Avery v. Medina , 174 Conn. App. 507 ( 2017 )


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  •      JOHN AVERY ET AL. v. LUIS MEDINA ET AL.
    (AC 38689)
    Lavine, Alvord and Beach, Js.
    Syllabus
    The plaintiff landowners brought this action seeking, inter alia, a temporary
    and permanent injunction requiring the defendant landowners, A and
    L, to cease construction of a pole barn and a stone wall on certain of
    their real property. The trial court subsequently rendered judgment
    denying in part the plaintiffs’ request for injunctive relief. The plaintiffs
    appealed to this court, claiming, in part, that the trial court improperly
    found that the stone wall was not a prohibited permanent structure
    pursuant to a restrictive covenant in the defendants’ deed. This court
    agreed with the plaintiffs and reversed the judgment only as to the trial
    court’s finding that the defendants’ construction of the stone wall did
    not violate the restrictive covenant prohibiting the erection of permanent
    structures within a 100 foot setback area. Subsequently, the trial court,
    pursuant to direction from this court, rendered judgment for the plain-
    tiffs on their request for injunctive relief requiring the defendants to
    remove all portions of the stone wall that were within the 100 foot
    setback area. In 2014, the plaintiffs filed a motion for contempt, which
    the trial court granted, finding that the defendants had failed to comply
    with its prior orders by failing to remove all portions of the stone wall
    within the setback. Although the defendants did subsequently remove
    the stone wall, the plaintiffs filed another motion for contempt in 2015,
    claiming, in part, that the defendants had erected another stone wall in
    the setback area. The trial court granted in part the plaintiffs’ motion
    for contempt, finding, in relevant part, that L was in contempt as to the
    stone wall, and ordering L to remove the stone wall and to pay $1500
    in attorney’s fees to the plaintiffs. On the defendants’ appeal to this
    court, held:
    1. The defendants could not prevail on their claim that, in granting the
    plaintiffs’ 2015 motion for contempt, the trial court impermissibly modi-
    fied the substantive terms of its judgment by converting a mandatory
    injunction into a prohibitive injunction that forbade any structure from
    being constructed in the setback, not just a permanent structure, which
    is prohibited by the language of the restrictive covenant; the trial court
    did not impermissibly alter the terms or the nature of the injunction,
    but merely ordered the defendants to remove stones that they had placed
    in the setback area after they had removed the stone wall, which the
    court did to effectuate its original judgment, and although the stones
    were not permanently affixed to the land and were lower in height than
    the original stone wall, they nevertheless formed a prohibited permanent
    structure because they were intended to remain permanently in their
    present location to keep trespassers out.
    2. The defendants’ claim to the contrary notwithstanding, this court’s judg-
    ment in the prior appeal and the subsequent order of the trial court
    requiring the defendants to remove all portions of the stone wall within
    the 100 foot setback, which was prohibited by the clear language of the
    restrictive covenant in the deed, were clear and unambiguous, and, thus,
    sufficient to support the contempt finding, and the stones within the
    setback constituted a permanent structure that violated the restrictive
    covenant in the defendants’ deed.
    3. The defendants’ claim that the trial court’s contempt finding deprived
    them of a fundamental property right was unavailing; that court did not
    deprive the defendants of their entire interest in their real property, as
    the court did not convey the defendants’ interest in their land, but merely
    sanctioned the defendants for disobeying the judgment to remove the
    stone wall in the setback, and the court granted the plaintiffs’ 2015
    motion for contempt in order to vindicate its prior judgment ordering
    the defendants to remove the stone wall within the setback, which
    was rendered pursuant to the restrictive covenant in the deed that the
    defendants had voluntarily signed.
    The defendants’ claim that the trial court abused its discretion by awarding
    the plaintiffs $1500 in attorney’s fees was not reviewable, the defendants
    having failed to preserve the claim at the contempt hearing by failing
    to object to the plaintiffs’ request for an additional $1500 in attorney’s
    fees, or to seek to have the plaintiffs present evidence in support of
    their request for attorney’s fees.
    Argued February 14—officially released July 11, 2017
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of
    Litchfield, Pickard, J.)
