Great Country Bank v. Ogalin ( 2016 )


Menu:
  • ******************************************************
    The ‘‘officially released’’ date that appears near the
    beginning of each opinion is the date the opinion will
    be published in the Connecticut Law Journal or the
    date it was released as a slip opinion. The operative
    date for the beginning of all time periods for filing
    postopinion motions and petitions for certification is
    the ‘‘officially released’’ date appearing in the opinion.
    In no event will any such motions be accepted before
    the ‘‘officially released’’ date.
    All opinions are subject to modification and technical
    correction prior to official publication in the Connecti-
    cut Reports and Connecticut Appellate Reports. In the
    event of discrepancies between the electronic version
    of an opinion and the print version appearing in the
    Connecticut Law Journal and subsequently in the Con-
    necticut Reports or Connecticut Appellate Reports, the
    latest print version is to be considered authoritative.
    The syllabus and procedural history accompanying
    the opinion as it appears on the Commission on Official
    Legal Publications Electronic Bulletin Board Service
    and in the Connecticut Law Journal and bound volumes
    of official reports are copyrighted by the Secretary of
    the State, State of Connecticut, and may not be repro-
    duced and distributed without the express written per-
    mission of the Commission on Official Legal
    Publications, Judicial Branch, State of Connecticut.
    ******************************************************
    GREAT COUNTRY BANK ET AL. v. JEFFREY
    OGALIN ET AL.
    (AC 37905)
    DiPentima, C. J., and Keller and Prescott, Js.
    Argued April 11—officially released October 11, 2016
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of
    Fairfield, Kamp, J.)
    Roy W. Moss, for the appellant (Drywall Construction
    Corporation of Connecticut, Inc.).
    Paul N. Gilmore, with whom, on the brief, was Chris-
    topher A. Klepps, for the appellee (substitute plaintiff).
    Opinion
    KELLER, J. In this foreclosure action, a third party,
    Drywall Construction Corporation of Connecticut, Inc.
    (Drywall), appeals from the judgment of the trial court
    awarding the plaintiff Cadle Company a turnover order
    in the amount of $19,887.27 to aid in the execution of
    a deficiency judgment rendered against the defendant
    Frank Ogalin, Jr.1 Drywall claims that (1) the court
    erroneously found that, as of the date on which the
    plaintiff served a property execution on Drywall, it
    owed the defendant unreimbursed business expenses,
    and (2) even if the court properly found that it owed
    the defendant unreimbursed business expenses, it
    improperly awarded the plaintiff a turnover order
    because the expenses at issue constituted earnings for
    personal services, which are not the proper subject of
    a property execution. We affirm the judgment of the
    trial court.
    The relevant procedural history may be summarized
    as follows. In 1994, following a foreclosure by sale,
    the named plaintiff, Great Country Bank, obtained a
    deficiency judgment against the defendant. Later, Great
    Country Bank assigned its interest in the deficiency
    judgment to the plaintiff. In 2013, the plaintiff conducted
    postjudgment discovery and concluded that Drywall, a
    closely held family business, was in possession of debts
    that were due and owing to the defendant, one of its
    employees. In December, 2013, pursuant to General
    Statutes (Rev. to 2013) § 52-356a (a) (1),2 the plaintiff
    served on Drywall a personal property execution in an
    attempt to collect on the unsatisfied judgment. Drywall
    refused this demand for payment.
    In 2014, the plaintiff sought a turnover order against
    Drywall. It filed an application for orders in aid of execu-
    tion pursuant to General Statutes § 52-356b3 and a claim
    for a determination of interests in the subject property
    pursuant to General Statutes § 52-356c.4 It is not in
    dispute that Drywall was served with the application
    and claim. The court summoned Drywall to appear at
    a hearing on these matters, which took place over the
    course of three days, September 4, 2014, October 2,
    2014, and November 5, 2014.5 During the hearing, the
    plaintiff presented documentary evidence and testi-
    mony from Christina Ogalin (Ogalin), who is both Dry-
    wall’s president and the defendant’s daughter.
    Following the hearing, both the plaintiff and Drywall
    submitted posttrial briefs. Essentially, the plaintiff
    argued that the evidence, which included business
    records of Drywall, demonstrated that Drywall owed
    the defendant unreimbursed business expenses that he
    incurred on Drywall’s behalf. Drywall, arguing that the
    evidence demonstrated that it had reimbursed the
    defendant for prior expenses and that not all of the
    expenses in evidence had been incurred by the defen-
    dant, contended that it did not owe the defendant any
    ‘‘significant obligation’’ in December, 2013, when the
    property execution was served on Drywall.
