CIT Bank, N.A. v. Francis ( 2022 )


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    CIT BANK, N.A. v. JOHANNA FRANCIS ET AL.
    (AC 43121)
    Bright, C. J., and Prescott and Elgo, Js.
    Syllabus
    The defendant J, an heir of the decedent mortgagors, appealed to this court
    following the trial court’s judgment of strict foreclosure in favor of the
    plaintiff bank. J claimed that the trial court improperly granted the
    plaintiff’s motion for a protective order that precluded her from obtaining
    the discovery materials she needed to develop and pursue her special
    defenses. J had filed special defenses that alleged, inter alia, that her
    father, F, had threatened and fraudulently induced the decedents, who
    were J’s grandparents, to enter into the mortgage transaction. J filed
    discovery requests that sought information from the plaintiff about its
    communications with F and its knowledge of his actions. In response,
    the plaintiff sought a protective order, claiming that J’s requests
    exceeded those normally made in mortgage foreclosure actions and that
    state and federal law prohibited disclosure of the requested information.
    In opposing the plaintiff’s motion, J produced a letter from the executor
    of her grandmother’s estate consenting to the discovery requests. The
    trial court granted the plaintiff’s motion for the protective order as to
    documents other than the promissory note, the mortgage, assignments
    of the mortgage and the decedents’ payment history. The court subse-
    quently granted a motion the plaintiff filed to strike the special defenses
    relating to F, reasoning that the special defenses failed to allege that
    the plaintiff or its predecessor in interest knew of or participated in F’s
    alleged misconduct and that F was acting on behalf of the plaintiff or
    as its agent. The court also granted motions the plaintiff filed seeking
    summary judgment as to liability only on the complaint and as to J’s
    remaining special defenses. The court concluded, inter alia, that J could
    not prevail on her special defenses that alleged that the decedents lacked
    the mental capacity to enter into the loan and that there was an absence
    of consideration for the loan. Held that the trial court’s granting of the
    plaintiff’s motion for a protective order constituted an abuse of discre-
    tion that, under the particular circumstances of this case, was harmful
    to J, as it prevented her from discovering facts that would permit her
    to pursue, develop and support her special defenses: contrary to the
    plaintiff’s assertion, state and federal law did not prohibit compliance
    with J’s discovery requests, as those laws permitted disclosure based
    on consent, which J had obtained from the executor of her grandmother’s
    estate, the plaintiff provided no authority for the court’s refusal to permit
    any disclosure of documents beyond the note, the mortgage and assign-
    ments thereof and the decedents’ payment history, and the plaintiff
    asserted no claim that J’s discovery requests were not made in good faith
    or were overbroad, unreasonable, oppressive or improper; moreover,
    the plaintiff’s claim that J could have amended the stricken special
    defenses or obtained discovery from other sources was unavailing
    because J was not a party to the mortgage transaction, the special
    defenses necessarily encompassed information relevant to the plaintiff’s
    participation in or knowledge of F’s alleged conduct, and, once the court
    precluded full discovery, J could no longer develop an evidentiary basis
    from which to amend the stricken special defenses; furthermore,
    because J was denied the discovery needed to develop and pursue her
    special defenses, she was not, as the plaintiff claimed, required to file
    an affidavit pursuant to the applicable rule of practice (§ 17-47) in
    response to the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment as to the spe-
    cial defenses.
    (One judge concurring separately)
    Argued January 5, 2021—officially released August 9, 2022
    Procedural History
    Action to foreclose a mortgage on certain real prop-
    erty, and for other relief, brought to the Superior Court
    in the judicial district of Stamford-Norwalk, where the
    court, Mintz, J., granted the plaintiff’s motion to cite
    in James M. Francis as a defendant; thereafter, the
    defendant James M. Francis et al. were defaulted for
    failure to appear; subsequently, the court, Randolph,
    J., granted the plaintiff’s motion for a protective order;
    thereafter, the court, Genuario, J., granted the plain-
    tiff’s motion to strike certain of the named defendant’s
    special defenses; subsequently, the court, Lee, J.,
    granted the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment
    as to liability only on the named defendant’s first and
    second special defenses; thereafter, the court, Gen-
    uario, J., granted the plaintiff’s motion for summary
    judgment as to the complaint; subsequently, the court,
    Lee, J., granted the plaintiff’s motion to substitute Cas-
    cade Funding RM1 Alternative Holdings, LLC, as the
    plaintiff; thereafter, the court, Genuario, J., granted the
    plaintiff’s motion for a judgment of strict foreclosure
    and rendered judgment thereon, from which the named
    defendant appealed to this court. Reversed; further pro-
    ceedings.