    Procedural History
    Action for, inter alia, a temporary and permanent
    injunction requiring the defendants to cease construc-
    tion of a stone wall on certain of their real property,
    and for other relief, brought to the Superior Court in
    the judicial district of Litchfield and tried to the court,
    Pickard, J.; judgment denying in part the plaintiffs’
    request for injunctive relief; thereafter, the plaintiffs
    appealed to this court, which reversed in part the judg-
    ment of the trial court, and remanded the case with
    direction to render judgment in part for the plaintiffs;
    subsequently, the court, Pickard, J., granted the plain-
    tiffs’ motion for contempt; thereafter, the court, Pick-
    ard, J., granted in part the plaintiffs’ motion for
    contempt, and the defendants appealed to this court.
    Affirmed.
    Luis A. Medina, self-represented, with whom was
    Richard R. Lavieri, for the appellants (defendants).
    Shelley E. Harms, with whom was David Torrey, for
    the appellees (plaintiffs).
    Opinion
    LAVINE, J. This dispute between the parties, which
    returns to this court for the third time, concerns the
    enforcement of a restrictive covenant in the deed to
    real property in Norfolk that is owned by the defen-
    dants, Luis Medina and Amanda Medina. The defen-
    dants appeal from the judgment of the trial court finding
    Luis Medina in contempt of the judgment rendered pur-
    suant to Avery v. Medina, 
    151 Conn. App. 433
    , 
    94 A.3d 1241
     (2014) (Avery I). On appeal, the defendants claim
    that the court improperly (1) modified the Avery I judg-
    ment by transforming a mandatory injunction into a
    prohibitive injunction, (2) exceeded its equitable pow-
    ers, (3) denied them a fundamental right, and (4)
    awarded the plaintiffs attorney’s fees for which there
    was no evidence. We affirm the judgment of the trial
    court.
    The relationship among the parties and the underly-
    ing history of their ongoing dispute is set forth in detail
    in Avery I. 
    Id.,
     435–40. The following facts are relevant
    to the present appeal. In April, 2003, David Torrey, the
    defendants, and the plaintiffs, John Avery, Elisabeth
    Avery, and Shelley Harms (collectively, co-owners),
    purchased 55.72 acres of land in Norfolk.1 
    Id.,
     435–36.
    The co-owners agreed in writing to subdivide the 55.72
    acres into two four acre building lots and one approxi-
    mately 47 acre lot, which was to be conveyed to the
    Norfolk Land Trust, Inc. 
    Id.,
     436–37. John Avery and
    Elisabeth Avery received one of the four acre lots
    (Avery lot) and the defendants received the other four
    acre lot (Medina lot). 
    Id., 437
    .
    Harms, acting on behalf of the co-owners, engaged
    Michael Sconyers, a lawyer, to draft the deeds to the
    Avery and Medina lots. 
    Id.
     Sconyers advised that the
    language in the deeds should differ in two respects from
    the language in the co-ownership agreement. ‘‘The co-
    ownership agreement stated that the Avery lot and the
    Medina lot will contain deed restrictions providing that
    the lot shall not be further divided, will contain only
    one single-family dwelling, and not more than two addi-
    tional outbuildings with a reasonable setback from the
    road for any structures and will be subject to a right
    of first refusal for each of the other co-owners . . . .
    The co-ownership [agreement] was silent as to enforce-
    ment of these deed restrictions.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) 
    Id.
     Sconyers advised that the ‘‘reason-
    able setback’’ language ‘‘should be made more specific
    and that there should be persons named to enforce the
    restrictions.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id.
    Pursuant to Sconyers’ advice, the language in the
    deeds to the Avery and Medina lots states in relevant
    part that ‘‘any permanent structure erected on the prop-
    erty shall be located at least 100 feet distant from the
    westerly line of Winchester Road.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) 
    Id.
     The deed for the Medina lot also
    states that the restrictions in the deed ‘‘shall be enforce-
    able by [the] Grantors, their heirs and assigns in perpe-
    tuity, as an appurtenance to the property of the
    Grantors.’’ (Emphasis added; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) 
    Id.,
     437–38. The grantors are the co-owners.
    The plaintiffs and Torrey signed the deeds on August
    8, 2004, and the defendants, who also are lawyers,
    signed them on August 10, 2004. 
    Id., 438
    . Subsequently,
    the defendants constructed a house, a carriage house,
    and a shed on the Medina lot. 
    Id.
