordingly, the plaintiffs' alleged harm is not irreparable; relief is available through the political process.
An additional justiciability constraint is raised by the defendants' argument that this action has been made moot with the passage of Special Acts 1988, No. 88-20, § 13. This argument of mootness is not ripe because General Statutes §
Finally, even if the plaintiffs had standing, their action for a writ of mandamus fails on the merits. " `It is well established that mandamus will issue only if the plaintiff can establish: (1) that the plaintiff has a clear legal right to the performance of a duty by the defendant; (2) that the defendant has no discretion with respect to performance of that duty; and (3) that the *99
plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law.' " (Citations omitted.) Harlow v. Planning Zoning Commission,
Even if this court puts aside the question of whether the plaintiffs' lack of standing affects the clarity of the legal right alleged, the plaintiffs' cause fails on other grounds. The plaintiffs argue that the "deemed to be appropriate" language in §
Accordingly, because the plaintiffs lack standing to pursue this action, the defendants' motion to dismiss is hereby granted.