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2 ,0 0 Conn. App. 710
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
JEFFERSON SOLAR, LLC v. FUELCELL
ENERGY, INC., ET AL.
(AC 45620)
Bright, C. J., and Cradle and Harper, Js.
Syllabus
The plaintiff, a renewable energy developer, brought a third action seeking
to invalidate the winning bid by a competing energy developer, the
defendant F Co. and its subsidiary, for a long-term clean energy contract
with a utility company, the defendant I Co. The plaintiff and F Co.
submitted bids in response to a request by I Co. for proposals to construct
a shared clean energy facility that would sell energy to the public. Bidders
were required to show that they had either control of the generation
site, an unconditional right to acquire control or an unconditional option
agreement to purchase or lease the site. F Co.’s bid, which contained
an option to lease agreement, was selected by I Co. and ultimately
approved by the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority. In a prior action
the plaintiff brought against F Co., Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell
Energy, Inc. (213 Conn. App. 288) (prior action), the trial court rendered
judgment dismissing the action, which this court affirmed on appeal.
The trial court determined that the plaintiff’s claims were moot and that
it lacked standing to seek a declaratory ruling as to the viability of the
option agreement. The court further determined that the plaintiff lacked
standing as to its claims for tortious interference with prospective con-
tractual relations and unfair trade practices. In the present action, the
plaintiff claimed that F Co.’s bid did not meet the site control requirement
and sought declaratory and injunctive relief to void F Co.’s bid and the
contract it was awarded as well as damages based on various legal
theories, including unfair trade practices. The defendants filed a motion
to dismiss, contending that the plaintiff lacked standing to pursue its
claims. The trial court granted the motion, concluding that the plaintiff
lacked standing to pursue its claims against F Co. for declaratory and
injunctive relief because the plaintiff was a disappointed bidder for a
public contract that failed to demonstrate fraud, corruption or favoritism
that undermined the integrity of the bidding process. The court further
determined that the plaintiff lacked standing because the damages it
sought, lost profits from the contract that was awarded to F Co., were
indirect and too remote from the defendants’ allegedly wrongful conduct
in submitting and accepting F Co.’s bid. On the plaintiff’s appeal to this
court, held:
1. This court determined, consistent with its reasoning in the prior action,
that the plaintiff lacked standing to assert its various causes of action
for monetary damages because the injuries it alleged were indirect and
too remote from F Co.’s alleged wrongdoing: the plaintiff’s claimed
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
injuries and the defendants’ allegedly wrongful conduct were the same
in both actions, as the plaintiff’s appellate counsel stated during oral
argument before this court that there was no meaningful difference
between the unfair trade practices claims in both actions, and the plain-
tiff’s other counts that sought damages were based on the same allega-
tion in the prior action that F Co.’s bid did not comply with the site
control requirement because the option to lease was invalid; moreover,
contrary to the plaintiff’s assertion that the trial court in the prior action
based its decision on a different complaint with different allegations
and lacked the benefit of F Co.’s concession in the present action that
its bid certification was no good, the trial court’s findings and ultimate
conclusion in the present action regarding the remoteness of the plain-
tiff’s claimed injuries were consistent with this court’s reasoning in
the prior action, which applied with equal force in the present case;
furthermore, the record supported the trial court’s finding that the plain-
tiff’s claimed injuries were too speculative because there were too many
links in the chain of causation for F Co.’s conduct to be the direct cause
of the plaintiff’s injuries and the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority
retained discretion in awarding contracts.
2. The trial court properly concluded that the plaintiff lacked standing to
assert its claims for declaratory and injunctive relief because it was a
disappointed bidder on a public contract that failed to demonstrate
fraud, corruption or favoritism that undermined the bidding process:
the plaintiff’s claim that the contract was not a public contract because
the state was not a counterparty was unavailing, as the contract was
awarded pursuant to competitive bidding in a public procurement pro-
cess that was developed by and subject to the oversight of two state
agencies; moreover, the plaintiff’s reliance on the program requirements
to challenge the award was no different from a disappointed bidder’s
reliance on state or municipal bidding statutes when challenging the
award of a government contract, the program requirements, like compet-
itive bidding laws, having been established for the benefit of the public,
not bidders, and the trial court’s application of standing rules regarding
disappointed bidders on public contracts represented a proper balance
between fulfilling the purposes of competitive bidding rules and pre-
venting frequent litigation that might result in extensive delays in the
commencement and completion of government projects to the detriment
of the public; furthermore, even if, as the plaintiff contended, the contract
were a public contract and the trial court improperly failed to find that
F Co. knew its bid certification was false and that I Co. undermined the
integrity of the bidding process by ignoring the program requirements,
nothing in the record showed that F Co.’s bid did not conform to the
site control requirement or that I Co. applied that requirement differently
to other bidders, as I Co., which was permitted to select bids with option
leases, applied the program requirements in a consistent, nondiscrimina-
tory fashion.
Argued October 19, 2023—officially released April 16, 2024
Page 2 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL 0, 0
4 ,0 0 Conn. App. 710
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
Procedural History
Action for, inter alia, a declaratory judgment inval-
idating the award of a contract to the named defendant
et al. for a shared clean energy facility, and for other
relief, brought to the Superior Court in the judicial dis-
trict of New Britain and transferred to the judicial dis-
trict of Stamford-Norwalk, Complex Litigation Docket,
where the court, Ozalis, J., granted the motion to dis-
miss filed by the named defendant et al. and rendered
judgment thereon, from which the plaintiff appealed to
this court. Affirmed.
Thomas Melone, for the appellant (plaintiff).
Erick M. Sandler, with whom, on the brief, were
Johanna S. Lerner and Lauren G. Moscato, for the
appellees (named defendant et al.).
Jennifer L. Morgan, with whom, on the brief was
Julie A. Lavoie, for the appellee (defendant United Illu-
minating Company).
Jill Lacedonia, assistant attorney general, and Wil-
liam Tong, attorney general, filed a brief for the appel-
lee (defendant Department of Energy and Environmen-
tal Protection).
Opinion
BRIGHT, C. J. The plaintiff, Jefferson Solar, LLC,
appeals from the judgment of the trial court dismissing
the action as to the defendants FuelCell Energy, Inc.,
and SCEF1 Fuel Cell, LLC (collectively, FuelCell),1 and
the United Illuminating Company (United Illuminat-
ing).2 On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the court
1
SCEF1 Fuel Cell, LLC, is a subsidiary of FuelCell Energy, Inc., that was
created to be the entity that would submit a bid in response to the request
for proposals at issue in the present case. For simplicity, we refer to both
entities as FuelCell in this opinion.
2
The plaintiff also named the Department of Energy and Environmental
Protection (department) as a defendant in the underlying action. The trial
court dismissed the action as to the department in a separate decision, and
the plaintiff does not challenge the judgment as to the department on appeal.
