Sec. 3-99a. Fees for filing, recording and copying documents. Expedited services. Filing by electronic means. Unique identification numbers. Remittance by
credit account. (a) Except as provided in subsection (b), the Secretary of the State shall
receive, for filing or recording any document, instrument or paper required to be filed
or recorded regardless of the number of pages, when fees are not otherwise specially
provided for, twenty-five dollars. The Secretary shall receive, for preparing and furnishing a copy of any document, instrument or paper filed or recorded: For each copy of
each such document, regardless of the number of pages, twenty dollars, for affixing his
certificate and the state seal thereto, five dollars; for the Secretary's certificate with the
state seal imprinted or affixed, twenty-five dollars; for a certificate, with the seal of the
state imprinted or affixed thereon, of any fact or record for which no special provision
is made, twenty-five dollars; for certifying the incumbency of a judge of probate, notary
public or other official, twenty dollars, except that for certifying the incumbency of an
official in connection with an adoption of a child, such fee shall be five dollars.
(b) No fee shall be charged for filing any document required to be filed pursuant
to the provisions of titles 4, 7 and 9, and the fee for furnishing copies of such documents
shall be such as will, in the judgment of said Secretary, cover the costs of such copies,
except that the fee for furnishing copies of documents filed pursuant to title 9 shall not
exceed twenty-five cents per page. No fee shall be charged for filing resolutions relating
to payment from the Treasury and statements of receipts and expenditures of judges of
probate.
(c) No fee shall be charged for any copy required by any state officer, department,
board or commission, the fee for which would be payable from the State Treasury. For
other services for which fees are not provided by the general statutes, the Secretary may
charge such fees as will in his judgment cover the cost of the services provided. The
tax imposed under chapter 219 shall not be imposed upon any transaction for which a
fee may be charged under the provisions of this section. Overpayments made to the
Records and Legislative Services Division or to the Commercial Recording Division
of the office of the Secretary of the State, whether for documents or for fees, in an
amount not to exceed five dollars shall not be refunded but shall be placed in the General
Fund. No overpayment claim shall be presented under this section but within one year
after it accrues.
(d) In the performance of their functions, the Commercial Recording Division and
the Records and Legislative Services Division of the office of the Secretary of the State
may, in the discretion of the Secretary, provide expedited services. The Secretary shall
provide for the establishment and administration of a system of payment for such expedited services and may include in such system prepaid deposit accounts. The Secretary
shall charge, in addition to the filing fees provided for by law, the sum of twenty-five
dollars for each expedited service provided. The filing fee and the expediting fee shall
be paid by the person requesting the information and documents, in such manner as
required by the Secretary. The Secretary may promulgate rules and regulations necessary
to establish guidelines for the use of expedited services and shall establish fees, in addition to the expediting fee, for expedited electronic data processing services which cover
the cost of such services.
(e) The Secretary of the State may accept the filing of documents by telecopier or
other electronic media and employ new technology, as it is developed, to aid in the
performance of all duties required by the law. The Secretary of the State may establish
rules, fee schedules and regulations, not inconsistent with the law, for filing documents
by telecopier or other electronic media, for the adoption, employment and use of new
technology in the performance of the duties of the office and for providing electronic
access and other related products or services that result from the employment of such
new technology.
(f) The Secretary of the State may require that a unique identification number be
provided on documents or requests processed by the office.
(g) The Secretary of the State may allow remittances to be in the form of a credit
account number and an authorization to draw upon a specified credit account, at such
time and under such conditions as the Secretary may prescribe. Remittances in the form
of an authorization to draw upon a specified credit account shall include an amount for
purposes of paying the discount rate associated with drawing upon the credit account,
unless the remittances are drawn on an account with a financial institution that agrees
to add the number to the credit card holder's billing, in which event the remittances
drawn shall not include an amount for purposes of paying the discount rate associated
with the drawing upon the credit account.