     In November, 2011,
    Luis Medina informed Torrey that the defendants were
    going to build a ‘‘pole barn’’ near the carriage house.
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 439
    . Torrey
    advised Luis Medina that the pole barn would be a
    ‘‘third outbuilding’’ on the lot and a violation of the
    restrictive covenant in the deed. (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) 
    Id.
     The defendants nonetheless began
    to construct the pole barn.2 
    Id.
    The plaintiffs commenced the underlying action to
    enforce the restrictive covenant in the Medina deed and
    sought ‘‘an injunction prohibiting further construction
    of the pole barn and an order that it be removed.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id.
     While the action
    was pending, the defendants built a stone wall along
    the southern and eastern borders of the Medina lot, a
    portion of which was twenty feet from Winchester
    Road.3 
    Id.
     Consequently, the plaintiffs amended their
    complaint to allege that the wall was ‘‘a new permanent
    structure in violation of the restrictive covenant in the
    defendants’ deed [that] prohibits new permanent struc-
    tures within 100 feet of the road.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) 
    Id.
     The plaintiffs sought injunctive
    relief and requested costs and punitive damages. 
    Id.
    The case was tried to the court, which issued its
    memorandum of decision on November 12, 2013. The
    court found that the pole barn violated the restrictive
    covenant that ‘‘limits development on [the defendants’]
    property to one single-family dwelling and no more than
    two additional outbuildings . . . .’’ 
    Id., 440
    . The court
    found, however, that the stone wall was not permanent
    in nature and, therefore, did not violate the restrictive
    covenant prohibiting permanent structures within 100
    feet of Winchester Road. 
    Id.
     The court ordered the
    defendants to remove the pole barn in thirty days. 
    Id.
    The court did not find that the defendants’ conduct was
    wanton or malicious and did not award the plaintiffs
    punitive damages. 
    Id.
     The plaintiffs appealed to this
    court.
    On appeal, in Avery I, the plaintiffs claimed, among
    other things, that the court improperly found that the
    wall was not a permanent structure pursuant to the
    Medina deed. 
    Id.
     This court agreed; 
    id., 447
    ; and
    reversed the judgment ‘‘only as to the [trial] court’s
    finding that the defendants’ construction of the stone
    wall did not violate the restrictive covenant prohibiting
    the erection of permanent structures within 100 feet of
    the westerly line of Winchester Road . . . .’’ 
    Id., 451
    .
    This court remanded the case to the trial court ‘‘with
    direction to render judgment for the plaintiffs on their
    request for injunctive relief requiring the defendants to
    remove all portions of the stone wall that are within
    100 feet of the westerly line of Winchester Road.’’ 
    Id.
    Pursuant to this court’s remand order, on August 20,
    2014, the trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiffs
    ‘‘on their request for injunctive relief requiring the
    defendants to remove all portions of the stone wall that
    are within 100 feet of the westerly line of Winchester
    Road.’’4
    On December 3, 2014, the plaintiffs filed a motion
    for contempt asking the court to find the defendants
    in contempt for failing to comply with the court’s orders
    dated November 20, 2013,5 and August 20, 2014. The
    plaintiffs stated that although more than thirty days had
    passed since the court had ordered the defendants to
    remove the pole barn, the pole barn was still standing
    on the Medina lot. Moreover, the plaintiffs represented
    that the defendants failed to remove all portions of the
    stone wall within the 100 foot setback. The plaintiffs
    asked the court to find the defendants in contempt for
    every day they remained in violation of the court’s
    order, and for costs and attorney’s fees pursuant to
    General Statutes § 52-256b. The defendants objected to
    the motion for contempt, arguing that they were not in
    wilful noncompliance with the judgment and that they
    did not have the financial wherewithal to remove the
    pole barn. On December 19, 2014, the court found Luis
    Medina to be in contempt of its orders. The court contin-
    ued the matter to January 5, 2015, ‘‘during which period
    of time the defendant is ordered to fully comply with
    the court’s orders. If the contempt has not been full[y]
    remedied a fine will be imposed for every day there is
    noncompliance.’’
    On January 6, 2015, the court ruled on the plaintiffs’
    motion for contempt, ordering: ‘‘The defendants, Luis
    Medina and Amanda Medina, are found to be in con-
    tempt of the orders of the court. The defendants are
    ordered to remove all the stones from the wall on or
    before February 1, 2015. Commencing [January 5, 2015],
    the defendants shall pay the plaintiffs the sum of $100
    per day until the stones are removed. The plaintiffs are
    awarded attorney’s fees in the amount of $1,500.’’
