Jenzack Partners, LLC v. Stoneridge Associates, LLC ( 2020 )


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    JENZACK PARTNERS, LLC v. STONERIDGE
    ASSOCIATES, LLC ET AL.
    (SC 20188)
    (SC 20189)
    Robinson, C. J., and Palmer, McDonald, D’Auria,
    Mullins, Kahn and Ecker, Js.*
    Syllabus
    The plaintiff sought to foreclose a mortgage executed by the defendant T
    in support of her personal guarantee of a promissory note. The named
    defendant had obtained a construction loan from the original lender, S
    Co., and executed a promissory note in connection with that transaction.
    Subsequently, the note was modified, and T executed a limited guarantee
    in favor of S Co. ensuring payment of the amount due under the modified
    note. In order to secure T’s guarantee, T executed a mortgage in favor
    of S Co. on certain of T’s real property. S Co. subsequently assigned
    T’s mortgage and interest in the note to the plaintiff. At that time, S Co.
    and the plaintiff executed an allonge endorsing the note to the plaintiff
    as the obligee. After the named defendant defaulted on the note, the
    plaintiff sought, inter alia, to collect on T’s guarantee and to foreclose the
    mortgage on T’s property. At the foreclosure trial, the plaintiff introduced
    into evidence an exhibit that documented its computation of the amount
    then due on the note, which incorporated an initial entry concerning
    the original balance on the note that was based on information that S
    Co. had provided to the plaintiff in conjunction with S Co.’s sale of the
    note. The trial court rendered a judgment of strict foreclosure, and T
    appealed to the Appellate Court, claiming that the plaintiff lacked stand-
    ing to foreclose the mortgage and that the plaintiff’s exhibit failed to
    establish the amount then due on the note because the initial entry in
    the exhibit was inadmissible hearsay. The Appellate Court concluded
    that the trial court correctly determined that the plaintiff had standing
    to foreclose the mortgage but reversed with respect to the admission
    of the exhibit under the statutory (§ 52-180) business records exception
    to the hearsay rule, concluding that the original note balance for the
    computation of debt was not calculated by the plaintiff and that it was
    received, rather than made, in the ordinary course of business, and,
    thus, the exhibit failed to satisfy the requirements of the business records
    exception. The Appellate Court reversed the trial court’s judgment of
    foreclosure as to T and remanded the case for a new trial. On the
    granting of certification, the plaintiff and T filed separate appeals with
    this court. Held:
    1. The Appellate Court correctly determined that the plaintiff had standing
    to foreclose T’s mortgage: although the allonge that was executed in
    conjunction with the assignment of the note from S Co. to the plaintiff
    did not explicitly incorporate or mention T’s guarantee, T’s guarantee,
    when read in its entirety, clearly provided that its benefit would continue
    to any and all future holders of the note, which included the plaintiff
    as the uncontested owner of the note; moreover, S Co.’s assignment of
    the note to the plaintiff operated as an assignment of T’s guarantee
    because the explicit language in T’s guarantee indicated that it was the
    intention of S Co. and T that T’s guarantee would follow the note to
    future note holders, including the plaintiff.
    2. The Appellate Court incorrectly concluded that the initial entry provided
    by S Co. and contained in the exhibit setting forth the plaintiff’s calcula-
    tion of debt owed on the note was not admissible under the business
    records exception to the hearsay rule and that, without that entry, the
    trial court could not properly determine the amount owed: when one
    business provides information to another business in the context of a
    business transaction, as is often the case with loan records transferred
    in connection with the purchase and sale of debt, the business acquiring
    the information and seeking to introduce the information under the
    business records exception simply must show that the information it
    acquired became part of its own business record as part of the transac-
    tion in which the provider of the information had a business duty to
    transmit accurate information, as it is the providing business’ duty to
    report the information in the business context that provides the reliabil-
    ity to justify its admission under the business records exception; in the
    present case, the plaintiff did not introduce a document as a business
    record that was created by a third party to prove the debt owed on the
    note at the time it was assigned to the plaintiff but, rather, introduced
    its own record of the debt that incorporated an initial entry that S Co.
    had provided to the plaintiff in conjunction with the sale of the note,
    and, because S Co. had a business duty to report the amount due on
    the note to the plaintiff as part of the sale of the note and the plaintiff
    incorporated the amount due as provided by S Co. into its own business
    records, this was sufficient to establish that the exhibit setting forth
    the plaintiff’s calculation of debt owed on the note, including the initial
    entry that S Co. had provided, was admissible under the business records
    exception to the hearsay rule; moreover, although T could have disputed
    the accuracy of the initial entry by highlighting the fact that the plaintiff
    failed to introduce supplemental documentation or testimony indicating
    that the plaintiff had accurately recorded the amount of debt as provided
    by S Co. in the initial entry or by offering contradictory evidence as to
    the amount due in order to discredit the weight of that evidence, the
    trial court found that T had failed to do so.
    Argued September 24, 2019—officially released January 14, 2020
    Procedural History
    Action seeking, inter alia, to foreclose a mortgage,
    brought to the Superior Court in the judicial district
    of Middlesex, where the named defendant et al. were
    defaulted for failure to appear; thereafter, the action
    was withdrawn as to the defendant Joseph Tine; subse-
    quently, the case was tried to the court, Domnarski,
    J.; judgment of strict foreclosure, from which the defen-
    dant Jennifer Tine appealed to the Appellate Court;
    thereafter, the court, Domnarski, J., granted the plain-
    tiff’s motion for attorney’s fees, and the defendant Jen-
    nifer Tine filed an amended appeal with the Appellate
    Court, DiPentima, C. J., and Lavine and Eveleigh, Js.,
    which reversed the judgment of the trial court only as
    to the defendant Jennifer Tine and remanded the case
    for a new trial, and the plaintiff and the defendant Jenni-
    fer Tine, on the granting of certification, filed separate
    appeals with this court. Reversed in part; judgment
    directed.