    In relevant part, the court stated the following in its
    memorandum of decision: ‘‘During the hearing on the
    plaintiff’s application, the only witness was [Ogalin],
    who testified in her capacity as president of Drywall.
    Her testimony largely focused on the creation of four
    manila envelopes that were marked as the plaintiff’s
    exhibits 3, 4, 5, and 6. On the outside of each of these
    exhibits, Ogalin had written in red ink, in three separate
    columns, the amount of the expense, the date the
    expense was incurred, and the vendor to whom the
    expense was paid. Contained within each envelope
    [were] the expense receipt[s] . . . itemized on the face
    of the envelope. It was estimated that among all four
    envelopes, more than 700 individual expenses were
    itemized. The court finds that Drywall’s accounting and
    record keeping practices were sloppy at best and per-
    formed in a manner that defies even basic account-
    ing standards.
    ‘‘On October 29, 2013, Ogalin was deposed by the
    plaintiff in postjudgment proceedings. During that
    deposition, the following colloquy took place:
    ‘‘ ‘Q. And all of these . . . receipts . . . in these four
    folders that are exhibits 3, 4, 5, and 6 and the front
    pages, that represents obligations owing from [Drywall]
    to [the defendant]?
    ‘‘ ‘A. Yes. All this will be owed. If not already paid,
    some.’ . . .
    ‘‘On March 13, 2014, in her continued deposition,
    Ogalin testified as follows with regard to the creation
    of the envelopes:
    ‘‘ ‘Q. You testified a couple of minutes ago that you
    never wrote the first check for expense reimbursement
    concerning a document, such as an exhibit, which is
    now exhibit 9, until the front face of the document
    was complete.
    ‘‘ ‘A. I normally would generate the receipts and have
    a total on the manila [envelope], and from that total
    would write out checks when the business had money,
    and then that total would be wiped out once I hit that
    total. And then would go to the next manila [envelope]
    and next manila [envelope] and so on. Everything has
    been paid and accounted for but, like I said, that would
    be an amount, and that’s how I would do it. . . .’
    ‘‘During the hearing on the plaintiff’s application,
    Ogalin testified contrary to her prior sworn deposition
    testimony. Most significantly, she claimed [at the hear-
    ing] that all the expenses had been reimbursed prior
    to her creating the manila envelopes, not before. In
    addition, it was her testimony that the expenses were
    not incurred by the defendant alone. Rather, they were
    expenses incurred by her brother [Frank F. Ogalin III],
    who is also an officer in the corporation, as well as
    herself and [the defendant]. There was also conflicting
    testimony as to how those receipts were maintained.
    At one point, Ogalin testified that receipts were kept
    in separate bags depending upon who incurred the
    expense. There was also testimony that all the receipts
    were comingled, regardless of who incurred the
    expense. Again, as the court noted previously, the
    accounting and record keeping methods employed by
    Ogalin and Drywall were so poor that it is almost impos-
    sible to place any credibility in their accuracy.
    ‘‘After [posttrial] litigation [had] commenced, Ogalin
    attempted to create a spreadsheet in which she allo-
    cated each individual expense to either herself, [the
    defendant], or [Frank Ogalin III]. The court does not
    find this testimony credible. First, when deposed,
    Ogalin made clear that she only issued reimbursement
    after she totaled the expenses on the outside of each
    envelope and knew the aggregate total of those
    expenses. Such a process would be the logical method
    of issuing reimbursement, as one would need to know
    how much needs to be reimbursed before issuing any
    payment. To now claim that payments were made to
    reimburse expenses before the actual value of those
    expenses was determined is not logical [or] credible.
    Moreover, to now assert that these expenses were
    comingled expenses incurred by the defendant, [Frank
    Ogalin III], and herself also lacks credibility. [Ogalin]
    previously testified under oath that the receipts con-
    tained in these individual envelopes were expense reim-
    bursements owed to the defendant alone. Her
    testimony, that in 2014 she created a spreadsheet allo-
    cating those expenses between three individuals, based
    on her memory of approximately 700 individual receipts
    from a multitude of different vendors, also lacks credi-
    bility. No individual is capable of recalling who incurred
    a specific expense out of all of the many individual
    expenses [at issue], some dating back as many as five
    years. . . .
