CONNECTICUT STATUTES AND CODES
               		Sec. 19a-343e. Court orders re abatement of public nuisance. Jurisdiction. State shall post copy order and notice re penalty for removal or destruction of order. Modification or vacation of order. Bon
               		
               		
               	 	
               	 	               	 	
               	 	
               	 	
               	 		
      Sec. 19a-343e. Court orders re abatement of public nuisance. Jurisdiction. 
State shall post copy order and notice re penalty for removal or destruction of 
order. Modification or vacation of order. Bond. Application to close property. Order. (a) If the court finds by clear and convincing evidence that a public nuisance exists, 
the court may enter such orders as justice requires to abate the public nuisance, including 
but not limited to, an order to close the real property or any portion thereof. The court 
shall retain jurisdiction over the case until it appears that the nuisance no longer exists. 
The state shall post a copy of any court order to close the real property or any portion 
thereof on any outside door of the premises. The order shall include a notice that any 
person who removes, mutilates or defaces the closing order may be punished, upon 
conviction, by a fine not to exceed two hundred fifty dollars or by imprisonment of 
fifteen days, or both.
      (b) At any time after entry of an order, any defendant may apply to the court to have 
any order vacated or modified for good cause. Prior to any decision on a defendant's 
application to vacate or modify an order, the state shall be afforded a reasonable opportunity to inspect the real property or any portion thereof to verify that the public nuisance 
has been abated, and the court shall provide the state with an opportunity to be heard 
to contest the defendant's application.
      (c) Where the court vacates or modifies any order, it may condition its decision on 
the posting of a bond in an amount not to exceed the current fair market value of the 
real property, as stated in an independent appraisal by a certified real estate appraiser, 
as surety against recurrence of the public nuisance.
      (d) Where the court finds that real property or any portion thereof constitutes a public 
nuisance and enters a final judgment, the state shall record a copy of such judgment and 
any orders on the land records in the town in which such real property is located. At 
any time after the entry of judgment, any defendant may apply to the court to modify 
or vacate any order, including the reduction of the amount of, or release of liability for 
any bond required pursuant to this section. The court may grant such application for 
good cause shown, which may include, but not be limited to, a showing by such defendant 
by clear and convincing evidence that: (1) All court orders have been complied with, 
that any named persons have ceased any conduct constituting a public nuisance upon 
the real property or any portion thereof and that the nuisance has abated; (2) the defendant 
wishes to refinance or sell the real property to an identified bona fide purchaser for value 
whose proposed use for the real property will not constitute a public nuisance; or (3) 
the defendant has demolished or razed any buildings, structures or features upon the real 
property capable of supporting a public nuisance. Prior to any decision on a defendant's 
application to vacate or modify a final order or release a lien, the state shall be afforded 
a reasonable opportunity to inspect the real property or any portion thereof. Any modification to any order shall be recorded on the land records in the town in which such real 
property is located.
      (e) Where the state applies for an order to close the real property or any portion 
thereof, the court shall take into consideration the rights of all interested parties and 
shall limit the scope of a closing order to minimize dispossession or dislocation of tenants 
or residents who have been factually uninvolved in the conduct contributing to the public 
nuisance, unless closure of the property is necessary to protect public health, safety or 
welfare.
      (P.A. 98-220, S. 6, 10; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 98-1, S. 97, 121.)
      History: P.A. 98-220 effective July 1, 1998; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 98-1 made a technical change in Subsec. (e), effective 
July 1, 1998.
               	 	
               	 	
               	 	               	 	
               	 	               	 	               	  
               	 
               	 
               	 
               	 
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