    Richard P. Weinstein, with whom, on the brief, was
    Sarah Black Lingenheld, for the appellant in Docket
    No. SC 20188 and the appellee in Docket No. SC 20189
    (defendant Jennifer Tine).
    Houston Putnam Lowry, for the appellee in Docket
    No. SC 20188 and the appellant in Docket No. SC
    20189 (plaintiff).
    Opinion
    KAHN, J. The plaintiff, Jenzack Partners, LLC (Jen-
    zack), and the defendant1 Jennifer Tine (Tine) sepa-
    rately appeal from the judgment of the Appellate Court,
    which reversed the judgment of the trial court ordering
    strict foreclosure.2 See Jenzack Partners, LLC v. Stone-
    ridge Associates, LLC, 
    183 Conn. App. 128
    , 143, 
    192 A.3d 455
    (2018). These appeals require us to consider
    (1) whether an entity that was assigned a promissory
    note as well as a mortgage granted as collateral to
    secure a personal guarantee of that promissory note
    has standing to foreclose on the mortgage despite the
    fact that the guarantee was not explicitly assigned to
    the foreclosing party, and (2) whether an initial entry
    into a record of debt is admissible under the business
    records exception to the hearsay rule when that entry
    was provided by a third party in the course of the sale
    of the debt. As to the issue of standing, Tine claims that
    the Appellate Court incorrectly concluded that Jenzack
    had standing to foreclose a mortgage executed in sup-
    port of a personal guarantee of a promissory note given
    by a third party because Jenzack did not receive a
    written assignment of the personal guarantee. As to
    the issue of hearsay, Jenzack claims that an adequate
    foundation was laid for the entirety of the record of
    debt to be admitted into evidence (exhibit 22) pursuant
    to the business records exception even though the ini-
    tial entry was provided by a third party. Although we
    agree with the Appellate Court’s conclusion that Jen-
    zack had standing to foreclose the mortgage, we con-
    clude that the Appellate Court incorrectly determined
    that the business records exception did not apply to
    Jenzack’s calculation of the debt owed on the promis-
    sory note. Accordingly, we reverse in part the judgment
    of the Appellate Court.
    The Appellate Court set forth the following facts and
    procedural history. ‘‘On July 13, 2006 . . . Stoneridge
    Associates, LLC (Stoneridge), obtained a construction
    loan in the amount of $1,650,000 from a nonparty, Sover-
    eign Bank (Sovereign). At that time, Stoneridge exe-
    cuted a promissory note (Stoneridge note) evidencing
    its promise to repay the loan. The note was secured
    by various personal guarantees; Premier [Building &
    Development, Inc.], [Ronald] Gattinella, [Patrick T.]
    Snow and Joseph Tine each executed guarantees in
    favor of Sovereign guaranteeing repayment of the sums
    due under the note.’’ Jenzack Partners, LLC v. Stone-
    ridge Associates, 
    LLC, supra
    , 
    183 Conn. App. 131
    ; see
    footnote 1 of this opinion. ‘‘On December 23, 2008,
    the Stoneridge note was modified via a modification
    agreement. On the same date, [Tine] executed a limited
    guarantee in favor of Sovereign guaranteeing repayment
    of the sum due under the Stoneridge note as modified
    [(Tine guarantee)]. In order to secure their respective
    guarantees, [Tine] and Joseph Tine executed a mort-
    gage (Tine mortgage) in favor of Sovereign on their
    residential property . . . in Cromwell.3 [Tine’s] nonre-
    course guarantee limited her liability solely to her inter-
    est in the Cromwell property. On August 27, 2009, and
    May 6, 2010, [Tine] executed reaffirmations of her guar-
    antee in connection with subsequent modifications of
    the Stoneridge note.
    ‘‘On March 22, 2012, Sovereign assigned [the Tine]
    mortgage and interests in the Stoneridge note to [Jen-
    zack].’’ (Footnote in original.) Jenzack Partners, LLC
    v. Stoneridge Associates, 
    LLC, supra
    , 
    183 Conn. App. 131
    –32. ‘‘Specifically, Sovereign and [Jenzack] executed
    an allonge endorsing the Stoneridge note to [Jenzack]
    as the obligee of the note. The Tine mortgage was
    assigned to [Jenzack] through an ‘Assignment of Open-
    End Mortgage Deed.’ ’’ 
    Id., 132 n.3.
    ‘‘In August, 2012,
    [Jenzack] commenced this action, seeking, inter alia,
    to foreclose the Tine mortgage. In the operative revised
    complaint dated April 2, 2013, [Jenzack] alleged that,
    because Stoneridge had defaulted on the underlying
    Stoneridge note, [Jenzack] was entitled to declare the
    entire balance of the note due and payable. [Jenzack]
    alleged that Sovereign had assigned all of its interests
    in the Stoneridge note, including continuing guarantees
    executed by Premier, Gattinella, Snow, and Joseph
    Tine, the limited guarantee executed by [Tine], and
    the Tine mortgage. Because [Jenzack] was the current
    holder of the Stoneridge note, [Jenzack] claimed it was
    entitled to collect on all underlying guarantees and [to]
    foreclose the [Tine] mortgage. On April 26, 2013, [Tine]
    filed an answer that denied the substance of the com-
    plaint . . . .’’4 (Footnote omitted.) 