    ‘‘[W]hen the court evaluates the credibility of the
    testimony of Ogalin, scrutinizes all the exhibits, and
    considers the business practices of Drywall and its
    accounting methods, the court finds that as of Decem-
    ber 3, 2013, the date of the plaintiff’s property execution
    issued to Drywall, Drywall owed the defendant unreim-
    bursed business expenses in the amount of $19,887.27.
    The court has reduced the total sum by those expenses
    not attributable to the business of Drywall.
    ‘‘With regard to the plaintiff’s claim of a $4300 loan
    repayment obligation due the defendant from Drywall,
    the plaintiff has not met its burden of proof that this
    was still owed to the defendant as of the date of the
    property execution. This portion of the turnover order
    is denied.
    ‘‘For the foregoing reasons, the court grants the plain-
    tiff’s [application for a] turnover order in the amount
    of $19,887.27.’’ (Emphasis in original.)
    This appeal by Drywall followed. We will address
    each of Drywall’s claims, in turn.
    I
    First, Drywall claims that the court erroneously found
    that, as of the date on which the plaintiff served the
    property execution on Drywall, it owed the defendant
    unreimbursed business expenses totaling $19,887.27.
    We disagree.
    Drywall expressly invokes our clearly erroneous stan-
    dard of review, which governs our review of the findings
    of fact made by the trial court. ‘‘It is the province of
    the trier of fact to weigh the evidence presented and
    determine the credibility and effect to be given the
    evidence. . . . On appellate review, therefore, we will
    give the evidence the most favorable reasonable con-
    struction in support of the verdict to which it is entitled.
    . . . It is not within the power of this court to find facts
    or draw conclusions from primary facts found by the
    trial court. As an appellate court, we review the trial
    court’s factual findings to ensure that they could have
    been found legally, logically and reasonably. . . .
    Appellate review under the clearly erroneous standard
    is a two-pronged inquiry: [W]e first determine whether
    there is evidence to support the finding. If not, the
    finding is clearly erroneous. Even if there is evidence
    to support it, however, a finding is clearly erroneous if
    in view of the evidence and pleadings in the whole
    record [this court] is left with the definite and firm
    conviction that a mistake has been committed.’’ (Cita-
    tions omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Mor-
    gan Buildings & Spas, Inc. v. Dean’s Stoves & Spas,
    Inc., 
    58 Conn. App. 560
    , 564, 
    753 A.2d 957
    (2000).
    In relevant part, Drywall argues: ‘‘The only witness
    presented by [the plaintiff], Drywall’s president,
    [Ogalin], testified that Drywall owed the defendant
    nothing at the time of [the plaintiff’s] levy. The docu-
    mentary evidence fully supported and in no manner did
    it contradict Ogalin’s testimony. This includes Ogalin’s
    relevant deposition testimony, wherein [she] indicated
    nothing more than Drywall’s general intention or prac-
    tice of paying reimbursement to an employee, such as
    [the defendant] for actual business expenses incurred
    for Drywall’s benefit.’’ (Emphasis omitted.) Addition-
    ally, Drywall argues that the evidence did not support
    the court’s reliance on receipts included in the enve-
    lopes, as there was no evidence that these envelopes,
    or the receipts therein, had ‘‘any specific connection
    to [the defendant]’’ or that the debts reflected therein
    were owed the defendant on the date of the execution
    or within the four months following the execution.6
    We readily conclude that the evidence supports the
    trial court’s finding that the four envelopes at the center
    of its findings contained receipts for expenses incurred
    by the defendant on behalf of Drywall. Although, in the
    context of this claim, Drywall appears to rely entirely
    on Ogalin’s testimony at the posttrial hearing, critical
    evidence in the present case came in the form of her
    deposition testimony, which was offered by the plaintiff
    and admitted into evidence for substantive purposes
    by the court without objection.7 She was deposed, first,
    on October 29, 2013, and, later, on March 13, 2014, after
    the plaintiff served the property execution and filed an
    application for a turnover order against Drywall. In her
    deposition testimony of October 29, 2013, Ogalin stated
    that the envelopes contained receipts for unreimbursed
    expenses incurred by the defendant for Drywall. She
    testified at length with respect to the manner in which
    she recorded the expenses incurred by the defendant
    for Drywall, which included, among other things, food
    purchases, items used by workers and office supplies.
    She testified that she kept records at Drywall’s place
    of business, which was located in a portion of her home.
    She testified that as the defendant provided her with
    receipts for his business expenditures, which were
    always cash expenditures, it was her procedure to place
    such receipts into a shopping bag that was dedicated
    to the defendant’s expenditures. Ogalin testified that
    receipts for business expenditures incurred by Frank
    Ogalin III were stored in a separate shopping bag.