    Timothy D. Miltenberger, for the appellant (named
    defendant).
    Christopher J. Picard, for the appellee (substitute
    plaintiff).
    Opinion
    ELGO, J. In this mortgage foreclosure action, the
    defendant Johanna Francis1 appeals from the judgment
    of the trial court in favor of the plaintiff, CIT Bank,
    N.A.2 On appeal, the defendant claims that the court
    improperly granted the plaintiff’s motion for a protec-
    tive order regarding certain discovery requests, thereby
    preventing her from pursuing her special defenses. We
    agree with the defendant and, accordingly, reverse the
    judgment of the trial court.
    The following facts and procedural history are rele-
    vant to this appeal. The plaintiff commenced this action
    on June 13, 2016, seeking to foreclose a residential
    mortgage on property located at 243 New Norwalk Road
    in New Canaan. According to the complaint, on April
    8, 2008, Norbert Francis and Evelyn Francis (decedents)
    executed and delivered to Financial Freedom Senior
    Funding Corporation, a subsidiary of IndyMac Bank,
    F.S.B., a promissory note for a loan not to exceed a
    maximum principal amount of $818,550. To secure the
    note, the decedents executed a reverse annuity mort-
    gage (mortgage) on the property. Thereafter, the mort-
    gage was assigned from Financial Freedom Senior
    Funding Corporation to Mortgage Electronic Registra-
    tion Systems, Inc., as nominee for Financial Freedom
    Acquisition, LLC. The mortgage then was assigned from
    Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc., to the
    plaintiff.
    Norbert Francis died on January 30, 2009, and Evelyn
    Francis died on February 1, 2016. The complaint alleged
    that the note was in default and that the plaintiff, as
    the holder of the note, had elected to accelerate the
    balance due on the note, to declare the note to be due
    in full and to foreclose the mortgage securing the note.
    The complaint further alleged that the defendant, who
    was the decedents’ granddaughter, and James M. Fran-
    cis (Francis), the defendant’s father, might claim an
    interest in the property by virtue of being the heirs at
    law to the decedent Evelyn Francis.
    On September 20, 2017, the defendant filed an answer
    to the plaintiff’s complaint. On December 12, 2017, the
    defendant filed a revised answer, in which she raised
    four special defenses. In those special defenses, she
    alleged that (1) the note and mortgage were unenforce-
    able because the decedents ‘‘had mental illness that
    prevented them from understanding the true nature of
    the loan documents alleged in the complaint’’; (2) ‘‘nei-
    ther [of the decedents] received any consideration’’ for
    the note and mortgage; (3) Francis ‘‘made a false repre-
    sentation of fact to induce [the decedents] to sign the
    note and mortgage,’’ and ‘‘Francis knew that his repre-
    sentations . . . were untrue and [that the decedents]
    relied on the false representation to their detriment’’;
    and (4) ‘‘Francis wrongfully acted and threatened [the
    decedents] to sign the note and mortgage . . . leaving
    them with no reasonable alternative, and to which acts
    and, or, threats they acceded, resulting in a transaction
    that was unfair to [the decedents].’’
    The defendant also filed discovery requests, in which
    she asked, inter alia, that the plaintiff identify all com-
    munications between Francis and the plaintiff, and to
    produce all written communications received by the
    plaintiff or any of its predecessors from Francis or the
    decedents or any attorney purporting to represent any
    of them. In response, the plaintiff filed a motion for
    a protective order pursuant to Practice Book § 13-5,
    contending, inter alia, that disclosure of the requested
    information was precluded by state and federal law.