    On July 8, 2015, Harms filed an affidavit of noncompli-
    ance, attesting that Luis Medina had not fully complied
    with the court’s order because he failed to pay the
    plaintiffs $100 per day until the stone wall was com-
    pletely removed. Luis Medina needed six days from,
    and including, January 5, 2015, to remove the wall, and
    had paid the plaintiffs only $400, not $600. In addition,
    Harms attested that Luis Medina had failed to remove
    the pole barn completely, as one of the pole supports
    remained standing. Luis Medina filed a counteraffidavit
    in which he attested that the stone wall was removed
    within four days of January 5, 2015, and that other
    stones, not part of the stone wall, were removed two
    days later. He further attested that he had paid the
    attorney’s fees of $1500.
    The plaintiffs filed another motion for contempt
    against the defendants on September 24, 2015. In that
    motion, the plaintiffs represented that the defendants
    had failed to fully remove the pole barn, failed to pay
    the $200 balance of the fine, and have ‘‘reerected a
    stone wall in the exact area where they were ordered
    to remove it.’’ The defendants objected, asking the court
    to deny the plaintiffs’ motion for contempt because they
    had removed the stone wall that the plaintiffs claimed
    was a permanent structure. The defendants argued that
    they had removed the stone wall that the plaintiffs
    alleged was a permanent structure, and that the court’s
    order did not prohibit them from having stones on
    their property.
    The parties appeared for oral argument on the motion
    for contempt on November 23, 2015. At the hearing,
    Luis Medina argued that the stone wall to which the
    plaintiffs were then objecting merely consisted of loose
    stones along the southern boundary of the defendants’
    property. A photograph of what Luis Medina termed
    ‘‘loose stones’’ was placed into evidence. The court
    rejected the defendants’ argument, stating: ‘‘If that’s not
    a stone wall, I don’t know what it is. . . . There is no
    question in my mind that the law as laid down by the
    Appellate Court includes what’s shown in that picture
    as a stone wall.’’6 The court issued its ruling on Novem-
    ber 25, 2015, ordering, ‘‘[a]s to previously imposed fines,
    the court does not make a finding of contempt, but
    does find that Mr. Medina owes $200 to the plaintiffs,
    which is ordered to be paid by December 11, 2015. As
    to the remaining pole from the pole barn, the court
    finds it to be a negligible item that need not be removed,
    and the court does not make a finding of contempt. As
    to the stone wall, the court does make a finding of
    contempt against Mr. Medina. The stones [shown in the
    photograph that was placed into evidence] are ordered
    removed on or before [December 11, 2015]. The court
    orders Mr. Medina to pay $1500 in attorney’s fees to
    the plaintiffs on or before December 11, 2015.’’ The
    defendants appealed.
    ‘‘[O]ur analysis of a judgment of contempt consists
    of two levels of inquiry. First, we must resolve the
    threshold question of whether the underlying order con-
    stituted a court order that was sufficiently clear and
    unambiguous so as to support a judgment of contempt.
    . . . This is a legal inquiry subject to de novo review.
    . . . Second, if we conclude that the underlying court
    order was sufficiently clear and unambiguous, we must
    then determine whether the trial court abused its discre-
    tion in issuing, or refusing to issue, a judgment of con-
    tempt, which includes a review of the trial court’s
    determination of whether the violation was wilful or
    excused by a good faith dispute or misunderstanding.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Ciottone v. Ciot-
    tone, 
    154 Conn. App. 780
    , 788–89, 
    107 A.3d 1004
     (2015).
    I
    On appeal, the defendants claim that in granting the
    plaintiffs’ 2015 motion for contempt, the court imper-
    missibly modified the substantive terms of its judgment
    by converting a mandatory injunction into a prohibitive
    injunction that forbade any structure, not just a perma-
    nent structure, from being constructed in the setback.
    We disagree.
    The defendants’ claim requires us to examine the
    judgment rendered pursuant to this court’s decision in
    Avery I to determine whether it was clear and unambig-
    uous. ‘‘In order to determine the practical effect of
    the court’s order on the original judgment, we must
    examine the terms of the original judgment as well as
    the subsequent order. [T]he construction of [an order
    or] judgment is a question of law for the court . . .
