Certificate of court clerk upon happening of certain events or attachment becoming ineffective.

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If an attachment, such as is set forth in section 52-322, has been made and the plaintiff has withdrawn the plaintiff's suit or has been nonsuited or final judgment has been rendered against the plaintiff, or if such suit has not been returned, or if for any reason such attachment has become of no effect, the clerk of the court to which such suit has been made returnable shall, upon the request of any person interested, issue a certificate in accordance with the facts, which certificate may be filed in the office of the town clerk, and such town clerk shall record such certificate in the land records.

(1949 Rev., S. 8056; 1959, P.A. 28, S. 184; P.A. 09-213, S. 10.)

History: 1959 act deleted reference to suits returnable to justices of the peace; P.A. 09-213 replaced requirement that certificate “shall by such town clerk be noted on the margin of the record where such attachment is recorded” with requirement that “such town clerk shall record such certificate in the land records” and made technical changes.

Certificate of dissolution denied since one count of complaint remained to be litigated. 146 C. 739. When release of lis pendens inequitable. 162 C. 26. Cited. 180 C. 501; 209 C. 15.

Cited. 36 CA 206.

Cited. 4 Conn. Cir. Ct. 14; 6 Conn. Cir. Ct. 456.


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