    In her October 29, 2013 deposition testimony, Ogalin
    testified that, between 2011 and 2013, she removed
    receipts from the shopping bag dedicated to the defen-
    dant’s unreimbursed expenses. Then, she engaged in a
    laborious process of itemizing the expenses by using
    four envelopes. Each envelope contained between 165
    and 174 receipts. For each receipt, Ogalin recorded on
    the front of the envelope the name of the vendor, the
    date the expense was incurred, and the amount of the
    expense. Ogalin proceeded to testify that, once she was
    unable to fit any additional receipts into an envelope,
    it was her practice to create a total for all of the receipts
    in the envelope and to write that total on the outside
    of each envelope near the columns listing the individual
    expenses. Photocopies of the front of each of the four
    envelopes were introduced as exhibits both at the time
    of Ogalin’s depositions and at the posttrial hearing.
    Added together, the four totals listed on the envelopes
    amount to $25,080.41.8
    In addition to demonstrating that the envelopes and
    the receipts therein reflected business expenses
    incurred by the defendant on behalf of Drywall, the
    evidence supported a finding that these expenses were
    unreimbursed on December 3, 2013, when the property
    execution was served on Drywall. During her deposition
    testimony of October 29, 2013, which, obviously, pre-
    ceded the execution, Ogalin was asked if the four enve-
    lopes represent obligations owed to the defendant by
    Drywall. She replied, ‘‘Yes. All this will be owed. If not
    already paid, some.’’
    In both her March 13, 2014 deposition testimony and
    her testimony at the time of the posttrial hearing, Ogalin
    testified that her process of totaling the receipts in the
    envelopes occurred prior to her making reimburse-
    ments for such expenses. She testified that reimburse-
    ments for the amount totaled on one envelope are
    completed prior to her making reimbursements for
    expenses reflected on another envelope.
    Ogalin’s testimony at the March 13, 2014 deposition,
    which occurred after the execution had been served
    and after the plaintiff applied for a turnover order, as
    well as her subsequent testimony at the posttrial hear-
    ing, differed in material ways from her original deposi-
    tion testimony. Essentially, both in her later deposition
    and at the posttrial hearing, Ogalin testified that, upon
    her further review, the envelopes contained receipts
    that reflected her own expenses, not just those of the
    defendant, as well as obligations that had been paid.
    As is detailed in the court’s discussion of Ogalin’s testi-
    mony at the posttrial hearing, she testified that, after
    her initial deposition testimony, she created a spread-
    sheet in which, on the basis of her recollection of the
    hundreds of business expenses at issue, she reflected
    that many of the receipts at issue were her own
    expenses. Also, referring to specific reimbursements
    that had been made by Drywall prior to the execution,
    she testified that, prior to the creation of the envelopes,
    reimbursements had been made to the defendant for
    receipts in the envelopes.
    For a variety of reasons, the court found that Ogalin
    did not testify credibly at the posttrial hearing. Although
    Drywall does not explicitly challenge the court’s credi-
    bility determination, upon which the court’s decision is
    based, its arguments concerning the evidence implicitly
    invite us to rely solely upon Ogalin’s testimony at the
    posttrial hearing. It suffices to observe that in our
    review we need only look to whether the evidence sup-
    ports the court’s factual determinations; we will not
    relitigate the court’s credibility findings because such
    determinations are wholly within the province of the
    court as the trier of fact.9 See, e.g., Somers v. Chan,
    
    110 Conn. App. 511
    , 530, 
    955 A.2d 667
    (2008).
    With respect to the precise amount of the court’s
    turnover order, $19,887.27, we observe that the court
    stated that it had reached this final amount after it
    carefully evaluated Ogalin’s testimony and all of the
    exhibits presented in evidence. As stated earlier, Ogal-
    in’s deposition testimony from October 29, 2013, as well
    as documentary evidence consistent therewith, sup-
    ported a finding that, at the time of execution, Drywall
    owed the defendant business expenses in a higher
    amount, $25,080.41. The court did not set forth detailed
    findings with respect to how it arrived at its turnover
    order in the amount of $19,887.27, and the record does
    not reflect that Drywall, which bears the burden of
    demonstrating that the trial court committed reversible
    error, asked the court to provide the manner by which
    it calculated the amount of the debt owed the defendant.