    On November 22, 2017, the defendant filed an objection
    to the plaintiff’s motion for a protective order. At a
    hearing on the plaintiff’s motion on January 29, 2018,3
    the plaintiff indicated that it was willing to provide ‘‘the
    note, the mortgage, the assignments, and the payment
    history’’ to the defendant. The plaintiff nevertheless
    informed the court that it objected to the defendant’s
    requests for ‘‘any and all communications between [the]
    decedents, who were the ones who took out the note
    and the mortgage,’’ ‘‘any communications between [the
    plaintiff] and [Francis],’’ and ‘‘any and all attorneys that
    were involved in the making and execution of the note
    and the mortgage.’’ The plaintiff also argued that the
    defendant’s discovery requests went ‘‘above and beyond
    asking for the normal documents that are required to
    give to the court in conjunction with a foreclosure
    action.’’ The plaintiff made no claim that the defendant’s
    discovery requests were made in bad faith or that they
    were overbroad, unreasonable, oppressive or improper.
    In response, the court stated: ‘‘What the court is taking
    into consideration is this: if the defenses that have been
    talked about include [incapacity], the court’s not going
    to jump into the deep end of the pool and provide
    anything beyond the note, the mortgage, the assign-
    ments, and the payment history.’’ The court thereafter
    granted the plaintiff’s motion for a protective order as to
    documents other than the note, mortgage, assignments
    and payment history.
    On January 26, 2018, three days before the trial court
    granted the plaintiff’s motion for a protective order, the
    plaintiff filed a motion to strike pursuant to Practice
    Book § 10-39, claiming that the defendant’s third and
    fourth special defenses were legally insufficient for fail-
    ing to allege that the plaintiff or its predecessor in
    interest knew of or participated in Francis’ alleged mis-
    conduct. The defendant did not file a response to the
    motion to strike. The court granted the plaintiff’s
    motion to strike by order dated April 9, 2018. As to the
    third special defense, the court held that the defendant
    had failed to plead facts regarding the subject matter
    of the alleged misrepresentation or demonstrating that
    the plaintiff or Francis, acting on behalf of the plaintiff,
    made the subject misrepresentation. As to the fourth
    special defense, the court held that the defendant had
    failed to allege that Francis was acting on behalf of or
    as the agent of the plaintiff.4
    On September 11, 2018, the plaintiff filed a motion
    for summary judgment as to liability on the defendant’s
    first and second special defenses. The defendant did
    not file a response to that motion and, on December
    6, 2018, the court rendered summary judgment in favor
    of the plaintiff as to liability only. In so doing, the court
    concluded that the plaintiff had established that it was
    the holder of the note and mortgage, and that a default
    had occurred. The court further concluded that the
    defendant could not prevail on the first and second
    special defenses, which alleged that the decedents
    lacked the mental capacity to enter into the loan and
    that there was an absence of consideration for the loan.5
    The plaintiff then filed a second motion for summary
    judgment as to liability on the sole count of the foreclo-
    sure complaint. Once again, the defendant did not file
    a response to the plaintiff’s motion, which the court
    granted on January 28, 2019, stating: ‘‘The court has
    reviewed the affidavits on file and finds no genuine
    issue of material fact as to the essential allegations of
    the complaint. [The] court also observes that there were
    no counteraffidavits or no opposition filed.’’ Thereafter,
    on June 11, 2019, the court rendered judgment of strict
    foreclosure in favor of the plaintiff. This appeal fol-
    lowed.
    On appeal, the defendant claims that the court
    improperly granted the plaintiff’s motion for a protec-
    tive order regarding the defendant’s discovery requests.
