228 Conn. 854 | Conn. | 1994
The issues in this mortgage foreclosure appeal concern the propriety of the dismissal of the appeal of the named defendant, Joseph Trantino, on the ground of mootness. In March, 1990, the trial court rendered a judgment of foreclosure by sale, from which the named defendant appealed. After the named defendant withdrew that appeal, the trial court opened the judgment for purposes of setting a new sale date. The named defendant appealed from that action of the trial court, and the Appellate Court subsequently dismissed that appeal. Thereafter, in September, 1992,
On January 25,1993, however, the trial court again terminated the automatic stay, and set a new law day for the named defendant of March 8,1993. The defendant filed with the Appellate Court a motion for review of the trial court’s termination of the stay, which the Appellate Court dismissed. On February 19,1993, the named defendant filed another amended appeal. The plaintiff moved to dismiss the named defendant’s appeal on the ground that, the law day of March 8, 1993, having passed, the appeal was moot. The Appellate Court granted the plaintiff’s motion to dismiss on March 24, 1993.
We granted the named defendant’s petition for certification to appeal the merits of the dismissal of his appeal by the Appellate Court.
The appeal is dismissed.
On March 24, 1993, the Appellate Court also granted the plaintiff’s motion to prohibit the named defendant from filing further motions or appeals regarding the judgment of foreclosure.
We granted the named defendant’s petition for certification to appeal limited to the following issues: “1. Where a defendant appeals from a judgment of strict foreclosure and the trial court terminates the automatic stay pending appeal, may the Appellate Court lawfully dismiss the appeal as moot if the law day set by the trial court passes prior to the Appellate Court’s deciding the appeal? 2. Are due process of law and the statutory right to appeal violated by a trial court’s ordering of a strict foreclosure, terminating the automatic stay pending appeal, and setting a law day prior to the time that the Appellate Court can decide the appeal, thus denying the defendant any opportunity for appellate review of the trial court’s judgment of strict foreclosure?” Rothstein v. Trantino, 226 Conn. 906, 625 A.2d 1377 (1993).