    [and] our review . . . is plenary. As a general rule,
    [orders and] judgments are to be construed in the same
    fashion as other written instruments. . . . The deter-
    minative factor is the intention of the court as gathered
    from all parts of the [order or] judgment. . . . The
    interpretation of [an order or] judgment may involve
    the circumstances surrounding [its] making. . . .
    Effect must be given to that which is clearly implied
    as well as to that which is expressed. . . . The [order
    or] judgment should admit of a consistent construction
    as whole.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Law-
    rence v. Cords, 
    165 Conn. App. 473
    , 484–85, 
    139 A.3d 778
    , cert. denied, 
    322 Conn. 907
    , 
    140 A.3d 221
     (2016).
    On the basis of our review of the injunction judgment
    and the underlying circumstances, we conclude that
    the court did not impermissibly alter the terms or the
    nature of the injunction. The facts found at trial reveal
    that the co-owners purchased the 55.72 acres of land
    to prevent it from becoming heavily developed and
    made the majority of the land available to the Norfolk
    Land Trust. The co-ownership agreement, which the
    defendants signed, provided that there was to be a rea-
    sonable setback from the road for any permanent struc-
    tures. The deed to the Medina lot provided that ‘‘any
    permanent structure erected on the property shall be
    located at least 100 feet distant from the westerly line
    of Winchester Road.’’ The defendants signed the deeds
    on August 10, 2004.
    In Avery I, this court determined that the wall in
    question was a permanent structure. After reviewing
    the trial court’s factual findings regarding the size, struc-
    ture, height, and appearance of the stone wall, and
    examining the photographic evidence in the record,
    this court found that ‘‘there can be no doubt that the
    defendants intend for the wall to remain firmly in the
    same place where it was erected and [not be] moved
    or relocated on a seasonal basis.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Avery v. Medina, supra, 
    151 Conn. App. 447
    . For that reason, this court concluded that the wall
    was a ‘‘permanent structure that is prohibited by the
    clear language of the restrictive covenant contained
    in the defendants’ deed.’’ (Emphasis added.) 
    Id.
     On
    remand, the court rendered ‘‘judgment for the plaintiffs
    on their request for injunctive relief requiring the defen-
    dants to remove all portions of the stone wall that are
    within 100 feet of the westerly line of Winchester Road,’’
    and ordered the defendants to remove the stone wall,
    which they did. Thereafter, they placed stones lower
    in height in a similar position within the setback area.
    The plaintiffs filed a motion for contempt claiming, in
    part, that the defendants reerected a stone wall in the
    setback area and therefore failed to comply with the
    court’s orders. The defendants objected to the motion
    for contempt arguing, in part, that the court did not
    prohibit any stones on their property. At the hearing
    on the motion for contempt, Luis Medina argued that
    there were just loose stones along the southern bound-
    ary of the defendants’ property. The court rejected that
    representation stating: ‘‘If that’s not a stone wall, I don’t
    know what it is. . . . There is no question in my mind
    that the law as laid down by the Appellate Court
    includes what’s shown in that picture as a stone wall.’’
    On appeal, the defendants claim that the court modi-
    fied the judgment whereby they were ordered to remove
    the stone wall. ‘‘A modification is [a] change; an alter-
    ation or amendment which introduces new elements
    into the details, or cancels some of them, but leaves
    the general purpose and effect of the subject-matter
    intact. . . . In contrast, an order effectuating an
    existing judgment allows the court to protect the integ-
    rity of its original ruling by ensuring the parties’ timely
    compliance therewith.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) Lawrence v. Cords, supra, 
    165 Conn. App. 484
    .
    The substance of the defendants’ claim is that the
    stone wall that replaced the wall they were ordered to
    remove is not permanently affixed to the land. This is
    a distinction without a difference. At oral argument
    before us, the defendants stated that the stones were
    necessary to denote the boundary of their land to keep
    hikers and other trespassers out. Regardless of the
    height of the stones now in place within the setback,
    given their purpose to keep trespassers out, they are
    intended to remain permanently in their present
    location.