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
improperly concluded that the plaintiff lacked standing
to assert its claims. We disagree and, accordingly, affirm
the judgment of the trial court.3
The following facts, either as found by the trial court
after an evidentiary hearing on the defendants’ motion
to dismiss or as undisputed in the record, and proce-
dural history are relevant to the plaintiff’s claims on
appeal. The present case arises from a 2020 request for
proposals (request) jointly issued by the state’s two
electric distribution companies (electric companies),
United Illuminating and Eversource Energy (Ever-
source), ‘‘ ‘for the purchase of any energy products and
renewable energy certificates’ produced by any eligible
Class I Shared Clean Energy Facility’’4 under ‘‘Year 1’’
of the shared clean energy facility program (program).
See General Statutes § 16-244z (a) (1) (C).5 The program
requires the electric distribution companies to conduct
a procurement process for shared clean energy facilities
We note that the department nevertheless filed a brief in support of affirming
the court’s judgment and that it is an appellee in a separate appeal brought
by the plaintiff challenging the dismissal of its action against the department.
See Jefferson Solar, LLC v. Dept. of Energy & Environmental Protection,
224 Conn. App. 688, A.3d (2024).
All references to the defendants in this opinion are to Fuel Cell and United
Illuminating only.
3
The trial court also dismissed the plaintiff’s claims on the ground that
they were moot, and the plaintiff has challenged that alternative basis for
the court’s judgment on appeal. Because we agree with the court’s conclusion
that the plaintiff lacks standing to assert its claims, we do not address the
mootness issue. See, e.g., Healey v. Mantell, 216 Conn. App. 514, 527, 528
n.10, 285 A.3d 823 (2022) (noting that, although courts are not required to
address jurisdictional claims in specific order, courts should ‘‘address first
the issue that disposes of the case’’).
4
A shared clean energy facility is an electric generation facility that uses
renewable resources, including but not limited to, solar and wind power,
fuel cells or geothermal sources. See General Statutes § 16-244x (a) (1); see
also General Statutes § 16-1 (a) (20).
5
We note that the legislature amended § 16-244z subsequent to the events
at issue. See, e.g., Public Acts 2023, No. 23-102, § 25. Because those amend-
ments are not relevant to this appeal, we refer in this opinion to the current
revision of § 16-244z.
Page 4 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL 0, 0
6 ,0 0 Conn. App. 710
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
on an annual basis for six years. General Statutes § 16-
244z (c) (1) (B). The program allows customers of the
electric companies who are unable to generate their
own clean energy to purchase clean energy from shared
clean energy facilities.
In accordance with § 16-244z, the Public Utilities Reg-
ulatory Authority (PURA) initiated a proceeding to
establish the procurement plan for each electric com-
pany ‘‘consistent with . . . the requirements to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions in accordance with [General
Statutes §] 22a-200a.’’ General Statutes § 16-244z (a) (1)
(A). In accordance with the program directives, the
Department of Energy and Environmental Protection
(department) developed program requirements and tar-
iff proposals for the procurement plan, which were
subject to PURA’s final approval. General Statutes § 16-
244z (a) (1) (C). On December 18, 2019, PURA issued
a final decision approving the program requirements
and tariff proposals, as modified. See Final Decision,
Public Utility Regulatory Authority, ‘‘Review of State-
wide Shared Clean Energy Facility Program Require-
ments,’’ Docket No. 19-07-01 (December 18, 2019) (pro-
gram requirements).
The program requirements provided that the electric
companies would select bids with the lowest price pro-
posals first and that the department ‘‘shall review and
approve the [electric companies’] final selections before
the [electric companies] submit them to PURA to ensure
consistency with the [p]rogram.’’ Accordingly, the pro-
gram involves a tiered review process for bids6 for
shared clean energy facilities, pursuant to which the
electric companies select the winning bids, the depart-
ment reviews those selected bids for compliance with
6
Although the electric companies issued a joint request for proposals, as
opposed to an invitation for bids, the program requirements provide that
‘‘ ‘Bid’ means a responsive submission by a Bidder to the procurement under
this [p]rogram’’ and that ‘Bidder’ means an entity that submits a [b]id . . . .’’
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
the program requirements, and PURA issues final
approval of the selected bids.
The request was issued on April 30, 2020, consistent
with the program requirements. Section 2.4.1 of the
request provides in relevant part: ‘‘The Bidder must
demonstrate that it has control of the generation site,
or an unconditional right, granted by the property
owner, to acquire such control. . . . In order to be
considered to have site control for generation, the Bid-
der must provide copies of executed documents
between the Bidder and property owner showing . . .
that the Bidder owns the site or has a lease or easement
with respect to the site . . . or . . . that the Bidder
has an unconditional option agreement to purchase or
lease the site for [a term as long as the term of the
standard agreement].’’ Section 4.4 of the request further
specifies that ‘‘[s]ubmission of the completed Bid Certi-
fication Form, including the affidavit from the owner
of the project site and the applicable documentation
demonstrating that the Bidder has control of the genera-
tion site, or an unconditional right, granted by the prop-
erty owner, to acquire such control, represents site
control.’’ (Footnote omitted.)
The request expressly provided that ‘‘[a]ny agreement
entered into for the purchase of energy and [renewable
energy credits] pursuant to this solicitation is contin-
gent upon obtaining Regulatory Approval by PURA as
set forth in the Standard Agreement. Pursuant to appli-
cable Connecticut General Statutes and PURA require-
ments, each [electric company] will submit required
information to PURA following the completion of each
annual procurement process. If any of the Bids and/or
Standard Agreements do not meet the objectives of
PURA, PURA may reject the Bid(s) and Standard Agree-
ment(s). . . . The [electric companies] . . . make no
commitment to any Bidder that [they] will accept any
Bid(s). The [c]ompanies reserve the right to discontinue
Page 6 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL 0, 0
8 ,0 0 Conn. App. 710
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
the [request] process at any time for any reason whatso-
ever. This is a Request for Proposals and not a binding
offer to contract.’’ The request was for a total of five
megawatts in United Illuminating’s service territory.
In its April 8, 2022 memorandum of decision granting
the defendants’ September 7, 2021 motion to dismiss,
the trial court found that, in July, 2020, ‘‘FuelCell and
the plaintiff submitted bids in response to the [request]
for year one of the [program] . . . . On its bid certifica-
tion form, FuelCell submitted an affidavit from Richard
Dziekan, the Mayor of [the city of] Derby [(city)],
attesting that [the city], as the owner of the property
. . . that was the subject of the energy bid [(property)],
understood the site control requirements of the
[request] and that FuelCell was authorized to submit a
bid for a [clean energy] facility to be located on [the
property]. . . . Attached to [Dziekan’s] affidavit was
the option to lease agreement between the city . . .
and FuelCell, dated July 1, 2020. The option to lease
provided FuelCell with the ‘sole and exclusive right,
privilege and option to lease [the property] from . . .
[the city] . . . for good and valuable consideration and
upon terms and conditions to be negotiated upon exer-
cise of [the] Option.’ . . . Section 4 of exhibit B to
the option to lease, entitled ‘Lease Terms,’ provides in
relevant part: ‘within ninety (90) days after the date of
Notice, the [c]ity and [FuelCell] shall enter into a lease
agreement upon the terms and conditions set forth in
[e]xhibit B attached hereto and made a part hereof,
and such other terms and conditions as the [c]ity and
[FuelCell] shall negotiate in good faith (the ‘‘Lease’’).’
