The plaintiff filed a complaint on February 3, 1998, against Castaneda Cafe, Inc. (Castaneda Cafe), Hector Castaneda, as permittee and President of Castaneda Cafe, Lead Penny Pub of Connecticut, Inc. (Lead Penny), and Carmel A. Musumano, as permittee and President of Lead Penny alleging a violation of the Dram Shop Act, General Statutes §
This court referred the plaintiffs action to an arbitrator pursuant to General Statutes §
Approximately two months later on November 22, 1999, the plaintiff filed both a motion to open judgment pursuant to General Statutes §
On December 22, 1999, the plaintiff filed a motion to reargue his motion to open judgment pursuant to Practice Book §§
The plaintiff maintains that this court should open the judgment rendered on September 21, 1999, because he never received notice of the arbitrator's decision at the time it was filed with the court on August 24, 1999. (Motion to Reargue, ¶ 10.) He contends that because he never received notice of the arbitrator's decision, he could not file a claim for a trial de CT Page 2932 novo within the twenty day time period required under General Statutes §
Although the question of whether a delay in receiving notice extends the time in which a party may file an appeal has not been addressed in the context of a motion for a trial de novo under General Statutes §
This court holds that the reasoning of these cases is applicable to demands for a trial de novo pursuant to General CT Page 2933 Statutes §
Although the plaintiff maintains that the proper procedure was to file a motion to open judgment to vacate the judgment issued by this court pursuant to General Statutes §
Second, if this court were to accept the plaintiffs proposition, the plaintiff would be allowed to totally bypass the statutory trial de novo scheme and arguably wait almost four months and then argue a motion to open judgment. Then, he argues, the demand for the trial de novo could be claimed. This result would render meaningless the legislature's purpose in enacting General Statutes §
Finally, this court rejects the plaintiffs conclusion that because he was allegedly denied notice and an opportunity to be heard, he was therefore denied his due process rights under both the Connecticut and the United States Constitutions. Although the plaintiff is correct in his proposition that an absolute denial of notice and an opportunity to be heard deprives a litigant of his procedural due process rights, the plaintiff in this case did receive notice and had an opportunity to be heard. See AngelseaProductions. Inc. v. Commission on Human Rights Opportunities,
Accordingly, the court affirms its prior decision denying the plaintiffs motion to open.
Berger, J.