    ‘‘Courts have in general the power to fashion a rem-
    edy appropriate to the vindication of a prior . . . judg-
    ment. . . . Having found noncompliance, the court, in
    the exercise of its equitable powers, necessarily ha[s]
    the authority to fashion whatever orders [are] required
    to protect the integrity of [its original] judgment.’’ (Inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) Gong v. Huang, 
    129 Conn. App. 141
    , 154, 
    21 A.3d 474
    , cert. denied, 
    302 Conn. 907
    , 
    23 A.3d 1247
     (2011). ‘‘This is so because [i]n a
    contempt proceeding, even in the absence of a finding
    of contempt, a trial court has broad discretion to make
    whole a party who has suffered as a result of another
    party’s failure to comply with the court order.’’ (Empha-
    sis omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Fuller
    v. Fuller, 
    119 Conn. App. 105
    , 115, 
    987 A.2d 1040
    , cert.
    denied, 
    296 Conn. 904
    , 
    992 A.2d 329
     (2010). For the
    foregoing reasons, we conclude that the court did not
    modify the injunction judgment, but merely ordered
    the defendants to remove the stones in the setback to
    effectuate its original judgment.
    II
    The defendants claim that the injunction ordered on
    remand from Avery I was vague and precluded a finding
    of contempt. We do not agree.
    As we set forth previously, an appellate court’s analy-
    sis of a judgment of contempt consists of two parts,
    the first of which is to determine whether the underlying
    order constituted an order that was sufficiently clear
    and unambiguous to support the contempt judgment.
    See Ciottone v. Ciottone, supra, 
    154 Conn. App. 788
    –89.
    In Avery I, this court determined that the stone wall
    was ‘‘prohibited by the clear language of the restrictive
    covenant in the defendants’ deed§ because there was
    no doubt that the defendants intended for it to remain
    in place where it was erected and not moved on a
    seasonal basis. Avery v. Medina, supra, 
    151 Conn. App. 447
    . On remand, the trial court ordered the defendants
    ‘‘to remove all portions of the stone wall that are within
    100 feet of the westerly line of Winchester Road.’’
    We employ the plenary standard of review when con-
    struing a judgment or order of the court. Lawrence v.
    Cords, supra, 
    165 Conn. App. 484
    . ‘‘The determinative
    factor is the intention of the court as gathered from all
    parts of the [order or] judgment.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) 
    Id., 485
    . On the basis of our examina-
    tion of this court’s judgment in Avery I and the subse-
    quent order of the trial court, we conclude that the
    judgment and order to remove the stone wall were
    clear and unambiguous. The stones within the setback
    constitute a permanent structure that violates the
    restrictive covenant in the Medina deed. The defen-
    dants’ claim therefore fails.
    III
    The defendants claim that the court’s contempt find-
    ing stripped them of a fundamental property right.
    We disagree.
    On appeal, the defendants argue that the court’s con-
    tempt finding deprives them of the use of 25 percent
    of their property because it exceeds the ‘‘permanent
    structure’’ restriction in the deed to the Medina lot
    by prohibiting stones within the setback area. At the
    hearing on the plaintiff’s motion for contempt, Luis
    Medina made the same argument to which the court
    responded: ‘‘No, no, no. I’m saying that you cannot put
    permanent structures within 100 feet of the road. And
    we went through this one time and it’s been found by
    the Appellate Court that a stone wall, regardless of
    whether it’s cemented or not cemented, is a perma-
    nent structure.’’7
    The defendants rely on Edmond v. Foisey, 
    111 Conn. App. 760
    , 
    961 A.2d 441
     (2008), to support their claim.
    Edmond, however, is not on point with the facts of the
    present case. In Edmond, the trial court conveyed the
    defendant’s entire interest in real property to the plain-
    tiff. 
    Id.,
     766–67. This court reversed the judgment of
    contempt, concluding that the trial court abused its
    discretion by depriving the defendant of her entire inter-
    est in her real property. 
    Id.,
     775–76. In the present case,
    the court sanctioned the defendants for disobeying the
    judgment rendered in Avery I to remove the stone wall
    in the setback. It did not convey the defendants’ interest
    in their land.
    ‘‘Courts have in general the power to fashion a rem-
    edy appropriate to the vindication of a prior . . . judg-
    ment. . . . Having found noncompliance, the court, in
    the exercise of its equitable powers, necessarily ha[s]
    the authority to fashion whatever orders [are] required
    to protect the integrity of [its original] judgment.’’ (Inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) Ciottone v. Ciottone,
    supra, 
    154 Conn. App. 794
    .