(February, 1965, P.A. 364, S. 1; 1967, P.A. 61; 1972, P.A. 30, S. 1; P.A. 76-230, S. 3, 4; P.A. 77-184, S. 3, 4; 77-604,
S. 1, 84; P.A. 79-341; 79-356, S. 11; P.A. 82-374, S. 5, 6; P.A. 85-486, S. 1, 2; P.A. 89-251, S. 63, 203; 89-252, S. 1, 11;
P.A. 90-100, S. 1, 2; May Sp. Sess. P.A. 92-6, S. 87, 117; P.A. 93-363, S. 1; P.A. 94-112, S. 2; P.A. 95-252, S. 14.)
History: 1967 act prohibited fees for filing party rules or furnishing copies of rules; 1972 act allowed charge of ten
cents per page for furnishing copies; P.A. 76-230 increased fee for certifying various documents from three to five dollars
and deleted provision concerning comparing copies; P.A. 77-184 added Subsec. (c) providing sales tax exemption; P.A.
77-604 made technical changes; P.A. 79-341 made fee exemption extend to all documents pertaining to elections for filing
purposes and allowed a charge for copying to cover costs, deleting the set fee of ten cents per page; P.A. 79-356 provided
that overpayments to corporations divisions not exceeding five dollars be paid into general fund; P.A. 82-374 amended
Subsec. (c) by adding provision that overpayments to uniform commercial code division in an amount not to exceed three
dollars shall not be refunded but shall be placed in general fund; P.A. 85-486 added Subsec. (d) re establishment and
administration of expedited services, including expediting fee of twenty dollars and regulatory authority to establish guidelines for use of system; P.A. 89-251 increased the fee for two pages or less from four dollars to six dollars, for additional
pages from one and one-half dollars to two dollars, for certifying the incumbency of a judge of probate from five dollars
to twenty dollars, and created a fee for certifying the incumbency of other public officials of twenty dollars, set the fee for
copies of title 9 documents at not less than thirty cents per copy for the first fifty copies and fifty cents each for subsequent
copies, set the fee for services in Subsec. (c) and increased the fees for expedited service in Subsec. (d) from twenty dollars
to twenty-five dollars; P.A. 89-252 amended Subsec. (a) by increasing standard fee for copies from one and one-half dollars
for each page of a document, with a minimum charge of four dollars to fifteen dollars for each document, regardless of
the number of pages, amended Subsec. (b) by exempting documents filed pursuant to titles 4 and 7 from fee, amended
Subsec. (c) by changing "corporations division" to "records and legislative services division or to the commercial recording
division, except the uniform commercial code unit" and amended Subsec. (d) by providing that the commercial recording
division and the records and legislative services division may provide expedited services; P.A. 90-100 added in Subsec.
(a) the reduced fee for certifying the incumbency of an official in connection with the adoption of a child; May Sp. Sess.
P.A. 92-6 amended Subsec. (a) to increase fees and to make fees applicable regardless of number of pages and amended
Subsec. (c) to delete specific fees formerly enumerated in Subdivs. (1) to (12), inclusive, and to place one-year time limit
on presenting overpayment claim; P.A. 93-363 increased fees for certificate from five to twenty-five dollars, deleted
provisions in Subsec. (c) re overpayments made to uniform commercial code unit and added Subsec. (e) re acceptance of
filing of documents by telecopier or other electronic media, Subsec. (f) re requirement of unique identification number on
documents or requests and Subsec. (g) re permitting remittances to be in form of credit account number; P.A. 94-112
amended Subsec. (b) by changing the fee from not less than thirty cents per copy for the first fifty copies and fifty cents
per copy for each copy thereafter to not more than twenty-five cents per page; P.A. 95-252 amended Subsec. (b) to provide
that the maximum fee of twenty-five cents per page for furnishing copies of documents only applies to copies of documents
filed pursuant to title 9 and amended Subsec. (e) to authorize the Secretary of the State to establish rules, fee schedules
and regulations "for providing electronic access and other related products or services that result from the employment of
such new technology".
See Secs. 33-617 and 33-1013 re fees payable to Secretary by stock and nonstock corporations, respectively.