    Id., 132–33. ‘‘A
    bench trial was held on August 16, 2016. At trial,
    [Jenzack] claimed that the assignment of the Stoneridge
    note necessarily carried with it an assignment of all
    underlying guarantees, including [Tine’s] limited guar-
    antee secured by the Tine mortgage. [Jenzack] also
    introduced into evidence exhibit 22, a computation of
    the current amount due on the [Stoneridge] note. In
    response, [Tine] claimed that the court lacked subject
    matter jurisdiction to render a judgment of foreclosure
    against her because her guarantee was not specifically
    assigned to [Jenzack] in the allonge. [Tine] also claimed
    that [Jenzack] failed to establish the amount of debt
    due on the [Stoneridge] note because evidence of the
    computation of debt, which included a starting balance
    provided to [Jenzack] by Sovereign, was inadmissible
    hearsay.’’5 
    Id., 133. ‘‘On
    December 1, 2016, the trial court
    issued a memorandum of decision [and entered] an
    order of strict foreclosure on the Tine mortgage. The
    court held that [Jenzack] had standing to foreclose the
    [Tine] mortgage that secured the [Tine] guarantee and
    that [Jenzack] had established the amount of debt due
    on the [Stoneridge] note through the testimony of Wil-
    liam Buland, [Jenzack’s] authorized representative, and
    the computation of debt in exhibit 22.’’ 
    Id. Before the
    Appellate Court, Tine argued that ‘‘the trial
    court improperly (1) held that [Jenzack] had standing
    to foreclose the Tine mortgage [and] (2) determined
    that [Jenzack’s] exhibit 22 was sufficient to establish
    the amount due on the [Stoneridge] note . . . .’’6 
    Id. Although the
    Appellate Court agreed with the trial court
    that Jenzack had standing to foreclose the Tine mort-
    gage; 
    id., 139; it
    reversed the trial court’s decision on
    the admissibility of the record of debt owed on the
    Stoneridge note under the business records exception,
    concluding that the starting balance for the computa-
    tion of debt ‘‘was not calculated by [Jenzack], and,
    therefore, it was received, rather than made, in the
    ordinary course of business.’’ 
    Id., 143. On
    the basis of
    this conclusion, the Appellate Court held that the initial
    entry did not satisfy the requirements of the business
    records exception, and, therefore, the trial court could
    not properly determine the amount of debt. 
    Id., 142–43. The
    Appellate Court reversed the trial court’s judgment
    of strict foreclosure as to Tine and remanded the case
    for a new trial. 
    Id., 146. These
    certified appeals followed.
    See footnote 2 of this opinion.
    I
    STANDING
    Because the question of standing implicates subject
    matter jurisdiction, we first consider Tine’s claim in
    Docket No. SC 20188 that the Appellate Court improp-
    erly held that Jenzack had standing to foreclose the
    Tine mortgage. Tine claims that Jenzack does not have
    standing to foreclose the Tine mortgage because Sover-
    eign did not expressly assign the Tine guarantee to
    Jenzack in the allonge, and, therefore, Jenzack is not
    a party to the Tine guarantee.7 Although Tine correctly
    points out that the allonge did not explicitly incorporate
    or mention the Tine guarantee, we conclude that Jen-
    zack nonetheless had standing according to the lan-
    guage of the Tine guarantee.
    ‘‘[S]tanding is the legal right to set judicial machinery
    in motion. One cannot rightfully invoke the jurisdiction
    of the court unless he [or she] has, in an individual or
    representative capacity, some real interest in the cause
    of action, or a legal or equitable right, title or interest
    in the subject matter of the controversy.’’ (Internal quo-
    tation marks omitted.) Citibank, N.A. v. Lindland, 
    310 Conn. 147
    , 161, 
    75 A.3d 651
    (2013). ‘‘A determination
    regarding a trial court’s subject matter jurisdiction is a
    question of law. When . . . the trial court draws con-
    clusions of law, our review is plenary and we must
    decide whether its conclusions are legally and logically
    correct and find support in the facts that appear in
    the record.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Pond
    View, LLC v. Planning & Zoning Commission, 
    288 Conn. 143
    , 155, 
    953 A.2d 1
    (2008). ‘‘It is well established
    that, in determining whether a court has subject matter
    jurisdiction, every presumption favoring jurisdiction
    should be indulged.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) Financial Consulting, LLC v. Commissioner of
    Ins., 
    315 Conn. 196
    , 226, 
    105 A.3d 210
    (2014).
    ‘‘The language of the assignment . . . does not by
    itself govern our resolution of the issue. We also turn to
    the language of the guarantee.’’ D’Amato Investments,
    LLC v. Sutton, 
    117 Conn. App. 418
    , 422, 
    978 A.2d 1135
    (2009). Even though a guarantee is not explicitly
    assigned along with the underlying obligation it is ensur-
    ing, guarantors are ‘‘bound by the contractual provi-
    sions [in the guarantee] to which they agreed.’’ See,
    e.g., One Country, LLC v. Johnson, 
    137 Conn. App. 810
    ,
    820, 
    49 A.3d 1030
    (2012), aff’d, 
    314 Conn. 288
    , 
    101 A.3d 933
    (2014). Although the allonge expressly assigned
    only the Stoneridge note to Jenzack, the language of
    the Tine guarantee should be considered to determine
    whether the parties to the guarantee—Tine and Sover-
    eign—intended the guarantee to follow the Stoneridge
    note. See Hudson United Bank v. Endeavor Group, 
    96 Conn. App. 447
    , 452, 
    901 A.2d 64
    (2006) (‘‘[i]n interpre-
    ting the intention of the parties to the guarantee, the
    referee was entitled to rely on, inter alia, the language of
    the guarantee’’); see also One Country, LLC v. 
    Johnson, supra
    , 816 (‘‘[a] guarantee, similar to a suretyship, is a
    contract, in which a party, sometimes referred to as a
    secondary obligor, contracts to fulfill an obligation
    upon the default of the principal obligor’’ [internal quo-
    tation marks omitted]); cf. Friezo v. Friezo, 
    281 Conn. 166
    , 199, 
    914 A.2d 533
    (2007) (‘‘[c]ontracting parties are
    normally bound by their agreements . . . irrespective
    of whether the agreements embodied reasonable or
    good bargains’’ [internal quotation marks omitted]).
    This court has stated that, where the guarantee of a
    note is unconditional or absolute, ‘‘default of the maker
    or endorser to pay the note promptly . . . [causes] the
    guarantor [to] become liable to the holder, and the
    relation of debtor and creditor was at once established
    between the guarantor and the holder of the note.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Perry v. Cohen, 
    126 Conn. 457
    , 459, 
    11 A.2d 804
    (1940).