    The deed to the Medina lot contains a restrictive
    covenant that provides in relevant part: ‘‘[a]ny perma-
    nent structure erected on the Property shall be located
    at least 100 feet distant from the westerly line of Win-
    chester Road.’’ In Avery I, this court concluded that a
    stone wall within the 100 foot setback constituted a
    violation of the restrictive covenant. Avery v. Medina,
    supra, 
    151 Conn. App. 447
    . The court granted the plain-
    tiffs’ 2015 motion for contempt to vindicate its prior
    judgment, which was rendered pursuant to the restric-
    tive covenant in the deed to the Medina lot. The defen-
    dants voluntarily signed the deed and, therefore, they
    cannot prevail on a claim that they were deprived of a
    fundamental right when the court vindicated its prior
    judgment by finding Luis Medina in contempt.
    IV
    The defendants also claim that the court abused its
    discretion by awarding the plaintiffs $1500 in attorney’s
    fees because there was no evidence to support the
    award. The defendants failed to preserve this claim
    at the hearing on the motion for contempt, and we,
    therefore, decline to review it.
    On September 24, 2015, the plaintiffs filed a motion
    for contempt in which they alleged that the defendants
    failed to completely remove the pole barn, failed to pay
    the remaining $200 fine owed to them, and placed a line
    of stones in the exact place where they were ordered to
    remove the stone wall. The plaintiffs argued that the
    defendants had flouted the court’s orders and had twice
    been found in contempt. The plaintiffs asked that the
    defendants again be found in contempt, and ordered
    to comply with the court’s judgment and to pay costs
    and attorney’s fees pursuant to General Statutes § 52-
    256b.8 The defendants filed an objection to the motion
    for contempt but did not object to the plaintiffs’ request
    for attorney’s fees. At the contempt hearing, the plain-
    tiffs asked for ‘‘attorney’s fees of $1500, the same as
    [the trial court] ordered on January 6.’’9 The defendants
    did not object or request that the plaintiffs present
    evidence in support of their request for attorney’s fees.
    The court ordered ‘‘another $1500 of attorney’s fees.’’
    ‘‘It is fundamental that claims of error must be dis-
    tinctly raised and decided in the trial court.’’ State v.
    Faison, 
    112 Conn. App. 373
    , 379, 
    962 A.2d 860
    , cert.
    denied, 
    291 Conn. 903
    , 
    967 A.2d 507
     (2009). See Practice
    Book § 5-2 (party intending to raise question of law
    subject to appeal must state question directly to judicial
    authority); Practice Book § 60-5 (court not bound to
    consider claim unless distinctly raised at trial or arose
    subsequent to trial).
    ‘‘Although the proponent bears the burden of furnish-
    ing evidence of attorney’s fees at the appropriate time,
    once the plaintiffs . . . make such a request, the defen-
    dants should [object] or at least [respond] to that
    request.’’ Smith v. Snyder, 
    267 Conn. 456
    , 480–81, 
    839 A.2d 589
     (2004). An appellate court will not reverse an
    award of attorney’s fees if the defendants fail to object
    to a bare request for attorney’s fees. 
    Id., 481
    . ‘‘In other
    words, the defendants, in failing to object to the plain-
    tiffs’ request for attorney’s fees, effectively acquiesced
    in that request, and, consequently, they now will not
    be heard to complain about that request.’’ 
    Id.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    The co-owners are three married couples. Torrey is married to Harms,
    but he is not a plaintiff in this action. When the co-owners purchased the
    55.72 acres, each couple received a one-third undivided interest in it. Avery
    v. Medina, supra, 
    151 Conn. App. 436
    .
    2
    The defendants failed to secure a building permit for the pole barn, and
    the town of Norfolk issued them a cease and desist order. Avery v. Medina,
    supra, 
    151 Conn. App. 439
    .
    3
    ‘‘The wall [was] approximately three feet high, with two large, six feet
    high stone pillars. There [was] a large wooden gate attached to one of the
    pillars, and a 1.5 foot fence that . . . attached to the top of the wall. The
    [trial] court found that the wall was large, heavy and immobile.’’ Avery v.
    Medina, supra, 
    151 Conn. App. 447
    .
