Tsiropoulos v. Radigan ( 2016 )


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    ELEFTERIOS TSIROPOULOS v. MARGARET M.
    RADIGAN
    (AC 37176)
    Lavine, Beach and Sheldon, Js.
    Submitted on briefs December 15, 2015—officially released
    February 16, 2016
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of
    Stamford, Hon David R. Tobin, judge trial referee.)
    Peter V. Lathouris and Richard M. Breen filed a brief
    for the appellant (plaintiff).
    David Eric Ross filed a brief for the appellee
    (defendant).
    Opinion
    LAVINE, J. This appeal concerns a seller’s right to
    liquidated damages due to a would-be buyer’s breach
    of a residential real estate sales agreement. The plaintiff,
    Elefterios Tsiropoulos, appeals from the judgment of
    the trial court rendered in favor of the defendant, Marga-
    ret M. Radigan. On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the
    court improperly (1) determined that the liquidated
    damages clause in the agreement was enforceable and
    (2) found that his failure to perform was wilful and that
    the defendant was not unjustly enriched. We affirm the
    judgment of the trial court.
    The following facts are relevant to our resolution of
    the plaintiff’s claims. On or about October 1, 2012, the
    parties signed a written contract (agreement) whereby
    the plaintiff agreed to purchase and the defendant
    agreed to sell the premises located at 6 Cardinal Lane
    in Westport (premises). The agreed upon sale price was
    $716,000. The plaintiff made a $30,000 deposit and was
    to pay the balance of $686,000 at the closing on Novem-
    ber 16, 2012. Although the plaintiff needed to secure
    financing to purchase the premises, he waived financing
    as a contingency to his purchase of the premises1 to
    secure the ability to purchase the premises over others
    who wanted to purchase the premises, but for whom
    financing was a contingency. The plaintiff, however,
    was unable to obtain a mortgage acceptable to him. On
    December 7, 2012, the plaintiff’s attorney informed the
    defendant that he was unable to close2 and encouraged
    the defendant to sell the premises to someone else. On
    December 28, 2012, the defendant sold the premises
    for $720,000. Thereafter, the plaintiff demanded that the
    defendant return his $30,000 deposit, but the defendant
    refused in reliance of paragraph 16 of the agreement.3
    On or about January 14, 2013, the plaintiff com-
    menced the present action, which sounds in breach of
    contract and unjust enrichment, to recover the $30,000
    deposit.4 The defendant denied the material allegations
    of the complaint and, in an amended answer, asserted
    three special defenses: the plaintiff terminated the
    agreement wilfully, breached the covenant of good faith
    and fair dealing, and had unclean hands. The defendant
    also pleaded a counterclaim seeking to retain the
    $30,000 deposit and to recover attorney’s fees.5 The
    parties tried the case to the court in May, 2014, at which
    time the plaintiff attempted to prove that his failure to
    close was not wilful because he had relied on the advice
    of mortgage brokers and lenders to waive a finance con-
    tingency.
    The court issued its ruling from the bench, stating in
    part: ‘‘In the first instance, we have a presumptively
    valid liquidated damages clause. It is for 4.2 percent as
    opposed to the customary 10 percent that was the sub-
    ject matter in Vines v. Orchard Hills[, Inc., 
    181 Conn. 501
    , 512, 
    435 A.2d 1022
    (1980)]. And given the fact that
    we had a $716,000 purchase price, $30,000 was a totally
    reasonable number to set as a liquidated damages in
    the event of the [plaintiff’s] breach.
    ‘‘The [plaintiff] knew that he was at risk. He knew
    that he was taking a calculated gamble that he could
    close. He did not think it was a gamble because he had
    been assured that he could get financing. But neverthe-
    less, in order to have his bid accepted in comparison
    to others that were perhaps higher but contingent, he
    decided to make his bid noncontingent. And by doing
    so, he willingly entered into a contract. There’s no indi-
    cation that this contract was procured by any fraud or
    deception on the part of the [defendant]. The court
    cannot find that breach was unwilful. . . .
