The court conducted a hearing on the instant motion. The parties have filed memoranda of law.
The plaintiff also alleges that on September 18, 1996, the CT Page 1027 DEP conducted and supervised a controlled archery hunt at the Groton Long Point Community Wildlife Refuge (Long Point), during which licensed hunters killed three fawn deer with the knowledge of DEP. Additionally, that at the time of the filing of the complaint, DEP was engaged in a second controlled archery hunt at Long Point.
The plaintiff claims that "[i]n causing, permitting, or otherwise participating in the killing of fawn deer by the implementation of controlled hunts at [Bluff Point] and [Long Point]", the defendant "has violated, is violating, and unless restrained by this court will continue to violate, the provisions of Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec.
The plaintiff seeks a declaratory judgment that "the acts and practices of defendant . . . violate Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec.
Previously, on January 5, 1998, the defendant moved to dismiss this action on the ground that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because of (1) the absence of a justiciable controversy, (2) mootness, (3) the plaintiff's lack of standing, (4) sovereign immunity, and (5) the plaintiff's failure to comply with Practice Book §
By memorandum of decision dated April 14, 1998, a coordinate judge of the Superior Court denied the defendant's motion to dismiss. With regard to other parties and notice, the court stated: "This action is brought only against the defendant. No order against him will have any legal effect on any other parties." CT Page 1028
The defendant now moves for an order of notice to compel the plaintiff to provide notice in accordance with Practice Book §
The plaintiff opposes the defendant's motion for order of notice, arguing that (1) the issue of notice has already been raised and resolved by the court's ruling on the motion to dismiss, which ruling should be followed as the "law of the case" and (2) a declaration that the defendant's acts and practices with regard to deer management at Bluff Point and Long Point violate CEPA and General Statutes §
A failure to comply with § 390(d), however, does not require dismissal of the plaintiff's action. Id., 309. "A jurisdictional defect relating to notice can be remedied . . . . Once there has been compliance with § 390(d), the trial court will have plenary authority to render whatever judgment it then deems appropriate." Id., 309-310.
By raising the issue of notice in present motion, the defendant is again raising an issue of subject matter jurisdiction and, in substance, asking this court to modify the prior ruling of a coordinate judge. "A judge is not bound to follow the decisions of another judge made at an earlier stage of the proceedings, and if the same point is again raised he has the same right to reconsider the question as if he had himself made the original decision. Santoro v. Kleinberger,
"The law of the case is not written in stone but is a flexible principle of many facets adaptable to the exigencies of the different situations in which it may be invoked. . . . In essence it expresses the practice of judges generally to refuse to reopen what has been decided and is not a limitation on their power. Messenger v. Anderson,
"It is a fundamental rule that a court may raise and review
the issue of subject matter jurisdiction at any time." (Emphasis added.) Lewis v. Gaming Policy Board,
An examination of the case law reveals that courts have found noncompliance with the rule, and ordered more extensive notice,where the declaratory judgment action challenges theCT Page 1031constitutionality or validity of a state or local law, ordinance,or regulation. See, e.g., Cristofaro v. Town of Burlinqton,
Courts have found that § 390(d) did not require notice to be given to any persons or parties other than those named where the declaration sought did not concern the constitutionality or validity of a statute, ordinance, CT Page 1033 regulation, but where the declaration instead sought a muchnarrower ruling concerning only the named parties' respectiverights and obligations to each other; see, e.g., Pequot Water Co.v. Brunelle, Superior Court, judicial district of Hartford-New Britain at Hartford, Docket No. 5121 (May 10, 1996) (declaration regarding rights and obligations of parties under lease, no notice required to any unnamed parties); and where thedeclaration sought concerned whether the defendant complied withapplicable law specifically in the defendant's dealings with theplaintiff see, e.g., Leoni v. Water Pollution ControlAuthority,
In the present action, the plaintiff seeks "a judgment declaring that the acts and practices of [the defendant] violate Conn. Gen. Stat. Sec.
The present action does not seek a declaration concerning the constitutionality or validity of a statute, ordinance, or regulation generally applicable to all citizens or to a particular industry or group such as private property owners or licensed hunters. The present action does not seek a declaration interpreting or defining the scope of a statute, ordinance or regulation, generally applicable to all citizens, to private property owners, or to licensed hunters. Instead, the present action challenges the acts and practices of the Commissioner undertaken in the management of the deer populations at B]uff Point and Long Point. A decision in this case regarding whether the Commissioner's deer management activities at Bluff Point and Long Point result in the unreasonable destruction of a natural resource does not affect the rights or interests of private CT Page 1034 property owners as a general group or licensed hunters.
A more troublesome question concerns whether the Groton Long Point Association, the private owner(s) of the Long Point Conservation Area, should be given Section 17-55(4) notice of this action. Plaintiff alleges that the acts and practices of the defendant Commission violated CEPA; those acts or practices allegedly occurred (or are occurring) on the Association's real property with respect to deer management. Arguably, the Association has an interest in the subject matter of this action as any declaration that the Commissioner's acts and practices violated CEPA would be in the context of, and with reference to, deer management activities undertaken by the Association and the defendant on its land. Admittedly, the allegations contained in the complaint relate to the acts and practices of the Commissioner in relation to fawn deer; and, fawn deer exist in public trust as a natural wildlife resource pursuant to General Statute Section
For the reasons stated, defendant's motion for order of notice is denied, except as to the Groton Long Point Association.
______________________ Mulcahy, J.