    As the plaintiff argues before this court, however, the
    evidence readily provides a rationale for the court’s
    award. It is clear from our review of the court’s decision
    that its award was directly based on its finding that, as
    of the date on which the plaintiff served a property
    execution on Drywall, it owed the defendant unreim-
    bursed business expenses totaling $19,887.27. As stated
    previously in this opinion, ‘‘[o]n appellate review . . .
    we will give the evidence the most favorable reasonable
    construction in support of the verdict to which it is
    entitled. . . . It is not within the power of this court
    to find facts or draw conclusions from primary facts
    found by the trial court. As an appellate court, we review
    the trial court’s factual findings to ensure that they
    could have been found legally, logically and reason-
    ably.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) Morgan Buildings & Spas, Inc. v. Dean’s Stoves &
    Spas, 
    Inc., supra
    , 
    58 Conn. App. 564
    .
    In its decision, the court stated that it had determined
    the amount of its turnover order after it had ‘‘reduced
    the total sum by those expenses not attributable to the
    business of Drywall.’’ In her initial deposition testimony
    in which she described the unreimbursed expenses
    detailed on the envelopes, Ogalin admitted that she had
    not reviewed the receipts contained in the envelopes
    for the purpose of determining whether they reflected
    valid business expenses because she believed that
    ‘‘many things could be for the company.’’ At the time
    of the posttrial hearing, Ogalin testified with respect to
    the spreadsheet concerning the receipts which, as was
    discussed previously in this opinion, she prepared prior
    to the posttrial hearing. Although the court did not
    find this evidence and the testimony concerning it be
    credible insofar as it was introduced to demonstrate,
    for example, that expenses had been reimbursed or that
    certain expenses were not attributable to the defendant,
    it appears that the court found this testimony and evi-
    dence credible insofar as it was introduced to demon-
    strate that certain of the expenses at issue simply were
    not business expenses of Drywall. ‘‘[T]he trial judge
    . . . is free to accept or reject, in whole or in part, the
    testimony offered by either party.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Antonucci v. Antonucci, 164 Conn.
    App. 95, 131, 
    138 A.3d 297
    (2016).
    The spreadsheet contained information concerning
    the receipts reflected on the envelopes. Referring to
    the spreadsheet, Ogalin testified that sixty-five of the
    expenses detailed thereon, totaling $3819.14, had been
    ‘‘rejected’’ by her because they were not business
    expenses of Drywall.10 Deducting this $3819.14 from
    $25,080.41, the total amount reflected on the envelopes,
    results in $21,261.27, an amount that is $1374 greater
    than the amount of the court’s turnover order,
    $19,887.27. Thus, the evidence suggests that the court
    deducted the expenses that Drywall claimed were not
    attributed to its business and, to Drywall’s benefit,
    awarded a turnover order in an amount that was lower
    than the total amount reflected on the envelopes minus
    such nonbusiness expenses.11
    As the foregoing analysis reflects, there is evidence
    to support the court’s findings and its turnover order.
    The plaintiff demonstrated that, at the time of the execu-
    tion, Drywall held ‘‘nonexempt personal property of the
    judgment debtor other than debts due from a banking
    institution or earnings.’’ General Statutes (Rev. to 2013)
    § 52-356a (a) (1).12 Such debts are a proper subject of
    a turnover order. See General Statutes § 52-356b.13 With
    respect to the court’s findings, our review of the evi-
    dence and pleadings in the whole record does not leave
    us with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake
    has been committed. Accordingly, this claim is not per-
    suasive.
    II
    Next, Drywall claims that even if the court properly
    found that it owed the defendant unreimbursed busi-
    ness expenses, it improperly awarded the plaintiff a
    turnover order because the expenses at issue consti-
    tuted earnings for personal services and, therefore,
    were not the proper subject of a property execution.
    We reject this claim.
    Drywall observes that, under General Statutes (Rev.
    to 2013) § 52-356a (a) (1), the plaintiff was entitled to
    an execution ‘‘against the nonexempt personal property
    of the judgment debtor other than debts due from a
    banking institution or earnings. . . .’’ Moreover, Dry-
    wall observes that ‘‘ ‘[e]arnings’ ’’ are defined by statute
    as ‘‘any debt accruing by reason of personal services,
    including any compensation payable by an employer
    to an employee for such personal services, whether
    denominated as wages, salary, commission, bonus or
    otherwise.’’ General Statutes § 52-350a (5). Drywall
    argues that ‘‘assuming Drywall owed [the defendant] a
    debt by reason of expenses [he] incurred as an
    employee on behalf of [his employer], then the expenses
    were incurred by [the defendant], a fortiori, by reason
    of his performance of personal services, and therefore
    the debt owed comes squarely within the plain statutory
    definition of earnings.’’ Drywall goes on to argue:
    ‘‘Where in the course of rendering personal services to
    an employer, an employee incurs substantial reimburs-
    able expenses, the actual reimbursement of such
    expenses is conceptually similar to wages, [salary],
    bonuses, commissions, etc., and is . . . deserving of
    the protections of the statutory wage execution provi-
    sions.’’ Thus, Drywall argues, ‘‘the alleged debt owed by
    Drywall to [the defendant] was not subject to ordinary
    property execution [and] it was error to enter the turn-
    over order.’’