. . . Derek Phelps, Director of Government Relations
and Business Development for FuelCell, testified at the
April 1, 2022 hearing on [the defendants’] motion to
dismiss that he believed when FuelCell submitted its
bid certification to [United Illuminating], that the option
to lease agreement for the property that it had attached
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
to its bid was valid and that such option to lease gave
it site control of the property where it planned to con-
struct the proposed . . . facility. . . .
‘‘The plaintiff submitted a bid for a 4.0 megawatt solar
energy project located in North Branford. . . . Fuel-
Cell submitted a bid for a 2.8 megawatt natural gas-
powered fuel cell located on the property. . . . [United
Illuminating] reviewed FuelCell’s bid, its option to lease
the property agreement, lease terms and the affidavit of
the [city’s] Mayor as the owner of the property regarding
site control. . . . [United Illuminating] found [that]
FuelCell’s bid satisfied the site control [requirement]
and [that] the option to lease demonstrated site control.
. . . On September 28, 2020, [United Illuminating]
selected [FuelCell’s] bid as the winning bid for a 2.8
megawatt natural gas-powered fuel cell. . . . [United
Illuminating] selected two other bids for its territory.
[It] selected a 1.5 megawatt solar project in Milford and
. . . the plaintiff’s bid but limited the [plaintiff’s proj-
ect] to a 700 kilowatt facility. . . .
‘‘[In October, 2020], the plaintiff made numerous fil-
ings at PURA in an effort to invalidate FuelCell’s win-
ning bid and notified [United Illuminating] and [the
department] that FuelCell’s bid did not meet the site
control requirement based on public records. . . . The
plaintiff claimed that [United Illuminating] and [the
department] were required to reject FuelCell’s bid and
that they knowingly accepted FuelCell’s bid even
though it did not meet the program requirements. The
plaintiff alleged that it would have received the contract
awarded to FuelCell for the energy capacity awarded
to FuelCell if [United Illuminating] rejected FuelCell’s
bid for lack of site control. On January 22, 2021, PURA
approved [United Illuminating’s] selections . . . .
‘‘Pursuant to General Statutes § 7-163[e], a public
hearing was duly noticed and held on May 13, 2021,
Page 8 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL 0, 0
10 ,0 0 Conn. App. 710
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
with the city of Derby [Board of Aldermen/Alder-
women] relating to the final lease of the property. . . .
On May 13, 2021, the [Board of Aldermen/Alderwomen]
voted in favor of granting FuelCell the final lease in
connection with the 2.8 megawatt [shared clean energy
facility]. . . . On August 31, 2021, the final lease was
executed between the city . . . and FuelCell.’’ (Cita-
tions omitted.)
The present case is the third action initiated by the
plaintiff in which it has sought to invalidate FuelCell’s
winning bid. See Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell
Energy, Inc., 213 Conn. App. 288, 288 A.3d 1032 (2022)
(Jefferson Solar I), cert. denied, 346 Conn. 917, 290
A.3d 799 (2023); see also Jefferson Solar, LLC v. Dept.
of Energy & Environmental Protection, 224 Conn. App.
688, A.3d (2024) (Jefferson Solar II).
In October, 2020, the plaintiff initiated Jefferson Solar
I against FuelCell in three counts. ‘‘In count one, the
plaintiff sought a declaratory ruling that the option
agreement ‘does not provide [FuelCell] with any legally
enforceable rights’ due to the city’s alleged failure to
comply with the requirements of the city charter and
. . . § 7-163e. In count two, the plaintiff alleged that
[FuelCell] had submitted ‘a false bid certification’ in
violation of [the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices
Act (CUTPA), General Statutes § 42-110a et seq.] as a
result of the city’s alleged failure to comply with the
requirements of the city charter and § 7-163e ‘prior to
executing’ the option agreement. In count three, the
plaintiff alleged that the submission of a false bid certifi-
cation by the defendants constituted tortious interfer-
ence with prospective contractual relations.
‘‘On December 10, 2020, the defendants filed a motion
to dismiss [Jefferson Solar I], alleging, inter alia, that
the plaintiff lacked standing. . . . By memorandum of
decision dated April 30, 2021, the [trial] court granted
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0 Conn. App. 710 ,0 11
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
the motion to dismiss. The court first concluded that
the plaintiff’s request for a declaratory ruling was not
ripe for adjudication, as PURA [had] not yet approved
[FuelCell’s] bid . . . . For the same reason, the court
concluded that the plaintiff’s tortious interference with
prospective contractual relations claim was ‘premature’
and ‘unripe.’ The court then concluded that the plaintiff
lacked standing to bring its CUTPA claim [because] its
alleged injuries ‘are remote and indirect.’ ’’ (Footnote
omitted.) Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.,
supra, 213 Conn. App. 291–93. On appeal to this court
in Jefferson Solar I, the plaintiff claimed that the court
improperly dismissed its CUTPA claim for lack of stand-
ing.7 Id., 293. On June 14, 2022, this court affirmed the
judgment of dismissal, reasoning that, ‘‘[b]ecause the
utility companies, by the plain terms of the request,
retained discretion in awarding shared clean energy
facility contracts and reserved the right to reject any
or all offers, the plaintiff’s purported injuries are purely
speculative. . . . We, therefore, agree with the trial
court’s determination that the plaintiff lacked standing
to maintain its CUTPA action against the defendants.’’
(Citations omitted.) Id., 297–98.
On May 18, 2021, the plaintiff filed Jefferson Solar
II in the Superior Court, challenging the department’s
decision declining the plaintiff’s request for a declara-
tory ruling that FuelCell’s option to lease was illegal
and did not satisfy the site control requirement under
the program. Jefferson Solar, LLC v. Dept. of Energy &
Environmental Protection, supra, 224 Conn. App. 688.
The Superior Court dismissed that action for lack of
subject matter jurisdiction on April 27, 2022, and the
plaintiff appealed. See footnote 2 of this opinion. This
7
The plaintiff did not challenge the trial court’s conclusion that its request
for a declaratory ruling and its tortious interference claim were not ripe.
See Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc., supra, 213 Conn. App.
293 n.5.
Page 10 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL 0, 0
12 ,0 0 Conn. App. 710
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
court affirmed the judgment. See Jefferson Solar, LLC
v. Dept. of Energy & Environmental Protection, supra,
709.
In June, 2021, while Jefferson Solar I was pending
in this court, the plaintiff filed the underlying action
against FuelCell, United Illuminating, and the depart-
ment. In the operative first amended complaint the
plaintiff sought (1) a declaratory ruling that FuelCell’s
bid did not satisfy the request’s site control requirement
(first count), (2) injunctive relief voiding the selection
of FuelCell’s bid and contract and awarding the plaintiff
a contract for 3.5 megawatts instead of the 700 kilowatts
it was awarded (second count), and (3) monetary dam-
ages against (i) FuelCell for its alleged violation of
CUTPA (third count) and tortious interference with
prospective contractual relations (fourth count) and (ii)
United Illuminating and the department for violations
of the filed rate doctrine (fifth count), the shared clean
energy facility tariff (sixth count),8 and the plaintiff’s
due process rights (seventh count) based on the selec-
tion of FuelCell’s allegedly noncompliant bid.