    According to the defendant, the plaintiff did not estab-
    lish good cause for the granting of a protective order as
    required pursuant to Practice Book § 13-5.6 She further
    contends that, in the absence of the discovery sought,
    she could not succeed on her third special defense,
    which alleged that Francis fraudulently had induced
    the decedents to enter into the mortgage transaction.7
    In response, the plaintiff argues that the defendant
    failed to preserve her claim because she did not chal-
    lenge the propriety of the court’s decision to strike that
    special defense or oppose the plaintiff’s motions for
    summary judgment. The plaintiff further argues that,
    even if the trial court abused its discretion in granting
    the protective order, the defendant has failed to demon-
    strate that she was harmed by this decision. We agree
    with the defendant that the court improperly granted
    the motion for a protective order. We also conclude,
    under the circumstances of this case, that the defendant
    was harmed by the error because it prevented her from
    discovering facts that would permit her to pursue,
    develop and support her special defenses.
    We begin by setting forth the applicable standard of
    review. ‘‘We have long recognized that the granting or
    denial of a discovery request rests in the sound discre-
    tion of the [trial] court, and is subject to reversal only
    if such an order constitutes an abuse of that discretion.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Barry v. Quality
    Steel Products, Inc., 
    280 Conn. 1
    , 16–17, 
    905 A.2d 55
    (2006). ‘‘[T]he [trial] court’s inherent authority to issue
    protective orders is embodied in Practice Book § 13-5
    . . . . The use of protective orders and the extent of
    discovery is within the discretion of the trial judge. . . .
    We have long recognized that the granting or denial of
    a discovery request . . . is subject to reversal only if
    such an order constitutes an abuse of that discretion.’’
    (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Coss v. Steward, 
    126 Conn. App. 30
    , 46, 
    10 A.3d 539
    (2011).
    As stated previously in this opinion, in her special
    defenses, the defendant alleged that Francis knowingly
    made a false representation of fact to induce the dece-
    dents to sign the note and mortgage, and that they
    relied on the false representation to their detriment.
    The defendant further alleged that Francis wrongfully
    acted and threatened the decedents to sign the note
    and mortgage. In support of the special defenses, the
    defendant sought, inter alia, information relating to the
    plaintiff’s knowledge of Francis’ actions. Specifically,
    the defendant requested that the plaintiff identify all
    communications between Francis and the plaintiff and
    to produce all written communications received by the
    plaintiff or any of its predecessors from Francis or the
    decedents, or any attorney purporting to represent any
    of them.
    In its motion for a protective order, the plaintiff
    argued that disclosure of this information was prohib-
    ited by (1) General Statutes § 36a-42,8 (2) the Fair Debt
    Collections Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1692c (b),9 and
    (3) the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Modernization
    Act, 
    15 U.S.C. § 6802.10
     These provisions, however, all
    contain an exception that permitted the bank to comply
    with the defendant’s discovery requests based on con-
    sent. Section 36a-42 provides in relevant part that ‘‘[a]
    financial institution may not disclose to any person,
    except to the customer or the customer’s duly author-
    ized agent, any financial records relating to such cus-
    tomer unless the customer has authorized disclosure
    . . . .’’ (Emphasis added.) Title 15 of the United States
    Code, § 1692c (b), provides in relevant part: ‘‘Except
    as provided in section 1692b of this title, without the
    prior consent of the consumer given directly to the debt
    collector . . . a debt collector may not communicate,
    in connection with the collection of any debt, with any
    person other than the consumer, his attorney, a con-
    sumer reporting agency if otherwise permitted by law,
    the creditor, the attorney of the creditor, or the attorney
    of the debt collector.’’ (Emphasis added.) Title 15 of
    the United States Code, § 6802 (a), provides: ‘‘Except
    as otherwise provided in this subchapter, a financial
    institution may not, directly or through any affiliate,
    disclose to a nonaffiliated third party any nonpublic
    personal information, unless such financial institution
    provides or has provided to the consumer a notice that
    complies with section 6803 of this title.’’ Title 15 of
    the United States Code, § 6802 (e) (2), permits such
    disclosure, however, ‘‘with the consent or at the direc-
    tion of the consumer . . . .’’