    The plaintiff argues that there is no support in the
    law for Drywall’s argument that any monies it owed the
    defendant for expenses that he incurred on Drywall’s
    behalf should be characterized as wages for personal
    services. On a more fundamental level, however, the
    plaintiff argues that Drywall is not entitled to review
    of this claim because it was not raised before the trial
    court. We agree with the plaintiff.
    The record reflects that, at no time during the pro-
    ceedings before the trial court did Drywall argue or
    attempt to demonstrate that the expenses at issue were
    a form of wages owed the defendant for personal ser-
    vices; the factual issues were limited to whether the
    expenses were incurred by the defendant on behalf of
    Drywall, whether the expenses were unreimbursed at
    the time of the execution, and whether the expenses
    were business expenses. Before this court, Drywall, in
    a conclusory manner that is not supported by reference
    to relevant facts in the record, raises a factual issue
    that it did not ask the court to resolve expressly and
    which, unsurprisingly, the trial court did not address
    in its memorandum of decision.
    We need not consider this claim. ‘‘Our appellate
    courts, as a general practice, will not review claims
    made for the first time on appeal. . . . [A]n appellate
    court is under no obligation to consider a claim that is
    not distinctly raised at the trial level. . . . [B]ecause
    our review is limited to matters in the record, we [also]
    will not address issues not decided by the trial court.
    . . . The purpose of our preservation requirements is
    to ensure fair notice of a party’s claims to both the trial
    court and opposing parties. . . . These requirements
    are not simply formalities. They serve to alert the trial
    court to potential error while there is still time for
    the court to act.’’ (Citations omitted; footnote omitted;
    internal quotation marks omitted.) White v. Mazda
    Motor of America, Inc., 
    313 Conn. 610
    , 619–20, 
    99 A.3d 1079
    (2014).
    Alternatively, we observe that Drywall has failed to
    set forth any authority in support of the proposition
    that, on behalf of the defendant, it had standing to claim
    before the trial court that the debts at issue were exempt
    from execution because they constituted wages owed
    the defendant as compensation for personal services.
    The record reflects that the defendant and Drywall were
    served with the execution in accordance with § 52-356a,
    which included a notice of judgment debtor rights as
    required by General Statutes § 52-361b. The defendant,
    who is the judgment debtor in this proceeding, did not
    avail himself of his statutory right to claim an exemption
    on the ground that the execution was directed at wages,
    which were exempt from execution, by returning the
    exemption claim form to the clerk of the Superior Court.
    For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that Drywall
    is unable to prevail with respect to this claim.
    The judgment is affirmed.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    This foreclosure action was commenced by the named plaintiff, Great
    Country Bank, against the following defendants: Jeffrey T. Ogalin; Frank
    Ogalin, Jr.; the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, as receiver for the
    Bank Mart; the Internal Revenue Service of the United States of America;
    and Benson Snaider, P.C. Great Country Bank obtained a judgment of fore-
    closure, and later a deficiency judgment following the sale, then assigned its
    interest in the deficiency judgment to Cadle Company, which subsequently
    appeared as a plaintiff in this action. In this opinion, we shall refer to Cadle
    Company as the plaintiff, to Frank Ogalin, Jr., as the defendant, and to other
    individuals by name. The plaintiff and Drywall are the only parties that
    participated in this appeal.
    2
    General Statutes (Rev. to 2013) § 52-356a (a) (1) provides in relevant
    part: ‘‘On application of a judgment creditor or a judgment creditor’s attor-
    ney, stating that a judgment remains unsatisfied and the amount due thereon,
    and subject to the expiration of any stay of enforcement and expiration of
    any right of appeal, the clerk of the court in which the money judgment
    was rendered shall issue an execution pursuant to this section against the
    nonexempt personal property of the judgment debtor other than debts due
    from a banking institution or earnings. . . .’’