On September 7, 2021, FuelCell and United Illuminat-
ing jointly filed a motion to dismiss for lack of subject
matter jurisdiction. In their memorandum of law in sup-
port of that motion, the defendants claimed, inter alia,
that the plaintiff lacked standing because it is an unsuc-
cessful bidder on a public contract and because the
8
In its operative amended complaint, the plaintiff alleged, as to counts
five and six, that ‘‘[t]he tariff and filed rate doctrine prohibit [United Illumi-
nating and the department] from allowing [FuelCell] to receive service and
a contract that deviates from the tariff.’’ The trial court subsequently
explained that count five of the operative amended complaint asserted
‘‘that [the department], the Commissioner [of Energy and Environmental
Protection (commissioner)], and [United Illuminating] violated the filed rate
doctrine when they allowed FuelCell to receive a contract that deviates
from the tariff’’ and that count six alleged that ‘‘[the department], the commis-
sioner, and [United Illuminating] violated the tariff when they selected Fuel-
Cell’s bid, even though FuelCell did not have site control.’’
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
plaintiff’s alleged injuries were too remote and indirect
to confer it with standing.9 The plaintiff filed an objec-
tion to the motion to dismiss on October 6, 2021, and
the defendants filed a reply on October 19, 2021. On
November 19, 2021, the court, Ozalis, J., heard oral
argument on the defendants’ motion. On January 27,
2022, the court issued an order scheduling the matter
for an evidentiary hearing ‘‘to determine the facts sur-
rounding United Illuminating’s selection of [FuelCell’s]
bid and [FuelCell’s] understanding of its option to lease
when it submitted it with its . . . bid.’’
At the start of the evidentiary hearing on April 1,
2022, the court explained that the hearing would be
limited to two questions. First, ‘‘if [FuelCell’s] bid had
not been accepted for any reason, would the plaintiff
have 100 percent been awarded the [clean energy]
capacity it desired. That’s . . . from the first amended
complaint, paragraph 77. And [second], was the option
to lease submitted by [FuelCell] in its bid a sufficient
basis to demonstrate site control required under the
[request].’’ At the hearing, the court heard testimony
from Christie Prescott, the Director of Wholesale Power
Contracts for United Illuminating; Attorney Vincent
Marino, the city’s attorney; and Phelps.
On April 8, 2022, two months before this court issued
its decision in Jefferson Solar I, the trial court issued
its decision dismissing the underlying action as to the
defendants on the grounds that the plaintiff’s claims
were moot and that the plaintiff lacked standing. The
court first concluded that, as a disappointed bidder
for a public contract, the plaintiff lacked standing to
challenge the award of a public contract because it
failed to demonstrate fraud, corruption, or favoritism
9
The defendants also claimed that the plaintiff’s claims were moot because
FuelCell and the city had executed a final lease for the property and that
the plaintiff’s claims were precluded by operation of the doctrine of collateral
estoppel based on the trial court’s decision in Jefferson Solar I.
Page 12 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL 0, 0
14 ,0 0 Conn. App. 710
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
that undermined the bidding process. The court further
concluded that the plaintiff lacked standing to assert
its claims because its claimed damages, i.e., the lost
profits from the contract that was awarded to FuelCell,
were indirect and too remote from the defendants’ alleg-
edly wrongful conduct in submitting and accepting
FuelCell’s allegedly noncompliant bid. This appeal fol-
lowed.
On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the court improp-
erly concluded that it lacked standing to assert all the
counts in its complaint against FuelCell. The seven
counts of the plaintiff’s complaint fall into two catego-
ries. In the first two counts, the plaintiff sought declara-
tory and injunctive relief and, in counts three through
seven, the plaintiff sought monetary damages based on
various theories. We conclude that this court’s decision
in Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc., supra,
213 Conn. App. 297–98, is dispositive of the plaintiff’s
claims for monetary damages in the present case and
that the trial court properly dismissed the plaintiff’s
claims for declaratory and injunctive relief because the
plaintiff lacked standing as a disappointed bidder on a
public contract.10
As an initial matter, we set forth the applicable stan-
dard of review. ‘‘A trial court’s determination of whether
a plaintiff lacks standing is a conclusion of law that is
subject to plenary review on appeal.’’ (Internal quota-
tion marks omitted.) R.S. Silver Enterprises, Inc. v.
Pascarella, 163 Conn. App. 1, 7, 134 A.3d 662, cert.
denied, 320 Conn. 929, 133 A.3d 460 (2016). ‘‘[T]rial
courts addressing motions to dismiss for lack of subject
matter jurisdiction . . . may encounter different situa-
tions, depending on the status of the record in the case.
. . . [W]here a jurisdictional determination is depen-
dent on the resolution of a critical factual dispute, it
10
For ease of discussion, we address the plaintiff’s claims in a different
order than they are set forth in its principal appellate brief.
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
cannot be decided on a motion to dismiss in the absence
of an evidentiary hearing to establish jurisdictional
facts.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Good Earth
Tree Care, Inc. v. Fairfield, 151 Conn. App. 680, 685,
97 A.3d 28 (2014).
When the trial court resolves disputed factual issues
after an evidentiary hearing,11 ‘‘[w]e conduct that ple-
nary review . . . in light of the trial court’s findings of
fact, which we will not overturn unless they are clearly
erroneous. . . . This involves a two part function:
where the legal conclusions of the court are challenged,
we must determine whether they are legally and logi-
cally correct and whether they find support in the facts
set out in the memorandum of decision; where the fac-
tual basis of the court’s decision is challenged we must
determine whether the facts set out in the memorandum
of decision are supported by the evidence or whether,
in light of the evidence and the pleadings in the whole
record, those facts are clearly erroneous.’’ (Internal quo-
tation marks omitted.) R.S. Silver Enterprises, Inc. v.
Pascarella, supra, 163 Conn. App. 7–8.
11
The plaintiff claims that ‘‘the trial court’s holding violates [the] plaintiff’s
due process rights and right to a jury trial because the plaintiff is not required
to establish its case by a preponderance of the evidence at this stage, not
having had the benefit of discovery. Nor can the court make merits findings
of fact that are disputed and [are] properly within the province of the jury.’’
Notably, not only did the plaintiff not object to the evidentiary hearing, it
requested the hearing. Moreover, the trial court conducted the evidentiary
hearing to determine disputed jurisdictional facts regarding the alleged mis-
conduct in the bidding process, a procedure that our Supreme Court has
endorsed. See, e.g., Unisys Corp. v. Dept. of Labor, 220 Conn. 689, 695–96,
600 A.2d 1019 (1991) (‘‘With respect to this issue of standing—that is bidder
injury—questions of fact were raised and the trial court should have allowed
an evidentiary hearing. When issues of fact are necessary to the determina-
tion of a court’s jurisdiction, due process requires that a trial-like hearing
be held, in which an opportunity is provided to present evidence and to cross-
examine adverse witnesses.’’ (Emphasis added; internal quotation marks
omitted.)). Accordingly, the trial court did not violate the plaintiff’s due
process rights or its right to a jury trial by holding a limited evidentiary
hearing regarding disputed jurisdictional facts in accordance with the plain-
tiff’s own request.