    Although this court has not addressed this exact issue
    of the interpretation of a guarantee that was not explic-
    itly assigned to a subsequent party seeking to enforce
    the guarantee, we are persuaded by the Appellate
    Court’s reasoning in applying the foregoing principles.
    In Hudson United Bank, the defendant executed a
    promissory note and continuous loan guaranty in 1995,
    in favor of a third-party bank. Hudson United Bank v.
    Endeavor 
    Group, supra
    , 
    96 Conn. App. 449
    . The third-
    party bank then merged with a second third-party bank
    before being consolidated with the plaintiff bank. 
    Id., 449–50. In
    1998, the plaintiff bank provided a loan to
    the defendant, and the defendant executed a promis-
    sory note in favor of the plaintiff bank; a portion of the
    loan was used to pay off the 1995 loan. 
    Id. The defendant
    then defaulted on the 1998 loan. 
    Id., 450. The
    plaintiff
    bank sought to collect from the defendant under the
    1995 continuous guarantee, and the defendant objected
    on the ground that he was liable under the 1995 guaran-
    tee only to the first bank and not to subsequent issuers
    of promissory notes, including the plaintiff bank. 
    Id. The Appellate
    Court concluded that, ‘‘[i]n interpreting
    the intention of the parties to the guarantee, the [trial
    court] was entitled to rely on, inter alia, the language of
    the guarantee.’’ 
    Id., 452. In
    that case, the 1995 guarantee
    explicitly provided that the borrower guaranteed pay-
    ment of ‘‘any and every obligation and liability of [the
    borrower] to [the original third-party bank] of whatso-
    ever nature and howsoever evidenced, whether now
    existing or hereafter incurred . . . .’’ (Emphasis in
    original; internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id. In addi-
    tion, it stated that ‘‘[t]his guarant[ee] shall inure to the
    benefit of the [original third-party bank], its successors,
    legal representatives, and assigns.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) 
    Id., 453. On
    the basis of this language,
    the court concluded that ‘‘the guarantee clearly pro-
    vides that its benefit would continue to any and all
    successors of [the original third-party bank], including
    [the second third-party bank] and the [plaintiff
    bank].’’ 
    Id. Similarly, in
    D’Amato Investments, LLC, a third-party
    corporation entered into a commercial lease with third-
    party property owners, and the defendant, who was
    the president of the third-party corporation, executed
    a personal guarantee of the lessee’s obligation thereun-
    der. D’Amato Investments, LLC v. 
    Sutton, supra
    , 
    117 Conn. App. 420
    . The third-party property owners
    assigned the lease to the plaintiff, and, subsequently,
    the defendant’s employment with the third-party corpo-
    ration was terminated. 
    Id. The third-party
    corporation
    failed to consistently pay rent and related fees before
    finally being evicted, and the plaintiff brought an action
    against the defendant to enforce the guarantee and to
    recover the amounts owed by the third-party corpora-
    tion. 
    Id., 420–21. ‘‘The
    defendant claim[ed] that the
    plaintiff lack[ed] standing to enforce the guarantee
    because the plaintiff [was] not a party to the guarantee.
    The defendant argu[ed] that although the lease was
    assigned from [the third-party property owners] to the
    plaintiff, the guaranty itself was never assigned to the
    plaintiff.’’ 
    Id., 421–22. The
    Appellate Court concluded
    that the assignment of the lease ‘‘did not explicitly incor-
    porate or mention the guarantee signed by the defen-
    dant. The language of the assignment, however, [did]
    not by itself govern [the court’s] resolution of the issue.
    [The court] also turn[ed] to the language of the guaran-
    tee.’’ 
    Id., 422. In
    that case, the guarantee provided that
    ‘‘[t]he undersigned guarantees to Landlord, Landlord’s
    successors and assigns, the full performance and obser-
    vance of all covenants, conditions and agreements
    . . . .’’ (Emphasis in original; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) 
    Id. In light
    of this language, the court rejected
    the defendant’s claim that the assignee lacked standing
    to enforce the personal guarantee. 
    Id., 423. In
    the present case, Sovereign did not explicitly
    assign the Tine guarantee to Jenzack, so we turn to the
    language of the Tine guarantee, titled ‘‘Limited Guaranty
    Agreement,’’ to determine the intention of Sovereign
    and Tine when the guarantee was executed.8 The Tine
    guarantee provides in relevant part:
    ‘‘The undersigned, JENNIFER J. TINE . . . (herein-
    after referred to as ‘Guarantor’) is executing this Contin-
    uing Guaranty Agreement to induce SOVEREIGN BANK
    (‘Lender’) to amend a construction loan in the amount of
    $1,650,000 (the ‘Loan’) to STONERIDGE ASSOCIATES,
    LLC (‘Borrower’) made pursuant to a commitment letter
    dated July 13, 2006 (‘Commitment’). The Loan is evi-
    denced by a Promissory Note (‘Note’) in the above
    amount . . . .’’ The Tine guarantee further provided:
    ‘‘1. Payment and Performance. Guarantor does hereby
    fully guarantee to Lender that Borrower shall make due
    and punctual payment of the principal of the Note and
    the interest thereon . . . . If Borrower shall at any
    time fail to make any such payments or performance,
    then . . . Guarantor shall make such payment or pay-
    ments to Lender, this Guaranty being a guaranty of
    payment and not of collection . . . .
    ***
    ‘‘14. Bind and Inure. The provisions of this Guaranty
    . . . shall bind and inure to the benefit of the parties
    hereto and their heirs, successors and assigns . . .
    the word ‘Lender’ as used herein shall mean not only
    the original Lender named in the first paragraph of
    this Guaranty, but also all future holders of the Note
    and Loan Documents . . . .’’ (Emphasis added.)