    3
    General Statutes § 52-356b provides: ‘‘(a) If a judgment is unsatisfied,
    the judgment creditor may apply to the court for an execution and an order
    in aid of the execution directing the judgment debtor, or any third person,
    to transfer to the levying officer either or both of the following: (1) Possession
    of specified personal property that is sought to be levied on; or (2) possession
    of documentary evidence of title to property of, or a debt owed to, the
    judgment debtor that is sought to be levied on.
    ‘‘(b) The court may issue a turnover order pursuant to this section, after
    notice and hearing or as provided in subsection (c) of this section, on a
    showing of need for the order. If the order is to be directed against a third
    person, such person shall be notified of his right pursuant to section 52-
    356c to a determination of any interest claimed in the property.
    ‘‘(c) The court may issue a turnover order against a judgment debtor,
    without notice or hearing, upon affidavit by the judgment creditor or another
    competent affiant stating facts from which the court concludes that there
    is a reasonable likelihood that the judgment debtor is about to remove the
    property from the state or is about to fraudulently dispose of the property
    with intent to hinder, delay or defraud his creditors. The court shall expedi-
    tiously hear and determine any motion by the judgment debtor to dissolve
    such an ex parte order.
    ‘‘(d) Unless directed to a person who is before the court, any turnover
    order shall be personally served and shall contain a notice that failure to
    comply therewith may subject the person served to being held in contempt
    of court.’’
    4
    General Statutes § 52-356c provides: ‘‘(a) Where a dispute exists between
    the judgment debtor or judgment creditor and a third person concerning
    an interest in personal property sought to be levied on, or where a third
    person claims that the execution will prejudice his superior interest therein,
    the judgment creditor or third person may, within twenty days of service
    of the execution or upon application by the judgment creditor for a turnover
    order, make a claim for determination of interests pursuant to this section.
    ‘‘(b) The claim, which shall constitute the appearance of any third-person
    claimant, shall be filed with the Superior Court, on a prescribed form as a
    supplemental proceeding to the original action. The claim shall contain a
    description of the property in which an interest is claimed and a statement
    of the basis for the claim or of the nature of the dispute.
    ‘‘(c) On filing of the claim, the clerk of the court shall assign the matter
    for hearing on a date certain and order that notice of the hearing be served
    by the claimant on all persons known to claim an interest in the disputed
    property.
    ‘‘(d) Pending the hearing on the claim and subject to further order of the
    court, any property in dispute shall continue to be held by the person then
    in possession and shall not be transferred to any person who is not a party
    to the supplemental proceeding. If previously seized by or delivered to a
    levying officer, the property shall remain in the custody of the levying officer.
    ‘‘(e) Unless the judgment creditor waives such rights as he may have to
    execute against the contested property, the claim shall be deemed contro-
    verted and the issues shall be joined without further pleading by any party.
    The court may permit or require such further pleadings, amendments and
    notices and may make such further orders as justice or orderly administra-
    tion requires. Prior to hearing the claim, the court may in its discretion: (1)
    Require the judgment creditor to post a bond in favor of a third person
    claimant for any damages which may accrue as a result of the outstanding
    execution and any subsequent proceedings, (2) on substitution by the third
    person of a bond as security for the property, allow the third person to
    obtain release of the property pending determination of the claim, or (3)
    direct that other known nonexempt property of the judgment debtor first
    be executed against.
    ‘‘(f) After hearing, the court shall render judgment determining the respec-
    tive interests of the parties and may order the disposition of the property
    or its proceeds in accordance therewith.
    ‘‘(g) This section does not affect any interest in property of any person who
    is not a party to a determination pursuant to the provisions of this section.’’
    5
    We observe that Drywall, represented by counsel, appeared before the
    trial court as a ‘‘third party’’ and that it has brought the present appeal as
    a ‘‘third party.’’ Drywall, which is not a party to the underlying action,
    nevertheless properly brings the present appeal because it indisputably was
    a party to the supplemental proceeding, initiated by the plaintiff under § 52-
    356c, in that original foreclosure action. General Statutes § 52-263 provides
    in relevant part: ‘‘Upon the trial of all matters of fact in any cause or action
    in the Superior Court, whether to the court or jury, or before any judge
    thereof when the jurisdiction of any action or proceeding is vested in him,
    if either party is aggrieved by the decision of the court or judge upon any
    question or questions of law arising in the trial . . . he may appeal to the
    court having jurisdiction from the final judgment of the court or of such
    judge . . . .’’ Our Supreme Court has observed that, for purposes of § 52-
    263, an underlying action encompasses judicial proceedings in a court of
    justice and ‘‘include any proceeding in such a court for the purpose of
    obtaining such redress as the law provides. . . . It includes not only the
    usual civil action instituted by process but also proceedings initiated by
    petition . . . stipulation . . . or motion.’’ (Citation omitted; emphasis
    altered; internal quotation marks omitted.) Board of Education v. Tavares
    Pediatric Center, 
    276 Conn. 544
    , 554–55, 
    888 A.2d 65
    (2006). Moreover,
    ‘‘[a]ny court decision on a determination of interest in property under section
    52-356c . . . shall be a final decision for the purpose of appeal.’’ General
    Statutes § 52-400d; see, e.g., PB Real Estate, Inc., v. Dem II Properties, 
    50 Conn. App. 741
    , 742, 
    719 A.2d 73
    (1998) (nonparty appealed from turnover
    order directed against it).
