The plaintiff has appealed from a judgment of the Superior Court denying his application for a writ of habeas corpus. In his application, the plaintiff alleged that he was an inmate at the Connecticut correctiоnal institution at Somers, that he had been denied parole on not less than four occasions, and that the procedures followed by the board of parole at parole release hearings complied with neither thе Uniform Administrative Procedure Act (c. 54 of the General Statutes, hereinafter referred to as UAPA) nor the due process clauses of the United States and Connecticut constitutions. In his prayer for relief, he requested the court to order that he either be granted a parole release hearing conforming to the UAPA and complying with the mandates of due process or, in the alternative, that he be immediately released from custody. 1 In denying the appliсation, the trial court determined that the UAPA did not apply to parole release hearings, and that the usual procedures followed at such hearings did satisfy the minimum requirements of due process. On appeal, the plaintiff has challenged both of these conclusions.
The plaintiff’s claim that the procedures followed by the board of parole at parole release hearings do not comply with the minimum requirements of the due process clаuses is not properly before this court. The trial court’s finding of fact, stipulated to by the parties, merely recites in general terms the usual procedures followed by the board of parole and does not disclose whether these usual procedures were actually followed by the board in considering the plaintiff’s eligibility for parole. Nor does it appear that the plaintiff offered any evidence that the procedures actually followed in his particular ease resulted in a denial of his rights to due process of law. Questions of constitutional law presented in abstract rather than concrete form are not susceptible of proper determination.
Kellems
v.
Brown,
In the interim between the trial court’s judgment and the perfection of this appeal, the plaintiff has been granted parole. Under similar circumstances, the United States Supreme Court has dismissed challenges to parole board procedures as moot.
Weinstein
v.
Bradford,
Similar considerations are involved in the present appeal. The board of parole conducts some 1700
Ill
The UAPA “applies to all agencies and agency proceedings not expressly exempted”; §4-185; and mandates the procedures to be followed by such agencies in the adoption of regulations; §§ 4-168 through 4-176; and in conducting hearings on “contested cases”; §§ 4-177 through 4-184. The plaintiff claims that a parole release hearing is a contested case to which the appropriate provisions of the UAPA apply. In determining the merits of this claim, we must consider (1) whether the board of parole is a nonexempt “agency”; and (2), if so, whether a parole release hearing is a “contested case.”
An “agency” is defined for purposes of the UAPA as “each state board, commission, department or officer . . . authorized by law to make regulations оr to determine contested cases.”
A “contested case” is defined as “a proceeding . . . in which the legal rights, duties or privileges
The sole statute concerning parole, § 54-125, simply provides that an inmate who has served his minimum sentence “may be allowed to go at large on parole in the discretion of the panel of the board of parole for the institution in which the person is confined.” There is no statutory requirement that the panel actuаlly consider the eligibility of any inmate for parole, the statute does not vest an inmate with the right to demand parole, and there is no statutory provision which even permits an inmate to apply for parole. The only statutory limits upon the discretion of the board of parole are the requirement that the inmate serve his mini
We conclude that there is no statutory requirement that the board of parole determine the eligibility for parole of any particular inmate, and that a parole release hearing is therefore not a “contested case” to which the provisions of the UAPA apply. This is not to say that a qualified inmate has no constitutional right to a parole release hearing or that an inmate has no due process rights at a parole release hearing. See
Childs
v.
United States Board of Parole,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The defendants filed a special defense, claiming that habeas corpus relief was not appropriate under the circumstances alleged, because the application did not challenge the validity of the judgment under which the plaintiff was confined, nor did it challenge the jurisdiction of the court which rendered that judgment. Cf.
Flaherty
v.
Warden,
Compare
In re Schoengarth,