    4
    During the course of the plaintiffs’ appeal, the conflict between the
    parties continued. On December 11, 2013, the defendants filed a motion to
    open the judgment and modify its order to state, ‘‘[w]ithin the next [thirty]
    days the defendant shall remove from their property one of the outbuildings
    identified in the [court’s] memorandum, leaving two outbuildings on [the
    defendants’] land.’’ The defendants wished to remove the utility shed, which
    would cost them significantly less than it would cost to remove the pole
    barn. The plaintiffs objected, arguing in part that the pole barn was an illegal
    structure in that it was constructed without a building permit, and that the
    defendants had the opportunity to present evidence as to the cost of remov-
    ing structures on the Medina lot at trial, but failed to do so.
    On February 26, 2014, the court denied the defendants’ motion to open,
    stating, ‘‘[t]he evidence in this case concerned the pole barn, not a shed.
    The defendant had the option of removing the shed before the pole barn
    was constructed so as to avoid this problem. It would not be proper for the
    court to permit the defendant to change the facts under which the case was
    tried.’’ The defendants filed a motion asking the court to reconsider its order
    denying their motion to open and modify the corrected memorandum of
    decision on or about March 18, 2014, and the plaintiffs filed an objection
    to it. On May 19, 2014, the court sustained the plaintiffs’ objection to the
    motion to open and modify. The defendants appealed from the judgment
    denying their motion to open. This court affirmed the judgment of the trial
    court in a memorandum decision. See Avery v. Medina, 
    153 Conn. App. 909
    , 
    100 A.3d 476
     (2014) (Avery II).
    5
    Subsequent to issuing its November 12, 2013 memorandum of decision,
    the trial court issued a corrected memorandum of decision on November
    20, 2013.
    6
    We have reviewed the photograph in the record and conclude that the
    court’s finding is not clearly erroneous. During oral argument before this
    court, Luis Medina argued that the wall is necessary to keep trespassers
    and hikers on the land conservancy’s property from walking on the defen-
    dants’ land.
    7
    The following colloquy also transpired between the court and Luis
    Medina during the hearing on the plaintiffs’ motion for contempt.
    ‘‘Luis Medina: [Y]ou’ve made your ruling. I need to clarify it for the record
    because I have to be able to discern what it is that I’m not able to do on
    my property.
    ‘‘The Court: You can’t have a permanent structure within 100 feet of the
    road, you know that.
    ‘‘Luis Medina: That I understand.
    ‘‘The Court: The Appellate Court [has] determined that a stone wall is a
    permanent structure. What you just had your contractor construct in Plain-
    tiffs’ Exhibit 2 is in my finding a stone wall.
    ‘‘Luis Medina: Right.
    ‘‘The Court: Remove it.
    ***
    ‘‘The Court: I’m not asking you to do anything other than [not to] violate the
    restriction in your deed.’’
    8
    General Statutes § 52-256b (a) provides in relevant part: ‘‘When any
    person is found in contempt of any order or judgment of the Superior Court,
    the court may award to the petitioner a reasonable attorney’s fee . . . such
    sums to be paid by the person found in contempt.’’
    9
    A hearing on the plaintiffs’ December 2014 motion for contempt was
    held on January 6, 2015. The record reflects the following colloquy.
    ‘‘Torrey: And, Your Honor, lastly, our motion to request reasonable legal
    fees for: the appearances, both preparing the motion, appearing the first
    time, appearing yesterday and appearing today. Right. I spent an hour and
    a half preparing the motion. I spent two hours on the first hearing. I spent
    two hours yesterday and whatever time we’re spending today. So that’s a
    total of five and a half hours, plus whatever it is today, which is now going
    on at least an hour and a half. So that’s seven hours’ worth of legal time.
    My normal hourly rate is $300 an hour, but . . . I would have no objection
    to you finding a reasonable hourly rate for that.
    ‘‘The Court: Anything further?
    ‘‘Luis Medina: I leave it to the court’s decision. I . . . said what I had
    to say. There was no wilful desire on my part not to comply with the
    court’s order.’’
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC38689

Citation Numbers: 163 A.3d 1271, 174 Conn. App. 507, 2017 WL 2889464, 2017 Conn. App. LEXIS 283

Judges: Lavine, Alvord, Beach

Filed Date: 7/11/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024