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
I
The plaintiff claims that the trial court improperly
held that its alleged injuries are too remote and indirect
to provide it with standing to assert its various causes
of action for monetary damages. As we previously
stated, our decision in Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell
Energy, Inc., supra, 213 Conn. App. 297–98, is disposi-
tive of the plaintiff’s standing to assert those claims.
On appeal in Jefferson Solar I, the plaintiff claimed
that ‘‘the court improperly concluded that it lacked
standing to maintain the CUTPA action . . . .’’ Id., 293.
In rejecting that claim, this court first set forth the
relevant legal principles regarding standing and, more
specifically, the requirement that a plaintiff make a col-
orable claim of direct injury. Id., 293–95. The court then
explained: ‘‘It is undisputed that [FuelCell], as part of
its bid, submitted both the affidavit of Mayor Dziekan,
in which he attested that [FuelCell] had control of the
generation site, or an unconditional right . . . to
acquire such control, and a copy of the option agree-
ment between the city and FuelCell, which option was
assigned to the company. Those materials demonstrate
that the company’s bid comported with the requirement
. . . that a bidder submit proof that it has control of
the generation site, or an unconditional right, granted
by the property owner, to acquire such control. . . .
‘‘In its complaint, the plaintiff alleged that the city’s
failure to comply with the bid process requirements of
§ 22 of the city charter and § 7-163e rendered the option
agreement unlawful, without legal effect, and void and
illusory. The plaintiff further alleged that, as a result of
the city’s failure to comply with those requirements,
the [option agreement] does not provide the defendants
with the unconditional right required by the [request]
requirements. For that reason, the plaintiff alleged that
the defendants had submitted a false bid certification
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
in violation of CUTPA, which allegedly caused the plain-
tiff to suffer an ascertainable loss of money because
[it] will lose the revenue from the [program] that it
would have received but for [the] defendants’ submis-
sion of a false bid certification.’’ (Internal quotation
marks omitted.) Id., 295.
The trial court in Jefferson Solar I reasoned that
‘‘[t]he direct recipient of any injury resulting from false
certification would be [United Illuminating], the benefi-
ciary of the project. [United Illuminating] would pre-
sumably have at least one cause of action against the
defendants. Additionally, the real party with purported
unclean hands is [the city], which is claimed to have
ignored its own city charter in order to furnish the
option to lease to [FuelCell]. The plaintiff has not
brought an action against [the city], nor does it appear
that the plaintiff has standing to maintain such an
action. The plaintiff’s claims are remote and indirect.
If there is a potential victim of [FuelCell’s] alleged
duplicity, it is [United Illuminating], not the plaintiff.
The plaintiff lacks standing to bring the CUTPA claim.’’
(Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 296.
This court agreed with that reasoning and also
explained that, ‘‘[i]f [FuelCell] knowingly submitted a
false bid, as the plaintiff alleges, the utility company
that was a party to the contract for the shared clean
energy facility would be a directly injured party and
would be best suited to seek a remedy for the harm.
Moreover, although the plaintiff claims that it was 100
percent certai[n] to receive the shared clean energy
facility contract in question if [FuelCell] lacked the nec-
essary site control, that contention is undermined by
the plain language of the request. . . . Because the
[electric] companies, by the plain terms of the request,
retained discretion in awarding shared clean energy
facility contracts and reserved the right to reject any
or all offers, the plaintiff’s purported injuries are purely
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
speculative.’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation
marks omitted.) Id., 296–97. Accordingly, this court held
that the plaintiff’s alleged injuries—that is, the lost ‘‘rev-
enue from the [program] that it would have received but
for [FuelCell’s] submission of a false bid certification’’—
were purely speculative. Id., 295; see also id., 297.
In the present case, the trial court likewise concluded
‘‘that the plaintiff’s injuries are too remote and indirect
from FuelCell’s conduct to confer [on] the plaintiff
standing. . . . Under the first policy factor articulated
in Ganim v. Smith & Wesson Corp., [258 Conn. 313,
347–48, 780 A.2d 98 (2002)], it would be difficult to
determine the damages attributable to FuelCell’s
wrongdoing as opposed to other independent factors
because, in all counts of the [operative] complaint, there
are too many links in the chain of causation for Fuel-
Cell’s conduct to be the direct cause of the plaintiff[’s]
not receiving its desired contract. . . .
‘‘Under the second policy consideration, [United Illu-
minating] is the party directly injured by FuelCell’s
alleged misrepresentations because [United Illuminat-
ing] is the party [that the] plaintiff claims FuelCell alleg-
edly made the misrepresentations to and the party [that]
relied on them. Thus, [United Illuminating], as the party
to a contract as to which an alleged misrepresentation
was made, would suffer the direct injury resulting from
FuelCell[’s] not having site control. Additionally, the
city . . . would be the more appropriate defendant
under the facts of this case because it is the city . . .
that the plaintiff claims did not comply with § 22 of its
[c]harter, § 7-163e, and the statute of frauds. . . .
Finally, under the third policy consideration . . . the
directly injured party, [United Illuminating], can remedy
the harm without these attendant problems such as
indirectness of injury and apportionment of damages.’’
(Citations omitted; footnote omitted.)
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
The plaintiff concedes that there is no meaningful
difference between its CUTPA claim in Jefferson Solar
I and its CUTPA claim in the present case.12 In Jefferson
Solar I, the plaintiff claimed ‘‘damages in an amount
equal to the sum of all amounts that [the] plaintiff would
have received over the twenty year term of the [shared
clean energy facility] tariff contract term for the [shared
clean energy facility] capacity that is obtained by [Fuel-
Cell] through the use of the false bid certification that
would have gone to the plaintiff plus other damages
and costs to be proved at trial . . . .’’ In the present
case, the plaintiff’s claimed damages under each count
for which it sought monetary damages are the same:
‘‘damages in an amount equal to the sum of all amounts
that [the] plaintiff would have received over the twenty
year term of the [shared clean energy facility] tariff
contract term for the [shared clean energy facility]
capacity that would have gone to the plaintiff but for
[the defendants’ wrongful conduct] . . . .’’ Moreover,
the plaintiff’s other counts seeking monetary damages
are based on the same allegation that FuelCell’s bid did
12
Although the plaintiff asserted in its reply brief that ‘‘the trial court in
[Jefferson Solar I] did not hold any factual hearing on the CUTPA claim,
did not have the benefit of [FuelCell’s] concessions that [it] knew its bid
certification was no good, and based its decision on a different complaint
with different allegations,’’ during oral argument before this court, counsel
for the plaintiff conceded that the allegations in the plaintiff’s CUTPA count
are the same as the allegations that were made in Jefferson Solar I. The
respective records confirm the plaintiff’s concession.
In Jefferson Solar I, the plaintiff alleged in its amended complaint that
it ‘‘has suffered an ascertainable loss of money because the plaintiff will
lose the revenue from its [shared clean energy facility] that it would have
received but for [FuelCell’s] submission of a false bid certification because
the plaintiff would receive a contract for 700 [kilowatts] and not 3.5 [mega-
watts], or a smaller facility contract than it otherwise would receive.’’ In
the present case, the plaintiff likewise alleged that it ‘‘has suffered an ascer-
tainable loss of money because the plaintiff will lose the revenue from its
[shared clean energy facility] that it would have received but for [FuelCell’s]
submission of a false bid certification. The plaintiff has received a contract
for 700 [kilowatts], and not 3.5 [megawatts], due to [FuelCell’s] fraudulent
and unfair and deceptive practice.’’