    In her objection to the plaintiff’s motion for a protec-
    tive order, the defendant argued that Attorney Jeremiah
    S. Miller, the executor of Evelyn Francis’ estate, had
    consented to her discovery requests. She also attached
    a letter from Miller dated November 16, 2017, memorial-
    izing that consent.11 At the hearing on the plaintiff’s
    motion, counsel for the defendant argued that, because
    the defendant, who is the sole beneficiary of the estate,12
    and the executor, both had consented to the defendant’s
    discovery request, the plaintiff’s motion for a protective
    order was without merit. Moreover, the plaintiff has
    provided no authority, nor have we found any, for the
    court’s refusal to provide anything beyond ‘‘the note, the
    mortgage, the assignments, and the payment history’’
    in the context of an incapacity claim, especially here,
    where the defendant was not present during any stage
    of the transaction, including the closing. In light of the
    foregoing, as well as the fact that there is no claim that
    the defendant was pursuing discovery in bad faith, we
    conclude that the court abused its discretion in granting
    the plaintiff’s motion for a protective order.13
    Our conclusion that the trial court abused its discre-
    tion in granting the protective order, however, does not
    end our analysis. According to the plaintiff, even if the
    trial court erred in granting the motion for a protective
    order, the defendant abandoned her claim by failing to
    revise her special defenses or to appeal from the grant-
    ing of the motion to strike. The plaintiff further argues
    that the defendant cannot show that the granting of
    the protective order precluded her from presenting a
    genuine issue of material fact in response to the plain-
    tiff’s two motions for summary judgment. Finally, the
    plaintiff argues that, even if the trial court abused its
    discretion in granting the protective order, the defen-
    dant has failed to demonstrate that she was harmed by
    this decision. We disagree.
    Preliminary to our consideration of these issues, we
    recognize that ‘‘[a]n action for foreclosure is peculiarly
    an equitable action’’ and that ‘‘[a] party that invokes
    a court’s equitable jurisdiction by filing an action for
    foreclosure necessarily invites the court to undertake
    . . . an inquiry [into his conduct]. . . . Equity will not
    afford its aid to one who by his conduct or neglect has
    put the other party in a situation in which it would be
    inequitable to place him. . . . A trial court conducting
    an equitable proceeding may therefore consider all rele-
    vant circumstances to ensure that complete justice is
    done.’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) U.S. Bank National Assn. v. Blowers, 
    332 Conn. 656
    , 670–71, 
    212 A.3d 226
     (2019). Relevant cir-
    cumstances that may form a proper basis for defenses
    in a foreclosure action include ‘‘conduct occurring after
    the origination of the loan, after default, and even after
    the initiation of the foreclosure action . . . .’’ (Empha-
    sis added.) Id., 672. We also observe that the defendant
    in the present case does not claim on appeal that the
    trial court erred in granting the motion to strike or in
    granting the motions for summary judgment. Instead,
    the defendant contends that the trial court’s ruling on
    the protective order precluded her from obtaining the
    discovery materials that would permit her to determine
    whether she had any viable special defenses.
    In order to prevail on her third special defense, the
    defendant was required to allege and prove ‘‘(1) that a
    false representation of fact was made; (2) that the party
    making the representation knew it to be false; (3) that
    the representation was made to induce action by the
    other party; and (4) that the other party did so act
    to her detriment.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Chase Manhattan Mortgage Corp. v. Machado, 
    83 Conn. App. 183
    , 188, 
    850 A.2d 260
     (2004). The defendant also
    had to establish that the plaintiff knowingly participated
    in or knew of the fraud. See id., 190 (spouse’s fraud in
    inducing spouse to execute mortgage does not invali-
    date mortgage against mortgagee unless mortgagee par-
    ticipated in or knew of fraud). Similarly, in order to
    prevail on her fourth special defense, the defendant
    was required to allege and prove: ‘‘[1] a wrongful act
    or threat [2] that left the victim no reasonable alterna-
    tive, and [3] to which the victim in fact acceded, and that
    [4] the resulting transaction was unfair to the victim.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 189. As with
    fraud, in order for the defendant to prevail on this spe-
    cial defense, she needed to establish that the plaintiff
    participated in or knew of the alleged duress. See id.,
    190.
    When the court granted the plaintiff’s motion for a
    protective order, it effectively prevented the defendant
    from obtaining information regarding the plaintiff’s par-
    ticipation in or knowledge of Francis’ alleged conduct.