    When read in its entirety, the Tine guarantee clearly
    provides that its benefit would continue to any and all
    future holders of the Stoneridge note, which includes
    Jenzack. Under these circumstances, the assignment of
    the Stoneridge note operated as an assignment of the
    Tine guarantee because the explicit language included
    in the Tine guarantee indicates that it was the intention
    of Sovereign and—more importantly—Tine that the
    guarantee would follow the Stoneridge note to future
    note holders. As it is uncontested that Jenzack owns
    the Stoneridge note, Jenzack has standing to foreclose
    the Tine mortgage.9 See Brentwood Scottsdale, LLC v.
    Smith, Docket No. 1 CA-CV 14-0067, 
    2015 WL 728364
    ,
    *2 (Ariz. App. February 19, 2015) (adopting general rule
    of law; see Restatement [Third], Suretyship & Guaranty
    § 13 [5], pp. 65–66 [1996]; but relying on language of
    personal guarantee as further evidence that assignment
    of note operated as assignment of guarantee).
    II
    We next consider Jenzack’s claim in its appeal in
    Docket No. SC 20189 that the Appellate Court incor-
    rectly held that the initial entry in Jenzack’s calculation
    of debt owed on the Stoneridge note as shown on
    exhibit 22 was not admissible pursuant to General Stat-
    utes § 52-180,10 colloquially referred to as the business
    records exception to the hearsay rule and that, without
    that initial entry, Jenzack was not able to establish the
    amount owed on the Sovereign note.11 We conclude that
    the entirety of Jenzack’s record of debt owed on the
    Sovereign note was admissible under the business
    records exception.
    ‘‘To the extent [that admissibility] of evidence is
    based on an interpretation of the Code of Evidence,
    our standard of review is plenary. For example, whether
    a challenged statement properly may be classified as
    hearsay . . . [is a] legal [question] demanding plenary
    review.’’ State v. Saucier, 
    283 Conn. 207
    , 218, 
    926 A.2d 633
    (2007); see also New England Savings Bank v.
    Bedford Realty Corp., 
    246 Conn. 594
    , 599 n.7, 
    717 A.2d 713
    (1998) (Bedford II) (‘‘[b]ecause we review the trial
    court’s interpretation of the statute, and the statute’s
    applicability to the proffered documents, our review
    is plenary’’).
    In the present case—unlike in previous cases before
    this court—Jenzack did not attempt to introduce a doc-
    ument as a business record that was created by a third
    party, Sovereign, to prove the debt owed on the Stone-
    ridge note at the time it was assigned to Jenzack.
    Instead, Jenzack introduced its own record of the debt
    owed on the Stoneridge note that incorporated an initial
    entry that Sovereign had provided to Jenzack in con-
    junction with the sale of the note. Jenzack offered this
    document as its business record of the debt owed on
    the note. Jenzack, however, did not offer into evidence
    documentation or witness testimony regarding the ini-
    tial figure in the form it was actually received from
    Sovereign. Tine claims that the statement of the initial
    debt as contained in exhibit 22 is hearsay without docu-
    mentation or testimony evidencing that Jenzack accu-
    rately recorded the amount of the debt provided by
    Sovereign. See footnote 5 of this opinion. This is an
    issue of first impression for this court. See Bedford 
    II, supra
    , 
    246 Conn. 607
    (‘‘[i]f we had not decided in . . .
    this opinion that [the] exhibit was admissible, we would
    be required to determine whether a record created by
    a subsequent holder of a note, based on an initial figure
    from a failed bank’s account books not in evidence,
    could be admitted as a business record of the second
    entity’’); cf. New England Savings Bank v. Bedford
    Realty Corp., 
    238 Conn. 745
    , 757–58, 
    680 A.2d 301
    (1996)
    (Bedford I) (holding that witness testimony as to
    amount of debt was inadmissible when witness did not
    have personal knowledge of debt or produce documen-
    tation evidencing amount of debt, but noting that ‘‘[the
    witness’] testimony [was not offered] for the limited
    purpose of laying a foundation for the entry of the
    documents into evidence, but, rather, as evidence of
    the debt’’).
    ‘‘The initial rationale for the [business records] excep-
    tion was that, although hearsay, business records [are]
    trustworthy because their creators had relied on the
    records for business purposes.’’ Bedford 
    II, supra
    , 
    246 Conn. 600
    . Because of the trustworthiness of business
    records, § 52-180 ‘‘ ‘should be liberally interpreted’ in
    favor of admissibility.’’ 
    Id., 603; see
    also Bell Food Ser-
    vices, Inc. v. Sherbacow, 
    217 Conn. 476
    , 485, 
    586 A.2d 1157
    (1991). Section 52-180 (b) provides that a record
    ‘‘shall not be rendered inadmissible by (1) a party’s
    failure to produce as witnesses the person or persons
    who made the writing or record, or who have personal
    knowledge of the act, transaction, occurrence or event
    recorded or (2) the party’s failure to show that such
    persons are unavailable as witnesses. Either of such
    facts and all other circumstances of the making of the
    writing or record, including lack of personal knowledge
    by the entrant or maker, may be shown to affect the
    weight of the evidence, but not to affect its admissibil-
    ity.’’ As such, we have held that the ‘‘witness introducing
    the document need not have made the entry himself or
    herself . . . [or] have been employed by the organiza-
    tion during the relevant time period. . . . In addition,
    [t]here is no requirement in § 52-180 . . . that the docu-
    ments must be prepared by the organization itself to
    be admissible as that organization’s business records.’’
    (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Bedford 
    II, supra
    , 603. Furthermore, ‘‘[t]he proponent
    need not prove the accuracy of the record; its weight
    is an issue for the trier of fact.’’ 