    ‘‘[T]he plaintiff in this matter had every expectation
    that he could obtain financing at a very high degree of
    leverage: 97 percent. And he has had experience in the
    past in leveraging properties. And he knew that he had
    significant obligations under prior notes, under prior
    mortgages he had taken advantage of the ability and
    the willingness of banks to lend money so as to allow
    him to build through his diligent efforts a substantial
    amount of real estate holdings. He was not an unsophis-
    ticated person in this regard. He decided to take advan-
    tage in this case . . . of the perceived availability of
    FHA funds, which would allow him to obtain ownership
    of the [premises] with a very small . . . out-of-pocket
    investment in case, using borrowed funds for the pur-
    chase price.
    ‘‘When he signed the contract without a mortgage
    contingency clause, he took the risk that he would be
    able to fulfill his desires as he set out to. And unfortu-
    nately, it took him some time before he knew or should
    have known that proceeding in that fashion would prob-
    ably lead to his inability to perform the contract in
    accordance with his obligations. The first notice proba-
    bly should have come when [the bank] indicated that
    they could not fund the loan without him changing his
    balance sheet to their liking. He, instead of recognizing
    that this was a problem with FHA loans, he chose to
    blame it on that particular lender, and to pursue financ-
    ing through a mortgage broker that was recommended
    to him, but there’s no evidence that he had previously
    worked with that mortgage lender, only to find out that
    despite the fact they were willing to finance at the
    rate of 97 percent, they were only willing to finance
    97 percent of a very, very conservative appraisal of
    the [premises.]
    ‘‘[The plaintiff] decided or opted not to try to fulfill
    his obligations by seeking more conventional financing.
    And in that regard, he put himself in the state that he
    found himself in, where he was unable to perform the
    contract on November 16, as he was obligated to do.
    He had three weeks within which he could have taken
    steps to apply for different financing, and perhaps pur-
    sue other goals. Instead, the only step apparently he
    took was to try to appeal [an] appraisal on the basis of
    comparables. [It d]oes not seem to the court that that
    was an avenue that would normally yield a banker
    changing its mind and agreeing to underwrite a loan
    that they had rejected.
    ‘‘So, under those circumstances the court finds first
    of all, that this was not an unavoidable, unwilful breach.
    It was one that was part and parcel of the course that
    the parties embarked on from the beginning. It was well
    known to both of them. And it was a risk that the
    plaintiff took.’’6 The court found for the defendant on
    the plaintiff’s breach of contract and unjust enrichment
    counts. The court found for the defendant on her coun-
    terclaim and ordered that she retain the $30,000
    deposit.7 After the parties stipulated to the amount of
    attorney’s fees and judgment was rendered, the plain-
    tiff appealed.
    I
    The plaintiff’s first claim is that the court improperly
    enforced the liquidated damages clause because it con-
    flicts with the ‘‘essential precepts of Connecticut con-
    tract law.’’ We disagree.
    The plaintiff argues that a contract provision that
    fixes liquidated damages for breach of contract is
    enforceable if it satisfies certain conditions; but that a
    liquidated damages provision that imposes a penalty is
    contrary to public policy, and therefore, is invalid. See
    Berger v. Shanahan, 
    142 Conn. 726
    , 731, 
    118 A.2d 311
    (1955). ‘‘A provision for liquidated damages . . . is one
    the real purpose of which is to fix fair compensation
    to the injured party for a breach of contract. In
    determining whether any particular provision is for liq-
    uidated damages or for a penalty, the courts are not
    controlled by the fact that the phrase ‘liquidated dam-
    ages’ or the word ‘penalty’ is used. Rather, that which
    is determinative of the question is the intention of the
    parties to the contract. Accordingly, such a provision
    is ordinarily to be construed as one for liquidated dam-
    ages if three conditions are satisfied: (1) The damage
    which was to be expected as a result of the breach of
    the contract was uncertain in amount or difficult to
    prove; (2) there was an intent on the part of the parties
    to liquidate damages in advance; and (3) the amount
    stipulated was reasonable in the sense that it was not
    greatly disproportionate to the amount of the damage
    which, as the parties looked forward, seemed to be
    the presumable loss which would be sustained by the
    contractee in the event of a breach of the contract.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) American Car
    Rental, Inc. v. Commissioner of Consumer Protection,
    
    273 Conn. 296
    , 306–307, 
    869 A.2d 1198
    (2005), quoting
    Berger v. 