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
not comply with the site control requirement under the
request because the option to lease was invalid. Thus,
whether styled as a CUTPA claim, a tortious interfer-
ence with prospective contractual relations claim, or
violations of the filed rate doctrine, the tariff, or the
plaintiff’s due process rights, the defendants’ alleged
wrongful conduct and the plaintiff’s claimed injuries
are the same as they were in Jefferson Solar I—too
remote and indirect to confer standing on the plaintiff.13
Because this court held in Jefferson Solar, LLC v.
FuelCell Energy, Inc., supra, 213 Conn. App. 296–97,
that the plaintiff’s claimed damages were indirect and
remote from the alleged wrongful conduct, that deci-
sion controls our decision in the present case in which
the plaintiff concedes that it suffered the same injuries
on account of the same allegedly wrongful conduct.
See footnote 12 of this opinion. Although the plaintiff
moved for reconsideration en banc of our decision in
Jefferson Solar I, this court denied that motion. In
effect, the plaintiff now requests that we reverse that
ruling and reach a different conclusion in this appeal
on the basis of the same allegations and claimed dam-
ages. We decline to do so. See Staurovsky v. Milford
Police Dept., 164 Conn. App. 182, 202–203, 134 A.3d
1263 (2016) (‘‘[T]his court’s policy dictates that one
panel should not, on its own, reverse the ruling of a
previous panel. The reversal may be accomplished only
if the appeal is heard en banc. . . . Prudence, then,
dictates that this panel decline to revisit such requests.’’
13
We recognize that neither this court nor the trial court in Jefferson
Solar I addressed the plaintiff’s standing to bring its tortious interference
with contractual relations claim because the trial court concluded that that
claim was not ripe, and the plaintiff did not challenge that conclusion on
appeal in Jefferson Solar I. Nevertheless, because the plaintiff’s tortious
interference claim was based on the same alleged wrongful conduct and
injuries as were alleged in the plaintiff’s CUTPA claim in Jefferson Solar I,
this court’s holding that the plaintiff lacked standing to assert its CUTPA
claim applies equally to the tortious interference claim.
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
(Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)),
appeal dismissed, 324 Conn. 693, 154 A.3d 525 (2017).
Accordingly, the same reasoning employed by this court
in Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc., supra,
296–97, applies with equal force in the present case.
The plaintiff nevertheless contends that our decision
in Jefferson Solar I is distinguishable because ‘‘the trial
court in the first action did not hold any factual hearing
on the CUTPA claim, did not have the benefit of [Fuel-
Cell’s] concessions that [it] knew its bid certification
was no good, and based its decision on a different
complaint with different allegations from the complaint
here.’’ We are not persuaded.
First, as noted in footnote 12 of this opinion, during
oral argument before this court, counsel for the plaintiff
conceded that the allegations in the plaintiff’s CUTPA
count in the present case are the same as the allegations
that were made in its CUTPA count in Jefferson Solar
I. Second, although the plaintiff suggests that the facts
developed at the evidentiary hearing in the present case
undermine this court’s reasoning in Jefferson Solar I,
the trial court’s findings and ultimate conclusion regard-
ing the remoteness of the plaintiff’s claimed injuries in
the present case are consistent with that reasoning.
Specifically, the trial court in the present case con-
cluded that ‘‘in all counts of the plaintiff’s [complaint]
there are too many links in the chain of causation for
FuelCell’s conduct to be the direct cause of the plain-
tiff[’s] not receiving its desired contract.’’ The court
found that, although Prescott testified that, if FuelCell
had been disqualified, the plaintiff likely would have
been selected for the 2.8 megawatts of power awarded
to FuelCell, it also explained that there was no ‘‘guaran-
tee that [the plaintiff] would have made it through the
final approval process with PURA for any portion of
the 2.8 [megawatts] of power.’’ In other words, because
PURA retained discretion in awarding the contracts,
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
the plaintiff’s claimed injuries are speculative. The evi-
dence in the record supports the court’s finding, as
Phelps testified that, although Eversource had selected
FuelCell’s bids for three additional projects in Year 1
of the shared clean energy program, ‘‘[t]hose selections
[had] to be affirmed, I’m going to say certified or finally
approved by . . . PURA in the end, and that did not
occur with those three projects.’’ Similarly, in Jefferson
Solar I, this court reasoned that, ‘‘[b]ecause the [elec-
tric] companies, by the plain terms of the request,
retained discretion in awarding shared clean energy
facility contracts and reserved the right to reject any
or all offers, the plaintiff’s purported injuries are purely
speculative.’’ Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy,
Inc., supra, 213 Conn. App. 297. Accordingly, the facts
developed in the present case do not alter this court’s
previous analysis.
Consequently, consistent with that decision, we con-
clude that the plaintiff lacked standing to assert its
claims for monetary damages in the present case
because the plaintiff’s alleged injuries are indirect and
remote. See id., 296–97.
II
The plaintiff also claims that the trial court improp-
erly concluded that it lacked standing to assert its
claims for declaratory and injunctive relief because it
is a disappointed bidder on a public contract that failed
to establish fraud, favoritism, or corruption that under-
mined the bidding process. We disagree.
The following legal principles regarding an unsuc-
cessful bidder on a public contract inform our review.
‘‘In the context of competitive bidding, it is well estab-
lished that an unsuccessful bidder on a state or munici-
pal contract has no contractual right under the common
law that would afford standing to challenge the award
of a contract. . . . [A] bid, even the lowest responsible
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
one, submitted in response to an invitation for bids is
only an offer which, until accepted by the municipality,
does not give rise to a contract between the parties.
. . . An unsuccessful bidder, therefore, has no legal or
equitable right in the contract. Not unlike any other
person whose offer has been rejected, the disappointed
bidder has no right to judicial intervention. . . .
‘‘Moreover, no statute grants unsuccessful bidders
standing to challenge the award of a state contract.
. . . In particular, state and local competitive bidding
laws have not been enacted in order to protect bidders.
These laws serve to guard against abuses in the award
of contracts such as favoritism, fraud or corruption and
are enacted solely for the benefit of the public and in no
sense create any rights in those who submit bids. . . .
‘‘Despite these substantial constraints, [our Supreme
Court has] recognized a limited exception to the rules
of standing in order to provide a means of protecting the
public’s interest in properly implemented competitive
bidding processes. . . . Under this exception, unsuc-
cessful bidders have standing to challenge the award
of a public contract where fraud, corruption or acts
undermining the objective and integrity of the bidding
process existed . . . . [S]uch a suit is brought by one
who suffers injury as a result of the illegal activity, but
the suit itself is brought in the public interest by one
acting essentially as a private attorney general. . . .