    Id., 602. When
    a party introduces a document that it did not
    create but that it received from a third party, the busi-
    ness records exception will apply only if the information
    contained in the document is ‘‘based on the entrant’s
    own observation or on information of others whose
    business duty it was to transmit it to the entrant.’’ (Inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) River Dock & Pile, Inc.
    v. O & G Industries, Inc., 
    219 Conn. 787
    , 794, 
    595 A.2d 839
    (1991). ‘‘Where the prior owner of the note had a
    legitimate business duty to provide to the next holder
    the information used to generate the payment history,
    the printout of that information was the business record
    of the present holder.’’ Premier Capital, Inc. v. Gross-
    man, Docket No. CV-XX-XXXXXXX-S, 
    2000 WL 1838695
    ,
    *4 (Conn. Super. November 22, 2000) (citing SKW Real
    Estate Ltd. Partnership v. Gallicchio, 
    49 Conn. App. 563
    , 577, 
    716 A.2d 903
    , cert. denied, 
    247 Conn. 926
    , 
    719 A.2d 1169
    [1998]), rev’d in part on other grounds, 
    68 Conn. App. 51
    , 52, 
    789 A.2d 565
    (2002); see also Bedford
    
    II, supra
    , 
    246 Conn. 603
    (‘‘ ‘[t]here is no requirement in
    § 52-180 . . . that the documents must be prepared by
    the organization itself to be admissible as that organiza-
    tion’s business records’ ’’). If part of the data was pro-
    vided by another business, as is often the case with
    loan records in connection with the purchase and sale
    of debt, the proponent does not have to lay a foundation
    concerning the preparation of the data it acquired but
    must simply show that these data became part of its
    own business record as part of a transaction in which
    the provider had a business duty to transmit accurate
    information. See Premier Capital, Inc. v. 
    Grossman, supra
    , *5, citing Bedford 
    II, supra
    , 604.
    This court’s precedents regarding the admission of
    business records that include information received
    from third parties have only involved instances in which
    documentation from the third party was offered into
    evidence as a business record of the offering party. As
    previously noted, Jenzack did not offer documentation
    from Sovereign as evidence of the initial entry into
    Jenzack’s record of debt owed on the Stoneridge note.
    Tine claims that, without supporting documentation or
    testimony from Sovereign to attest to its accuracy, the
    initial entry is not part of Jenzack’s business record.
    We conclude, however, that—regardless of whether
    supporting documentation or testimony from the third
    party is offered—it is the third party’s ‘‘duty to report
    [the information] in a business context which provides
    the reliability to justify [the business records exception
    to the hearsay rule].’’ State v. Milner, 
    206 Conn. 512
    ,
    521, 
    539 A.2d 80
    (1988); see D’Amato v. Johnston, 
    140 Conn. 54
    , 59, 
    97 A.2d 893
    (1953); see also U.S. Bank
    Trust, N.A. v. Jones, 
    925 F.3d 534
    , 538 (1st Cir. 2019)
    (‘‘[t]he key question is whether the records in question
    are reliable enough to be admissible’’ [internal quotation
    marks omitted]). This reliability is further strengthened,
    in our view, when the entity receiving the information
    from a third party, with a business duty to report it,
    subsequently integrates that information into the enti-
    ty’s own business records and has a ‘‘self-interest in
    [ensuring] the accuracy of the outside information
    . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) U.S. Bank
    Trust, N.A. v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 538; see also Federal
    Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Carabetta, 
    55 Conn. App. 369
    , 394,
    
    739 A.2d 301
    , cert. denied, 
    251 Conn. 927
    , 
    742 A.2d 362
    (1999). By relying on information from a third party,
    an entity stakes not only its livelihood on the accuracy
    of the information received but also its reputation as
    being a trustworthy entity with which to do business
    in the future. See generally U.S. Bank Trust, N.A. v.
    
    Jones, supra
    , 538–39.
    Furthermore, a business record is admissible if the
    information therein is reliable, which, in the case of
    information provided by a third party, is established by
    the third party’s business duty to report the information.
    ‘‘[T]here is no requirement that the accuracy of a busi-
    ness record be proved as a prerequisite to its admis-
    sion.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Federal
    Deposit Ins. Corp. v. 
    Carabetta, supra
    , 
    55 Conn. App. 375
    . In addition, once a reliable business record is
    admitted, there is no presumption that it is accurate,
    and ‘‘the circumstances of the making of the [record]
    may be shown to affect the weight of that evidence,’’
    as its ‘‘credibility [remains] a question for the trier of
    fact.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id.; see also
    State v. Ward, 
    172 Conn. 163
    , 170, 
    374 A.2d 168
    (1976).
    A defendant is free to undertake discovery concerning
    the accuracy of the information in a business record
    as well as to introduce or cross-examine witnesses
    about its accuracy. Any contention that the information
    might be inaccurate or lack veracity, therefore, ‘‘goes
    to the weight of the document, not its admissibility.’’
    Webster Bank v. Flanagan, 
    51 Conn. App. 733
    , 748,
    
    725 A.2d 975
    (1999); see also Bedford 
    II, supra
    , 
    246 Conn. 602
    .
    The First Circuit Court of Appeals recently issued a
    decision with facts similar to those at issue in the pres-
    ent case. We find that court’s analysis persuasive. In
    that case, the bank ‘‘sought to establish the total amount
    owed on the loan account by introducing a computer
    printout [maintained by the current loan servicer of the
    borrower’s account] that contained an account sum-
    mary and a list of transactions related to the loan.’’ U.S.
    Bank Trust, N.A. v. 
    Jones, supra
    , 
    925 F.3d 536
    . Similar
    to Jenzack’s record of debt in the present case, the
    record in Jones included ‘‘prior entries [that] were cre-
    ated by two other loan servicers . . . and were inte-
    grated into [the current loan processor’s] database
    when [the current loan processor] succeeded them as
    servicer.’’ 
    Id., 537. Noting
    that ‘‘there is no categorical
    rule barring the admission of integrated business
    records under [the business records exception] based
    only on the testimony from a representative of the suc-
    cessor business,’’ the First Circuit relied on the fact
    that the previous loan processors had a business duty
    to report the amount due on the loan to the current
    loan processor, and the current loan processor placed
    ‘‘its own financial interest at stake by relying on’’ the
    records. 