Sec. 3-99b. Forms of documents filed in Secretary's office. The Secretary of the
State may (a) except when such forms are otherwise prescribed by the general statutes,
prescribe and require the use of forms for any reports, documents, certificates, instruments or other papers required to be filed in his office, and (b) prescribe the size of all
documents filed in his office and require all documents submitted for filing to be such
prescribed size.
(P.A. 83-138.)
Sec. 3-99c. Commercial recording account established. Use of funds. All fees
received by the Secretary of the State shall be deposited in the General Fund, except
that the Treasurer shall deposit in a separate, nonlapsing commercial recording account
which shall be established within the General Fund, sufficient funds for the administration of the Commercial Recording Division within the office of the Secretary of the
State. All costs incurred in the administration of the Commercial Recording Division
shall be paid from the commercial recording account.
(P.A. 92-200, S. 3, 5.)
Sec. 3-100. Names of streams. The Commissioner of Transportation and the Commissioner of Environmental Protection are directed to prepare and file in the office of
the Secretary a list of the names of all brooks, rivers, ponds, lakes and other bodies of
water in this state, and, when such list is so filed, the names thereon shall be the official
names of said bodies of water, provided additions to, and corrections of, said list may
be certified at any time.
(1949 Rev., S. 181; 1969, P.A. 768, S. 56.)
History: 1969 act substituted commissioner of transportation for highway commissioner.
Secs. 3-101 to 3-104. Division of Professional and Vocational Licensing. Professional and vocational licensing boards, generally. Sections 3-101 to 3-104, inclusive, are repealed.
(1949 Rev., S. 182-185; September, 1957, P.A. 11, S. 4; 1971, P.A. 410, S. 1; P.A. 75-268, S. 1; P.A. 76-86.)
Sec. 3-105. Arms of the state. The following-described arms shall be the official
arms of the state: A shield of rococo design of white field, having in the center three
grape vines, supported and bearing fruit. The vine located in the center of the shield and
the vine located on the right side of the shield shall ascend in a counterclockwise manner.
The vine located on the left side of the shield shall ascend in a clockwise manner. The
bordure to the shield shall consist of two bands bordered by fine lines adorned with
clusters of white oak leaves (Quercus alba) bearing acorns. Below the shield shall be a
white streamer, cleft at each end, bordered with two fine lines, and upon the streamer
shall be in block letters the motto "QUI TRANSTULIT SUSTINET". A drawing of
said arms, made in conformity herewith and filed in the office of the Secretary, shall be
the official drawing of the arms of the state.
(1949 Rev., S. 178; 1953, S. 61d; 1959, P.A. 328, S. 1; 1961, P.A. 76, S. 1; P.A. 90-156, S. 1.)
History: 1959 act added provision re approval of certain reproductions by secretary; 1961 act deleted references to use
of arms other than on official business, but see section 3-106a; P.A. 90-156 added provisions re location of the vines and
description of bordure to the shield and amended description of letters on the streamer.
Sec. 3-106. Seal. The great seal of the state shall conform to the following description: It shall be a perfect ellipse with its major axis two and one-half inches in length
and its minor axis two inches in length, the major axis being vertical. Within such ellipse
shall appear another ellipse with its major axis one and fifteen-sixteenths inches in length
and its minor axis one and one-half inches in length. The inner ellipse is separated from
the outer ellipse only by a line two points one-thirty-sixth of an inch in width and with
the space between the two ellipses, being seven-thirty-seconds of an inch, forming a
border. In said space shall appear, letter spaced and in letters one-eighth of an inch in
height and of twelve point century Roman, the words "SIGILLUM REIPUBLICAE
CONNECTICUTENSIS", beginning and ending one and one-sixteenth inches apart in
the lower space along such border. In the center of the inner ellipse shall be three grape
vines, two above and one below, each with four leaves and three clusters of grapes
intertwined around a support nine-sixteenths of an inch high, and the base of the supports
of the two upper vines one inch from the base of the inner ellipse and eleven-sixteenths
of an inch apart. The base of the lower support shall be nine-sixteenths of an inch from
the base of the inner ellipse and halfway between said bases shall appear the motto
"QUI TRANSTULIT SUSTINET", in number three, six point card Roman letters, or
engraver's Roman letters, on a ribbon gracefully formed, with the ends of the ribbon
turned upward and inward and cleft. A drawing of said seal shall be filed in the office
of the Secretary and shall be its official drawing.