‘‘Our policy to limit standing so as to deny some
claims brought by unsuccessful and precluded bidders
is designed to protect twin goals that serve the public
interest in various, sometimes conflicting, ways. The
standing rules aim to strike the proper balance between
fulfilling the purposes of the competitive bidding stat-
utes and preventing frequent litigation that might result
in extensive delay in the commencement and comple-
tion of government projects to the detriment of the
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24 ,0 0 Conn. App. 710
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
public.’’ (Citations omitted; emphasis added; internal
quotation marks omitted.) Electrical Contractors, Inc.
v. Dept. of Education, 303 Conn. 402, 412–13, 35 A.3d
188 (2012).
In addition, ‘‘an unsuccessful bidder to a municipal
contract has no standing to assert a cause of action for
money damages for failure of the municipality to follow
its competitive bidding laws, regardless of whether the
plaintiff alleges fraud, corruption or favoritism.’’ Law-
rence Brunoli, Inc. v. Branford, 247 Conn. 407, 411,
722 A.2d 271 (1999).14 Thus, in the absence of a colorable
claim of fraud, corruption or other acts undermining
the integrity of the bidding process, an unsuccessful
bidder lacks standing to challenge the award of a public
contract. Compare Spiniello Construction Co. v. Man-
chester, 189 Conn. 539, 545, 456 A.2d 1199 (1983) (unsuc-
cessful bidder had standing to challenge award of con-
tract because evidence showed that bidding officials
favored winning bidder by allowing that bidder to devi-
ate from invitation for bids), with Ardmare Construc-
tion Co. v. Freedman, 191 Conn. 497, 506, 467 A.2d 674
(1983) (unsuccessful bidder lacked standing because
elements traditionally thought to undermine competi-
tive bidding process were absent when official ‘‘did not
apply its requirement inconsistently or in a discrimina-
tory fashion’’).
In its objection to the defendants’ motion to dismiss
in the present case, the plaintiff claimed that it is not
properly characterized as a disappointed bidder because
the shared clean energy facility contracts are not con-
tracts with the government and because it has not
14
The trial court held that the plaintiff lacked standing as a disappointed
bidder to assert its claims for monetary damages pursuant to Lawrence
Brunoli, Inc. Because we conclude in part I of this opinion that the plaintiff
lacks standing to assert those claims based on this court’s decision in
Jefferson Solar I, we focus our analysis in part II of this opinion on whether
the plaintiff has standing as a disappointed bidder to assert its claims for
declaratory and injunctive relief.
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
asserted a breach of contract claim against a govern-
mental entity. In the alternative, the plaintiff claimed
that, assuming that it is a disappointed bidder on a
public contract, it still has standing to seek declaratory
and injunctive relief because the integrity of the bidding
process was undermined when United Illuminating and
the department failed to adhere to the program require-
ments by awarding FuelCell the contract when FuelCell
did not demonstrate site control.
The trial court rejected each of the plaintiff’s argu-
ments. First, the court held that the shared clean energy
facility contract is a public contract because, ‘‘although
the contract is ultimately entered into between the bid-
der and [United Illuminating], the whole process is pur-
suant to a state administered program.’’ The court next
concluded that the limited exception to the standing
rule did not apply because ‘‘the plaintiff’s conclusory
allegations do not amount to fraud, favoritism, corrup-
tion or acts that undermine the integrity of the bidding
system to confer it standing under [that] exception.
Additionally, there is nothing in the record to support
that the bid submitted by FuelCell did not conform with
the [site control requirement], as the program require-
ments permitted [United Illuminating] to select bids
with option leases. . . .
‘‘Moreover, there is no allegation, besides a conclu-
sory assertion, that FuelCell knew its [option to] lease
violated [the city’s charter] and submitted the bid certifi-
cation anyway to constitute fraud or to undermine the
bidding requirements. In fact, the evidence is to the
contrary. . . . [I]t is clear that [United Illuminating] did
not use [the city charter] as a basis to reject some bids
while ignoring [it] to award other bids. . . . Prescott,
the Director of Wholesale Power Contracts for [United
Illuminating], who oversaw the bid selection process
for [United Illuminating], confirmed that [United Illumi-
nating] found the option to lease submitted by FuelCell
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
to be acceptable under § 2.4.1 of the [request] and that
neither she [n]or anyone else at [United Illuminating]
was advised by someone with the proper authority that
FuelCell lacked site control and granted the bid anyway
to undermine the integrity of the bidding process.’’
(Citations omitted.)
Finally, the court concluded that, ‘‘as a disappointed
bidder, the plaintiff cannot request declaratory relief
as a way to circumvent the fact that it does not have
standing to assert its claims because [the declaratory
judgment statute] does not create jurisdiction where it
would not otherwise exist.’’ (Internal quotation marks
omitted.) Accordingly, the court held that the plaintiff
lacked standing as a disappointed bidder.
On appeal, the plaintiff contends that the court
improperly concluded that the shared clean energy
facility contracts are public contracts. It argues that,
although the shared clean energy facility ‘‘contracts are
a public benefit made available to renewable energy
developers, the . . . bids are not bids for a contract
with a municipality or with any governmental agency.
. . . The [shared clean energy facility] contracts at
issue are not public contracts under Ardmare [Con-
struction Co. v. Freedman, supra, 191 Conn. 497]
because the state is not a counterparty. See, e.g., Con-
necticut Energy Marketers Assn. v. Dept. of Energy &
Environmental Protection, 324 Conn. 362, 374 [152 A.3d
509] (2016) (holding that ‘activities that are proposed
by state actors, but which are ultimately performed by
private entities’ are not state activities).’’ We are not
persuaded.
The plaintiff’s reliance on our Supreme Court’s hold-
ing in Connecticut Energy Marketers Assn. is mis-
placed. In that case, the court addressed whether the
department’s ‘‘issuance of a comprehensive energy
strategy . . . pursuant to a legislative directive, and
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
the subsequent approval of a plan to expand the use of
natural gas in this state by the department and [PURA]
constituted ‘’’actions which may significantly affect the
environment’’’ within the meaning of General Statutes
§ 22a-1c, thereby triggering the requirement for written
evaluation of the expansion plan’s environmental
impact pursuant to General Statutes § 22a-1b (c).’’
(Footnote omitted.) Id., 364–65. The court held that
‘‘activities that are proposed by state actors, but which
are ultimately performed by private entities, do not
constitute ‘actions which may significantly affect the
environment’ for purposes of § 22a-1b (c).’’ Id., 374.
Because Connecticut Energy Marketers Assn. involved
an entirely different statutory scheme that is not at
issue in the present case, our Supreme Court’s holding
in that case does not resolve the issue presented in the
present case—whether the shared clean energy facility
contract constitutes a public contract for purposes of
the disappointed bidder doctrine.
In that regard, we recognize that neither the state
nor any municipality is a party to the contract that was
awarded to FuelCell. At the same time, the crux of each
count of the plaintiff’s complaint is that FuelCell’s bid
failed to comply with the request or the program
requirements that were developed by the department
and approved by PURA in accordance with express
legislative directives. See General Statutes § 16-244z (a)
(1) (C) (department ‘‘shall . . . develop program
requirements and tariff proposals for shared clean
energy facilities’’ and PURA ‘‘shall approve or modify
such program requirements and tariff proposals submit-
ted by the department’’); see also General Statutes § 16-
244z (a) (6) (providing that department’s program
requirements ‘‘shall include’’ several specific provisions
and requirements). Thus, although this is not the typical
disappointed bidder case in which a state or local gov-
ernment is a party to the contract, the plaintiff seeks
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28 ,0 0 Conn. App. 710
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
to challenge the award of a contract pursuant to com-
petitive bidding in a public procurement process, which
was developed by and subject to the oversight of two
different state agencies. Indeed, the plaintiff’s claims
depend on the lowest responsible bidder requirement to
establish that it would have been awarded the contract,
which is the hallmark of a public procurement process.
