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Lyme Land Conservation Trust, Inc. v. Platner

Conn.December 31, 2019No. SC20071Cited 3 times
RemandedPlatner

Case Details

Judge(s)
Robinson; Palmer; McDonald; Mullins; Kahn; Ecker
Status
Published
Procedural Posture
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Excerpt

Pursuant to statute (§ 51-183c), a judge who has tried a case without a jury in which a new trial is granted, or in which the judgment is reversed by the Supreme Court, may not again try the case. The defendant property owner appealed from the trial court's judgment rendered following a hearing in damages that was held on remand in connection with the plaintiff conservation trust's claim that the defen- dant had wilfully violated a conservation easement in contravention of the statute (§ 52-560a [b]) prohibiting encroachment on such an ease- ment. After a trial to the court, which found that the defendant had violated the easement, the court ordered the defendant to restore the property to its prior condition in accordance with a plan proposed by the plaintiff's expert at a cost of approximately $100,000. The court also awarded the plaintiff $350,000 in punitive damages pursuant to § 52-560a (d), which permits damages of up to five times the cost of restoration, and ordered further hearings to address the specific manner and timing of implementation of the restoration plan. At a subsequent hearing, at which experts for both parties proposed differing courses of action to effectuate restoration, the trial court ordered a new restoration plan but did not take evidence as to the cost of the new restoration plan or revisit its punitive damages award. The defendant thereafter appealed, and this court concluded that, although the trial court had properly found that the defendant violated the easement and that the new restora- tion plan was authorized and supported by sufficient evidence, the trial court's punitive damages award under § 52-560a (d) lacked the requisite evidentiary foundation. Specifically, that award had been compliant with § 52-560a (d) at the time it was initially issued, as it was based on evidence that restoration costs would be approximately $100,000, but, when the trial court adopted the new restoration plan with no evidence of its cost, the ratio of

What This Ruling Means

# Lyme Land Conservation Trust v. Platner - Case Summary ## What Happened A conservation trust sued property owner Platner, claiming he deliberately violated a conservation easement agreement. The case went to trial without a jury, and the judge issued a ruling. The defendant appealed the decision, and the case was sent back to the lower court for another hearing to determine damages (money owed). ## What the Court Decided Connecticut's Supreme Court sent the case back for a new damages hearing. However, the original judge who heard the first trial cannot preside over this new hearing. State law prevents judges from retrying cases they've already decided if the case is reversed or sent back on appeal. ## Why This Matters for Workers This ruling reinforces important procedural fairness rules in Connecticut courts. It ensures that when cases are appealed and returned for new hearings, workers and other parties get a fresh perspective from a different judge. This protects against bias and gives parties a fair chance to present their case again, which is a fundamental principle of the justice system.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

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