(1949 Rev., S. 179, 8490; 1953, S. 3280d; 1959, P.A. 328, S. 2; 1961, P.A. 76, S. 2.)
History: 1959 act deleted provision confining use of seal to use under direction of secretary and stated reproductions
could only be for purposes related directly or indirectly to state business; 1961 act deleted all provisions re reproductions,
but see section 3-106a.
Sec. 3-106a. Reproduction of arms and seal. The official arms and seal of the
state of Connecticut, or imitation thereof, whether as a reproduction, imprint or facsimile, shall be made and used only under the direction and with the approval of the Secretary
of the State for purposes specifically authorized by the Constitution and laws of the
state or related directly or indirectly to the official business of the state, provided the
Secretary may in his judgment approve other reproductions of said arms or seal of the
state for memorials and for purposes he considers educational.
(1961, P.A. 76, S. 3; February, 1965, P.A. 396, S. 1.)
History: 1965 act specified section applies to imitations of the official arms and seal of state.
Sec. 3-107. State flag. The following-described flag is the official flag of the state.
The dimensions of the flag shall be five feet and six inches in length, four feet and four
inches in width. The flag shall be azure blue, charged with an argent white shield of
rococo design, having in the center three grape vines, supported and bearing fruit in
natural colors. The bordure to the shield shall be in two colors, gold on the interior and
silver on the exterior, adorned with natural-colored clusters of white oak leaves (Quercus
alba) bearing acorns. Below the shield shall be a white streamer, cleft at each end,
bordered by a band of gold within fine brown lines, and upon the streamer in dark blue
block letters shall be the motto "QUI TRANSTULIT SUSTINET"; the whole design
being the arms of the state.
(1949 Rev., S. 3581; P.A. 90-156, S. 2.)
History: P.A. 90-156 amended description of the state flag.
Sec. 3-108. State flower. The mountain laurel, Kalmia latifolia, shall be the state
flower.
(1949 Rev., S. 3582.)
Sec. 3-109. State bird. The American robin, Turdus migratorius, shall be the
state bird.
(1949 Rev., S. 3583.)
Sec. 3-109a. State animal. The sperm whale, Physeter macrocephalus, shall be
the state animal.
(P.A. 75-165; P.A. 86-403, S. 6, 132.)
History: P.A. 86-403 made technical change re scientific name of sperm whale.
Sec. 3-109b. State insect. The praying mantis, Mantis religiosa, shall be the state
insect.
(P.A. 77-243.)
Sec. 3-109c. State shellfish. The Eastern oyster, Crassostrea virginica, shall be the
state shellfish.
(P.A. 89-321, S. 10, 12.)
Sec. 3-109d. State fish. The American shad, Alosa sapidissima, shall be the
state fish.
(P.A. 03-41, S. 1.)
Sec. 3-110. State tree. The white oak, Quercus alba, shall be the state tree.
(1949 Rev., S. 3584.)
Sec. 3-110a. State to be known as "Constitution State". The state of Connecticut
shall be known as "The Constitution State".
(1959, P.A. 121.)
Sec. 3-110b. State mineral. The garnet shall be the state mineral.
(P.A. 77-293.)
Sec. 3-110c. State song. The song entitled "Yankee Doodle", composer unknown,
shall be the state song. The form in which this song shall be sung as the state song shall
be as follows:
WORDS
Yankee Doodle went to town,
Riding on a pony,
Stuck a feather in his hat,
And called it macaroni.
CHORUS
Yankee Doodle keep it up,
Yankee Doodle dandy,
Mind the music and the step,
And with the folks be handy.
MUSIC

(P.A. 78-4.)