See, e.g., Powder Horn Constructors, Inc. v. Florence,
754 P.2d 356, 376 (Colo. 1988) (noting that public pro-
curement process is ‘‘designed to avoid the appearance
. . . of favoritism . . . in public procurement by
awarding the contract in all cases to the lowest respon-
sible bidder,’’ whereas ‘‘[p]rivate parties are not
required to accept the lowest bid’’).
Specifically, in the operative complaint, the plaintiff
alleged that the electric companies ‘‘have no discretion
in terms of whether they enter into contracts with suc-
cessful bidders. The contracts are required to be
entered into under . . . § 16-244z and [the program
requirements]. . . . Nor do the [electric companies]
have any discretion as to the basis for selection, which
is based upon price for qualified bids as provided for
by the tariffs.’’ The plaintiff further alleged that, notwith-
standing ‘‘the usual boilerplate disclaimer language that
purported to reserve to the [electric companies] ‘the
right to reject any or all offers or proposals’ . . . and
that the [electric companies] ‘make no commitment to
any [b]idder that it will accept any [b]id(s)’ and that
the [request] does not constitute ‘a binding offer to
contract’ . . . the legal and practical reality is that nei-
ther [electric company] had the discretion to reject any
and all offers unless those offers failed to satisfy the
requirements of the tariff, which incorporates the . . .
program requirements.’’ (Citation omitted; emphasis
omitted.)
Consequently, the plaintiff’s reliance on the program
requirements to challenge the award of the contract in
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Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
the present case is no different than a disappointed
bidder’s reliance on the state or municipal bidding stat-
utes to challenge the award of a government contract.
That is, the program requirements, much like competi-
tive bidding laws, were established for the benefit of
the public—not the bidders. See, e.g., General Statutes
§ 16-244z (e) (‘‘The costs incurred by an electric distri-
bution company pursuant to this section shall be recov-
ered on a timely basis through a nonbypassable fully
reconciling component of electric rates for all custom-
ers of the electric distribution company. Any net reve-
nues from the sale of products purchased in accordance
with any tariff offered pursuant to this section shall be
credited to customers through the same fully reconcil-
ing rate component for all customers of such electric
distribution company.’’).
Therefore, applying our well established standing
rules regarding disappointed bidders on public con-
tracts to the present case represents a ‘‘proper balance
between fulfilling the purposes of the competitive bid-
ding [rules] and preventing frequent litigation that might
result in extensive delay in the commencement and
completion of government projects to the detriment of
the public.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Electri-
cal Contractors, Inc. v. Dept. of Education, supra, 303
Conn. 413. Accordingly, we agree with the trial court
that the shared clean energy facility contract awarded
pursuant to the request is a public contract.
The plaintiff contends that ‘‘even if the contract was
a public contract . . . the trial court’s conclusion . . .
that FuelCell did not know or have reason to know that
its lease option was unenforceable is disproven by the
testimony at the hearing.’’ According to the plaintiff,
‘‘at the time [FuelCell] submitted its . . . bid, [Fuel-
Cell] knew, or at the very least had reason to know,
that the option to lease and bid certification was no
good and did not provide [FuelCell] with control to
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30 ,0 0 Conn. App. 710
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
anything, much less unconditional control.’’ The plain-
tiff further maintains that the integrity of the bidding
process was undermined when United Illuminating
‘‘ignored the [program requirements] on which [the]
plaintiff relied when it expended funds necessary to
submit a compliant bid.’’ The plaintiff’s arguments are
unavailing.
The court rejected the plaintiff’s ‘‘conclusory allega-
tions’’ that fraud, favoritism, corruption, or other acts
undermined the integrity of the bidding process because
‘‘there is nothing in the record to support that the bid
submitted by FuelCell did not conform with the [site
control requirement], as the program requirements per-
mitted [United Illuminating] to select bids with option
leases.’’ The court relied on testimony from Prescott,
who evaluated the bids for United Illuminating, and
found that FuelCell’s bid complied with the site control
requirements. The court specifically noted that there
was no evidence that United Illuminating applied the
site control requirement differently to other bidders
and, therefore, it would not disturb the bidding official’s
good faith interpretation of the bidding requirements.
Put differently, the court found that United Illuminating
did not exhibit favoritism by interpreting and applying
the program requirements in a consistent and nondis-
criminatory fashion. See Good Earth Tree Care, Inc. v.
Fairfield, supra, 151 Conn. App. 685 (bidding officials
do ‘‘not exhibit favoritism by making good faith inter-
pretations of bidding requirements and applying them
in a consistent and nondiscriminatory fashion’’).
Accordingly, the plaintiff’s assertion, based on its
reading of the option to lease and the city charter, that
FuelCell knew that its bid certification was false does
not alter the court’s conclusion that there was no fraud,
favoritism, or corruption that undermined the integrity
of the bidding process. At bottom, the plaintiff simply
disagrees with United Illuminating’s, PURA’s, and the
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0 Conn. App. 710 ,0 31
Jefferson Solar, LLC v. FuelCell Energy, Inc.
department’s application of the bidding requirements
and seeks to obtain judicial intervention to set aside
the award of a public contract on the basis of its own
interpretation of the bidding requirements. The plain-
tiff’s interpretation, however, has been rejected by
those entities, and the plaintiff has failed to demonstrate
that their good faith assessments of their own bidding
requirements amount to fraud, favoritism or corruption
that undermined the integrity of the bidding process.
It is well settled that, ‘‘[a]lthough the assessment of
the criteria for determining the lowest qualified bidder
includes some subjective analysis, that subjective analy-
sis . . . does not carry with it the imprint of favoritism,
but rather is a wholly permissive exercise of the [bid-
ding official’s] discretion unless favoritism otherwise
is illustrated.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.,
686. Thus, although the plaintiff asserts that it seeks to
vindicate the ‘‘public interest in ensuring that govern-
ment agencies adhere to the law,’’ it has failed to allege
facts to support its claim that fraud, corruption or favor-
itism undermined the bidding process. See AAIS Corp.
v. Dept. of Administrative Services, 93 Conn. App. 327,
332–33, 888 A.2d 1127 (unsuccessful bidder lacked
standing to seek injunctive relief because there was ‘‘no
allegation that any ex parte communications with other
bidders took place or that the department was favoring
the use of one brand of product over another in the
bidding process’’), cert. denied, 277 Conn. 927, 895 A.2d
798 (2006). Consequently, we conclude that the plaintiff,
as a disappointed bidder on a public contract, lacked
standing to challenge the award of the contract because
it failed to demonstrate fraud, corruption or favoritism
that undermined the integrity of the bidding process.
Therefore, the court properly dismissed the plaintiff’s
claims for declaratory and injunctive relief.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.