    Shanahan, supra
    , 
    142 Conn. 731
    –32.
    The essence of the plaintiff’s claim is that the defen-
    dant suffered no damages as a result of his breach, and
    therefore, the court improperly permitted the defendant
    to retain the $30,000 deposit. In rendering its decision,
    the court stated: ‘‘With respect to the liquidated dam-
    ages clause . . . the evidence that [the court] has seen
    regarding actual damages is incomplete and inconclu-
    sive. The burden was on the plaintiff to show that those
    actual damages were so disproportionate or nonexis-
    tent as to render the clause a penalty clause. The court
    finds specifically that the plaintiff has failed to satisfy
    that burden. So, the court finds that the liquidated dam-
    ages clause is enforceable and valid.’’
    In contract, where the purchaser is in default, as is
    the plaintiff in the present case, the defaulting party
    has the ‘‘burden of showing that the clause is invalid
    and unenforceable.’’ Vines v. Orchard Hills, 
    Inc., supra
    ,
    
    181 Conn. 512
    . We have reviewed the record and con-
    clude that it supports the finding of the trial court.8
    In support of his appellate claim, the plaintiff relies
    on Norwalk Door Closer Co. v. Eagle Lock & Screw
    Co., 
    153 Conn. 681
    , 
    220 A.2d 263
    (1966), in which our
    Supreme Court concluded that a $100,000 liquidated
    damages clause of the parties’ contract was not enforce-
    able where no damages were suffered by the non-
    breaching party. Although the defendant breached its
    contract with the plaintiff, the plaintiff’s business con-
    tinued uninterrupted and as usual. 
    Id., 690. The
    plaintiff
    suffered no damages and, therefore, was not entitled
    to liquidated damages. 
    Id. ‘‘[N]o provision
    in a contract
    for the payment of a fixed sum as damages, whether
    stipulated for as a penalty or as liquidated damages,
    will be enforced in a case where the court sees that
    no damages has been sustained.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) 
    Id., 688. The
    present case is distinguish-
    able because the trial court found that the plaintiff
    had failed to prove that the defendant did not suffer
    actual damages.9
    With regard to the breach of a contract for the sale
    of real property, a ‘‘seller’s damages . . . include not
    only his expectation damages suffered through loss of
    his bargain, and his incidental damages such as broker’s
    commissions, but also less quantifiable costs arising
    out of retention of real property beyond the time of the
    originally contemplated sale.’’ Vines v. Orchard Hills,
    
    Inc., supra
    , 
    181 Conn. 512
    . ‘‘It is not unreasonable . . .
    to presume that a liquidated damages clause that is
    appropriately limited in amount bears a reasonable rela-
    tionship to the damages that the seller has actually
    suffered.’’ 
    Id. ‘‘A liquidated
    damages clause allowing
    the seller to retain 10 percent of the contract price as
    earnest money is presumptively a reasonable allocation
    of the risks associated with default.’’ 
    Id. In the
    present
    case, the $30,000 down payment was considerably less
    than 10 percent of the offering price of $716,000, and
    therefore presumptively reasonable.
    As to the plaintiff’s claim that the defendant was able
    to sell the premises for $4000 more than his offering
    price, ‘‘[t]he relevant time at which to measure the sell-
    er’s damages is the time of breach. . . . Benefits to the
    seller that are attributable to a rising market subsequent
    to breach rightfully accrue to the seller.’’ (Citations
    omitted.) 
    Id., 513. Although
    the court made no such
    finding, there is evidence in the record that the person
    who eventually purchased the premises originally had
    offered to pay $5000 more for the premises during what
    we presume was a bidding war.
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the court
    properly determined that the liquidated damages clause
    was valid and enforceable.10
    II
    The plaintiff’s second claim is that the trial court
    improperly found that he had breached the agreement
    wilfully and that the defendant was not unjustly
    enriched. We disagree.
    ‘‘[A] purchaser whose breach is not willful has a resti-
    tutionary claim to recover moneys paid that unjustly
    enrich his seller.’’ 
    Id., 509. The
    essence of the plaintiff’s
    claims on appeal is the same as it was in the trial court,
    that is, that he should be excused from having breached
    the agreement because he could not secure financing
    and the defendant suffered no damages because she
    was able to sell the premises within weeks of his breach.