See Sec. 54-195.
Sec. 3-110d. State ship. The submarine, USS Nautilus, shall be the state ship.
(P.A. 83-313.)
Sec. 3-110e. State hero and state heroine. (a) Nathan Hale shall be the state hero.
(b) Prudence Crandall shall be the state heroine.
(P.A. 85-311; P.A. 95-20.)
History: P.A. 95-20 designated existing provision as Subsec. (a) and added Subsec. (b), naming Prudence Crandall as
the state heroine.
Sec. 3-110f. State poet laureate. The Connecticut Commission on Culture and
Tourism may appoint a state poet laureate.
(P.A. 85-221; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6, S. 210(e); P.A. 04-20, S. 3; 04-205, S. 5; May Sp. Sess. P.A. 04-2, S. 30.)
History: June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6 and P.A. 04-20 replaced State Commission on the Arts with Connecticut Commission on Arts, Tourism, Culture, History and Film, effective August 20, 2003; P.A. 04-205, effective June 3, 2004, and May
Sp. Sess. P.A. 04-2, effective May 12, 2004, both replaced Connecticut Commission on Arts, Tourism, Culture, History
and Film with Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism.
Sec. 3-110g. State fossil. The dinosaur footprints of Eubrontes shall be the state
fossil.
(P.A. 91-70.)
Sec. 3-110h. State troubadour. There shall be an official state troubadour. The
Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism shall biennially designate a troubadour to serve in the position.
(P.A. 91-157; June Sp. Sess. P.A. 99-1, S. 49, 51; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6, S. 210(e); P.A. 04-20, S. 3; 04-205, S.
5; May Sp. Sess. P.A. 04-2, S. 30.)
History: June Sp. Sess. P.A. 99-1 required troubadour to be designated biennially, rather than annually, effective July
1, 1999; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6 and P.A. 04-20 replaced state Commission on the Arts with Connecticut Commission
on Arts, Tourism, Culture, History and Film, effective August 20, 2003; P.A. 04-205, effective June 3, 2004, and May Sp.
Sess. P.A. 04-2, effective May 12, 2004, both replaced Connecticut Commission on Arts, Tourism, Culture, History and
Film with Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism.
Sec. 3-110i. State composer. Charles Edward Ives Memorial Composer Laureate. Charles Edward Ives is designated as the composer of the state of Connecticut.
There shall be a "Charles Edward Ives Memorial Composer Laureate of the state of
Connecticut". The board of directors of the Charles Ives Center for the Arts, in consultation with the panel established under this section, may designate from time to time a
composer who was born or is living in Connecticut to serve in the position of composer
laureate. There is established a panel that shall meet from time to time to advise said
board of directors on the designation of the composer laureate. The panel shall be comprised of eight members, one of whom shall be a representative of the Connecticut
Commission on Culture and Tourism, one of whom shall be a representative of the New
Haven Symphony Orchestra, one of whom shall be a representative of the Hartford
Symphony Orchestra, one of whom shall be a representative of the Yale University
School of Music, one of whom shall be a representative of the Hartt School of Music
of The University of Hartford, one of whom shall be a representative of The Charles
Ives Society, Inc., one of whom shall be a representative of The University of Connecticut through its music department, and one of whom shall be a representative of the
Connecticut State University through the music department of Western Connecticut
State University. Each member of the panel shall be selected by the entity that the
member represents.
(P.A. 91-318; June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6, S. 210(e); P.A. 04-20, S. 3; 04-205, S. 5; May Sp. Sess. P.A. 04-2, S. 30.)
History: June 30 Sp. Sess. P.A. 03-6 and P.A. 04-20 replaced Connecticut Commission on the Arts with Connecticut
Commission on Arts, Tourism, Culture, History and Film, effective August 20, 2003; P.A. 04-205, effective June 3, 2004,
and May Sp. Sess. P.A. 04-2, effective May 12, 2004, both replaced Connecticut Commission on Arts, Tourism, Culture,
History and Film with Connecticut Commission on Culture and Tourism.