    Id., 537–38. Furthermore,
    the court noted that
    the borrower ‘‘did not dispute the transaction history
    by claiming overbilling or unrecorded payments, as she
    surely could have done if the records were inaccurate.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 538. On
    the
    basis of these circumstances, the First Circuit held that
    the computer printout evidencing the amount owed on
    the borrower’s loan was admissible under the federal
    business records exception to the hearsay rule. 
    Id., 539–40. In
    the present case, the trial court credited the testi-
    mony of Buland that ‘‘Sovereign had attested to the
    balance due on the note as part of the transaction
    between Sovereign and [Jenzack].’’ Thus, Sovereign had
    a business duty to report the amount due on the Stoner-
    idge note to Jenzack as part of the sale of the debt;
    Sovereign was not merely volunteering the information.
    See State v. 
    Milner, supra
    , 
    206 Conn. 520
    –21 (holding
    that one page police report detailing contents of tele-
    phone call was inadmissible as business record when
    caller was anonymous and had no duty to report). In
    addition, the trial court noted that ‘‘[Buland] relied upon
    data provided by Sovereign to establish the outstanding
    principal balance and accrued interest on the note as
    of January 17, 2012—the starting date of [Jenzack’s]
    computation,’’ as evidenced by exhibit 22. Jenzack
    incorporated the amount due on the Stoneridge note
    provided by Sovereign into its business records and
    then calculated the accumulating debt from that point
    forward by applying its own interest rate, thereby plac-
    ing its own financial interest at stake by relying on
    that information. This is sufficient to establish that the
    entirety of Jenzack’s record of debt owed on the Stoner-
    idge note—including the initial entry—was admissible
    as a business record.
    At that point, Tine could have disputed the accuracy
    of the initial entry of Jenzack’s business record by high-
    lighting the lack of supplemental documentation or
    offering contradictory evidence as to the amount due
    on the note, thereby discrediting the weight of the evi-
    dence in the eyes of the trier of fact. The trial court
    found that ‘‘[n]one of the defendants presented any
    testimony or evidence that contradicted [the] figures’’
    in Jenzack’s business record, including the initial entry,
    as Tine surely could have done if the records were
    inaccurate.12 See U.S. Bank Trust, N.A. v. 
    Jones, supra
    ,
    
    925 F.3d 538
    .
    The judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed with
    respect to the admissibility of the entry regarding the
    amount owed on the Stoneridge note under the business
    records exception to the hearsay rule and the case is
    remanded to that court with direction to render judg-
    ment affirming the judgment of the trial court; the judg-
    ment of the Appellate Court is affirmed in all other
    respects.
    In this opinion the other justices concurred.
    * This case originally was scheduled to be argued before a panel of this
    court consisting of Chief Justice Robinson and Justices Palmer, McDonald,
    D’Auria, Mullins, Kahn and Ecker. Although Chief Justice Robinson and
    Justice Kahn were not present at oral argument, they have read the briefs
    and appendices, and have listened to a recording of oral argument prior to
    participating in this decision.
    1
    Stoneridge Associates, LLC, Premier Building & Development, Inc., Ron-
    ald Gattinella, Joseph Tine, Patrick T. Snow, and Webster Bank were also
    named as defendants. With the exception of Tine and Joseph Tine, all
    defendants were defaulted for failure to appear or to plead. During the
    pendency of the foreclosure action, Joseph Tine, Tine’s former husband,
    filed a bankruptcy petition, and the claims against him were subsequently
    discharged. For the purposes of this opinion, any reference to the defendant
    or Tine is to Jennifer Tine only. See Jenzack Partners, LLC v. Stoneridge
    Associates, LLC, 
    183 Conn. App. 128
    , 131 n.1, 
    192 A.3d 455
    (2018).
    2
    In Docket No. SC 20188, this court granted Tine’s petition for certification
    to appeal, limited to the following issue: ‘‘Did the Appellate Court properly
    conclude that [Jenzack] had standing to foreclose the Tine mortgage because
    Sovereign Bank had assigned the Stoneridge note to [Jenzack], even though
    Sovereign Bank did not assign the Tine guarantee, for which the Tine mort-
    gage was collateral, to [Jenzack]?’’ Jenzack Partners, LLC v. Stoneridge
    Associates, LLC, 
    330 Conn. 921
    , 
    193 A.3d 1213
    (2018).
    In Docket No. SC 20189, this court granted Jenzack’s petition for certifica-
    tion to appeal, limited to the following issue: ‘‘Did the Appellate Court
    properly conclude that exhibit 22 was not admissible under the business
    records exception?’’ Jenzack Partners, LLC v. Stoneridge Associates, LLC,
    
    330 Conn. 922
    , 
    194 A.3d 288
    (2018).
    The two appeals were not consolidated; the parties submitted separate
    briefs, and the appeals were not heard together before this court. We resolve
    the appeals, however, in the same decision, as they share the same facts
    and procedural history.
    3
    ‘‘The Tine mortgage was recorded in the Cromwell land records on
    January 7, 2009. When [Tine] executed her limited guarantee, she and Joseph
    Tine were joint owners of the Cromwell property. Joseph Tine subsequently
    transferred his interest in the property to [Tine] in connection with his
    bankruptcy proceedings. At the time of the foreclosure judgment, [Tine]
    was the sole owner of the Cromwell property.’’ Jenzack Partners, LLC v.
    Stoneridge Associates, 
    LLC, supra
    , 
    183 Conn. App. 132
    n.2.
    4
    The answer also asserted, as special defenses, lack of consideration,
    unclean hands, and equitable estoppel, none of which is at issue in this
    appeal.
    5
    Tine concedes that the portion of exhibit 22 reflecting interest accrual,
    payments, or other transactions that occurred after Jenzack acquired the
    Stoneridge note was properly admitted under the business records excep-
    tion. See Jenzack Partners, LLC v. Stoneridge Associates, 
    LLC, supra
    , 
    183 Conn. App. 139
    n.7.