    We are not persuaded.
    ‘‘Appellate review of a trial court’s findings of fact is
    governed by the clearly erroneous standard of review.
    The trial court’s findings are binding upon this court
    unless they are clearly erroneous in light of the evidence
    and the pleadings in the record as a whole. . . . We
    cannot retry the facts or pass on the credibility of the
    witnesses. . . . A finding of fact is clearly erroneous
    when there is no evidence in the record to support it
    . . . or when although there is evidence to support it,
    the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with
    the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been
    committed.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) In re
    Francisco R., 
    111 Conn. App. 529
    , 535–36, 
    959 A.2d 1079
    (2008).
    A
    In the present case, the court found that the plaintiff’s
    breach was ‘‘not unwilful.’’ ‘‘‘Willful’ as a term of art
    requires more than a finding of deliberate action. The
    contemporary view is that the court must consider not
    only the deliberateness of the breach, but also other
    factors in determining whether to apply the court’s equi-
    table jurisdicition. . . . These factors include, among
    others, the degree of innocence of the breach, the
    amount of the detriment to the breaching party and the
    amount of the benefit conferred upon the nonbreaching
    party.’’ (Citation omitted.) Stabenau v. Cairelli, 
    22 Conn. App. 578
    , 581–82, 
    577 A.2d 1130
    (1990).
    On the basis of our review of the court’s oral decision
    and the record, we conclude that the court did not err
    when it found that the plaintiff’s breach of the contract
    was wilful, in that there is evidence that he deliberately
    took the risk of entering into the agreement without
    the funds to consummate the sale and without reserving
    a financing contingency. It appears from the record that
    a number of persons were interested in purchasing the
    premises. In order to foreclose others from winning
    what may have become a bidding war, the plaintiff
    waived any financing contingency to secure his bid. Not
    only did the plaintiff place himself at risk by waiving
    the finance contingency, he sought a highly leveraged
    mortgage of 97 percent of the purchase price. When he
    was unable to obtain such a mortgage from his preap-
    proved conventional lender and the mortgage offered
    to him by another lending institution was too little, he
    failed to pursue other means of financing. The plaintiff
    was not a novice in the real estate business. He took
    a calculated risk in an effort to outbid his competition
    for the premises. The plaintiff’s breach of the agreement
    was not wilful because he could not obtain a mortgage,
    but because he wilfully waived a financial contingency
    that put not only him, but also the defendant, at financial
    risk. The trial court, therefore, did not err when it found
    that the plaintiff’s breach of the agreement was wilful.
    On appeal the plaintiff argues that the trial court’s
    decision is contrary to Connecticut law because it is
    not consistent with our Supreme Court’s decision in
    Vines v. Orchard Hills, 
    Inc., supra
    , 
    181 Conn. 501
    . The
    factual circumstance of the purchasers’ breach in Vines
    is inapposite to the facts of the present case. In Vines,
    the husband and wife would-be purchasers withdrew
    their offer to buy a condominium in New Canaan from
    the developer seller because the husband’s employer
    transferred him to New Jersey. 
    Id., 503. Our
    Supreme
    Court stated that ‘‘a purchaser whose breach is not
    willful has a restitutionary claim to recover moneys
    paid that unjustly enrich his seller. In this case, no one
    has alleged that the purchasers’ breach, arising out of
    a transfer to a more distant place of employment, should
    be deemed to have been willful.’’ 
    Id., 509–10; see
    also
    Stabenau v. 
    Cairelli, supra
    , 
    22 Conn. App. 582
    (breach
    prompted by fear that named plaintiff would lose job
    and not be able to make payments required for purchase
    of property; named plaintiff did not deliberately place
    job in jeopardy for purpose of avoiding contract). In
    both Vines and Stabenau neither would-be purchasers
    voluntarily put themselves in the position to breach the
    contracts of sale. In the present case, however, the
    plaintiff voluntarily waived the finance contingency that
    put him at risk of not being able to close on the sale
    of the premises.