    6
    See General Statutes (Rev. to 2013) § 52-356a (a) (4) (C) (ii) (‘‘if a debt
    is not yet payable, payment shall be made when the debt matures if within
    four months after issuance of the execution’’).
    7
    Section 8-5 of the Connecticut Code of Evidence provides in relevant
    part: ‘‘The following are not excluded by the hearsay rule, provided the
    declarant is available for cross-examination at trial:
    ‘‘(1) A prior inconsistent statement of a witness, provided (A) the state-
    ment is in writing or otherwise recorded by audiotape, videotape or some
    other equally reliable medium, (B) the writing or recording is duly authenti-
    cated as that of the witness, and (C) the witness has personal knowledge
    of the contents of the statement . . . .’’
    8
    Each envelope reflected a different total. One envelope was marked with
    a total of $7603.37, another with a total of $5155.45, another with a total of
    $5920.05, and the final with a total of $6401.54.
    9
    Insofar as Ogalin testified in a manner contrary to her initial deposition
    testimony, the court resolved such conflict in favor of the earlier deposition
    testimony. It suffices to observe that there were ample factors that supported
    the court’s finding that Ogalin’s later testimony, concerning debts owed
    from her family’s business to the defendant, generally was not credible. The
    court explained that Ogalin’s later deposition testimony and her posttrial
    testimony were not logical and likely had been influenced by the fact that
    they occurred after the posttrial litigation was initiated by the plaintiff. The
    court also explained why it did not credit as accurate the spreadsheet
    generated by Ogalin, by memory, after the commencement of the posttrial
    litigation. As the plaintiff correctly argues, Ogalin’s testimony that Drywall
    had reimbursed the defendant for expenses that appear on the envelopes,
    and Drywall’s attempt to demonstrate this by presenting evidence of pay-
    ments that allegedly had been made to the defendant, was incompatible
    with the court’s finding, supported by Ogalin’s initial deposition testimony,
    that reimbursements were made by Drywall, if at all, only after Ogalin had
    prepared each envelope and had totaled the receipts contained therein. Thus,
    although there was testimony from Ogalin concerning several payments that
    had been made to the defendant by Drywall, the court did not rely on such
    evidence because many of these alleged payments predated the preparation
    of the envelopes that, according to Ogalin’s testimony, contained the receipts
    for the expenses reimbursed to the defendant.
    10
    In addition to Ogalin’s testimony that these expenses were not business
    expenses of Drywall, we observe that the spreadsheet reflects that many
    of the expenses were incurred in retail stores, including but not limited to
    T.J. Maxx, Toys R Us, Perfume World, Champs, Old Navy, Game Stop,
    Macy’s, Petco, American Eagle, Sephora, Hallmark, Kohl’s, and Hollister.
    Consistent with Ogalin’s testimony, it would have been reasonable for the
    court to have inferred that expenses incurred at such retail stores were
    unlikely to have been related to Drywall’s construction business.
    11
    The plaintiff argues, and we agree, that the court’s further reduction of
    $1374 may be the result of the court having credited other evidence favorable
    to Drywall, including evidence presented at the posttrial hearing that on
    October 11, 2013, prior to the date on which the execution was served on
    Drywall, Drywall had reimbursed the defendant by check in the amount of
    $1274, for his purchase of ‘‘small tools and supplies.’’ Ogalin, referring to a
    ‘‘Vendor Activity Report’’ that reflected payments made to the defendant,
    testified that such payment, for business expenses of Drywall, had been
    made to the defendant.
    12
    See also footnote 2 of this opinion.
    13
    See also footnote 3 of this opinion.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC37905

Judges: DiPentima, Keller, Prescott

Filed Date: 10/11/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024