    6
    Tine also argued that the trial court improperly awarded Jenzack attor-
    ney’s fees and expenses, but that issue is not before this court in this appeal.
    See Jenzack Partners, LLC v. Stoneridge Associates, 
    LLC, supra
    , 183 Conn.
    App. 144–45.
    7
    The allonge, dated March 22, 2012, provides in its entirety:
    ‘‘Allonge to that certain Promissory Note, as modified, dated July 13, 2006
    in the original principal amount of One Million Six Hundred Fifty Thousand
    and 00/100 ($1,650,000.00) Dollars given by Stoneridge Associates, LLC (the
    ‘‘ ‘Borrower’ ’’) to Sovereign Bank, N.A., f/k/a Sovereign Bank (‘‘ ‘Bank’ ’’).
    ‘‘Pay to the order of Jenzack Partners, LLC, a Maryland Limited Liability
    Company. This Allonge and endorsement is made without recourse and
    without any representation or warranty, express or implied, by operation
    of law or otherwise, including but not limited to any warranty under [New
    Jersey Statutes Annotated §] 12A:3-416 (a).’’
    Jenzack also argues that it is the holder of the guarantee due to its
    assignment in fact, or equitable assignment, by Sovereign. Tine argues,
    however, that Jenzack did not plead an alternative form of assignment of
    the Tine guarantee. We resolve the issue of standing on other grounds and,
    therefore, make no conclusions as to whether Jenzack’s claim of standing
    could have been resolved on any grounds other than those expressed in
    this opinion.
    8
    We observe that Jenzack physically possesses the Tine guarantee and
    entered it as a full exhibit in the trial court without objection.
    9
    Jenzack argues that this court should adopt § 13 of the Restatement
    (Third) of Suretyship and Guaranty in determining whether Jenzack has
    standing to foreclose the Tine mortgage. See Restatement (Third), Surety-
    ship & Guaranty § 13 (5), p. 66 (1996) (‘‘an assignment by the obligee of its
    rights against the principal obligor arising out of the underlying obligation
    operates as an assignment of the obligee’s rights against the secondary
    obligor arising out of the secondary obligation,’’ except ‘‘as otherwise agreed
    to or provided in subsection [1]).’’ That subsection is based on the premise
    that ‘‘[a] secondary obligation, like a security interest, has value only as an
    adjunct to an underlying obligation.’’ 
    Id., comment (f),
    p. 68. Tine argues
    that we should explicitly reject this Restatement provision. This court has
    recognized that ‘‘guarantors are not obligated on a mortgage because they
    have a separate and distinct contractual obligation from the promissory
    note and mortgage under their guarantee.’’ JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A. v.
    Winthrop Properties, LLC, 
    312 Conn. 662
    , 673, 
    94 A.3d 622
    (2014). Although
    we recognize that a note and a guarantee are separate and distinct obliga-
    tions, the parties in the present case agreed to contractual language that
    tied the Tine guarantee to the Stoneridge note, and those two obligations
    remained connected regardless of the present owner of the Stoneridge note.
    Under these circumstances, we leave the question of whether to adopt § 13
    of the Restatement (Third) for another day.
    10
    General Statutes § 52-180 provides in relevant part: ‘‘(a) Any writing or
    record, whether in the form of an entry in a book or otherwise, made as a
    memorandum or record of any act, transaction, occurrence or event, shall
    be admissible as evidence of the act, transaction, occurrence or event, if
    the trial judge finds that it was made in the regular course of any business,
    and that it was the regular course of the business to make the writing or
    record at the time of the act, transaction, occurrence or event or within a
    reasonable time thereafter.
    ‘‘(b) The writing or record shall not be rendered inadmissible by (1) a
    party’s failure to produce as witnesses the person or persons who made the
    writing or record, or who have personal knowledge of the act, transaction,
    occurrence or event recorded or (2) the party’s failure to show that such
    persons are unavailable as witnesses. Either of such facts and all other
    circumstances of the making of the writing or record, including lack of
    personal knowledge by the entrant or maker, may be shown to affect the
    weight of the evidence, but not to affect its admissibility. . . .’’
    Section 8-4 of the Connecticut Code of Evidence quotes § 52-180; we refer
    to § 52-180 throughout this opinion.
    11
    For a business record to be admissible, ‘‘[t]he court must determine
    . . . that the record was made in the regular course of business, that it was
    the regular course of such business to make such a record, and that it was
    made at the time of the act described in the report, or within a reasonable
    time thereafter.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) New England Savings
    Bank v. Bedford Realty Corp., 
    246 Conn. 594
    , 602, 
    717 A.2d 713
    (1998). Tine
    does not challenge any individual element of this requirement but, rather,
    argues that it is not appropriate to reach this analysis because Jenzack did
    not provide evidence establishing the accuracy of the initial entry.
    12
    Tine claimed that she did not have any information regarding the pay-
    ment history on the Stoneridge note because she had nothing to do with
    Stoneridge and Joseph Tine was not obligated to keep her apprised of when
    he made payments under the terms of their divorce decree. As a result, she
    was unable to evaluate whether the purported balance stated by Jenzack
    appeared to be accurate. Regardless of whether Tine had knowledge of the
    ongoing transactions between Stoneridge and Sovereign, the Tine guarantee
    included a disclaimer that she ‘‘assume[d] all responsibility for being and
    keeping herself informed of [Stoneridge’s] financial condition and assets,
    and of all other circumstances bearing upon the risk of nonpayment of the
    [Stoneridge] [n]ote or any other indebtedness of [Stoneridge] to [Sovereign]
    and the nature, scope, and extent of the risks which [Tine] assume[d] and
    incur[red] [under the Tine guarantee], and agree[d] that [Sovereign] shall
    have no duty to advise [Tine] of information known to it regarding such
    circumstances or risk.’’
    

Document Info

Docket Number: SC20188, SC20189

Filed Date: 1/14/2020

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/13/2020