    B
    The plaintiff also claims that the trial court erred
    when it found that the defendant was not unjustly
    enriched. It was the plaintiff’s burden to ‘‘demonstrate
    that the property could, at the time of [his] breach, have
    been resold at a price sufficiently higher than [the]
    contract price to obviate any loss of profits and to
    compensate the seller for any incidental and consequen-
    tial damages.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Sta-
    benau v. 
    Cairelli, supra
    , 
    22 Conn. App. 583
    ; see also
    Vines v. Orchard Hills, 
    Inc., supra
    , 
    181 Conn. 510
    (plain-
    tiff’s burden to establish defendant unjustly enriched).
    The trial court found that the plaintiff failed to meet
    his burden to demonstrate that the defendant would be
    unjustly enriched by retaining the plaintiff’s $30,000
    deposit. We review the trial court’s findings of fact by
    a clearly erroneous standard. See Lynch v. Lynch, 
    13 Conn. App. 433
    , 436–37, 
    537 A.2d 503
    (1988). On the
    basis of our review of the record, the parties’ briefs,
    and arguments before us, we cannot conclude that the
    court’s finding was clearly erroneous.11 Moreover, the
    plaintiff’s claim for restitution fails because his breach
    of the agreement was wilful.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    Paragraph 17 of the agreement states: ‘‘MORTGAGE CONTINGENCY.
    This Agreement is not contingent upon BUYER obtaining financing for the
    purchase of the subject premises.’’
    2
    When the plaintiff informed the defendant that he was unable to close
    at the contract price, he offered to purchase the premises at a lower price.
    3
    Paragraph 16 of the agreement provides in part: ‘‘DEFAULT. If BUYER
    is in default hereunder, or, on or before the date of closing as set forth
    herein, indicates that BUYER is unable or unwilling to perform and SELLER
    stands ready to perform SELLER’’S obligations, SELLER’s sole remedy shall
    be the right to terminate this Agreement by written notice to BUYER or
    BUYER’s attorney and retain the down payment as reasonable liquidated
    damages for BUYER’s inability or unwillingness to perform. It is the intention
    of the parties hereto freely to make advance provision on the date of the
    Agreement for such event in order (a) to avoid controversy, delay and
    expense, and (b) to specify now a reasonable amount agreeable to both for
    compensation to the SELLER for losses which may not be readily ascertain-
    able or quantifiable, such as any of the following which might be necessary
    to place SELLER in the position SELLER would have been in had BUYER
    made timely performance . . . .’’
    4
    The deposit was being held in escrow by Attorney W. Glenn Major.
    5
    Paragraph 37 of the agreement states: ‘‘COSTS OF ENFORCEMENT.
    Except as otherwise expressly provided herein, in the event of any litigation
    brought to enforce any material provision of this Agreement, the prevailing
    party shall be entitled to recover its reasonable attorneys’ fees and court
    costs from the other party.’’
    6
    The court did not reach the issue of unjust enrichment.
    7
    The parties were to appear before the court at a later time to present
    evidence as to reasonable attorney’s fees. On August 20, 2014, the parties
    filed a stipulation of attorney’s fees in the amount of $20,000.
    8
    The defendant presented evidence to prove that she sustained more than
    $24,000 in damages as a result of the plaintiff’s breach.
    9
    In her brief, the defendant has identified the evidence of the expenses
    she incurred as a result of the plaintiff’s having breached the agreement. A
    summary of her alleged damages was marked as an exhibit and is included
    in the appendix of her brief. The court, however, made no specific finding
    with respect to that evidence, and the plaintiff failed to ask the court to
    articulate its factual findings as to damages. See Practice Book §§ 60-5 and
    61-10. We presume, therefore, that the court properly applied the law to the
    facts of the case. See Blumenthal v. Kimber Mfg., Inc., 
    265 Conn. 1
    , 9, 
    826 A.2d 1088
    (2003).
    10
    See also Peterson v. McAndrew, 
    160 Conn. App. 180
    , 193–94, 
    125 A.3d 241
    (2015) (enforcing liquidated damages clause pursuant to American
    Car Rental, Inc., v. Commissioner of Consumer 
    Protection, supra
    , 
    273 Conn. 306
    –307).
    11
    The defendant presented evidence that a second buyer offered $725,000
    to purchase the premises but that she accepted the plaintiff’s noncontingency
    offer of $716,000.