    The plaintiff argues that the defendant could have
    obtained discovery from other sources, such as by
    deposing the decedent’s doctors or Francis; this argu-
    ment is not persuasive, however, because her special
    defenses necessarily encompassed information rele-
    vant to the plaintiff’s participation in or knowledge of
    Francis’ alleged conduct. Moreover, we reiterate that
    the plaintiff has sued a defendant with respect to a
    transaction to which she was not a party. As such, the
    defendant has a right to obtain discovery from the party
    most likely to have it. See Practice Book § 13-2 (‘‘[d]is-
    covery shall be permitted if the disclosure sought would
    be of assistance in the prosecution or defense of the
    action and if it can be provided by the disclosing party
    or person with substantially greater facility than it
    could otherwise be obtained by the party seeking disclo-
    sure’’ (emphasis added)). Under these circumstances,
    once full discovery was precluded, the defendant had
    no evidentiary basis on which to amend her special
    defenses to allege that the plaintiff knew of or partici-
    pated in Francis’ alleged misconduct.14 Put differently,
    the striking of the defendant’s special defenses without
    the evidentiary basis to amend is simply a foregone
    conclusion and, thus, a red herring in our consideration
    of her appellate claims. Because the defendant’s claim
    is that the court abused its discretion in granting the
    plaintiff the protective order and precluding discovery,
    and not whether it erred in granting the motion to strike,
    we are not persuaded that the defendant was required
    to take an appeal on that determination.
    The plaintiff further argues that, in order to preserve
    this claim of error, the defendant should have filed an
    objection to the plaintiff’s motions for summary judg-
    ment with supporting affidavits. Specifically, the plain-
    tiff argues that the defendant should have filed an affida-
    vit, pursuant to Practice Book § 17-47,15 setting forth
    the information that is solely under the control of the
    plaintiff. We disagree.
    ‘‘A party opposing a summary judgment motion [pur-
    suant to Practice Book § 17-47] on the ground that more
    time is needed to conduct discovery bears the burden
    of establishing a valid reason why the motion should
    be denied or its resolution postponed, including some
    indication as to what steps that party has taken to
    secure facts necessary to defeat the motion. Further-
    more, under § 17-47, the opposing party must show by
    affidavit precisely what facts are within the exclusive
    knowledge of the moving party and what steps he has
    taken to attempt to acquire these facts.’’ (Internal quota-
    tion marks omitted.) Bank of America, N.A. v. Briar-
    wood Connecticut, LLC, 
    135 Conn. App. 670
    , 675, 
    43 A.3d 215
     (2012). ‘‘[A] party contending that it needs to
    conduct discovery to respond to a motion for summary
    judgment must do more than merely claim the informa-
    tion needed is within the possession of the opposing
    party.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., 677.
    In citing to the provisions of Practice Book § 17-47,
    the plaintiff contends that the defendant was required to
    pursue ‘‘other options available to her’’ such as deposing
    the decedents’ physicians or Francis, and, notably,
    emphasizes that the defendant failed to dispute the
    affidavit of Christopher J. Albanese, the closing attorney
    for both the bank and the decedents, which was filed
    with the plaintiff’s first motion for summary judgment.
    See footnote 5 of this opinion. By its terms, however,
    the relief available in § 17-47 assumes that discovery
    has not yet been attempted or is complete; it does not
    contemplate the present situation in which the defen-
    dant was precluded from full and complete discovery
    in the first instance. For that reason, the present case
    is unlike Briarwood Connecticut, LLC, in which the
    defendant already had successfully conducted exten-
    sive discovery and, as the court observed, the plaintiff
    had not hindered the defendant in its discovery efforts.
    See Bank of America, N.A. v. Briarwood Connecticut,
    LLC, supra, 
    135 Conn. App. 677
    . In the present case,
    by contrast, the record indicates that the precluded
    discovery included communications between any attor-
    ney purporting to represent the plaintiff or its predeces-
    sors, the decedents and Francis. The protective order
    thus deprived the defendant of the ability to explore
    and potentially challenge the circumstances of the clos-
    ing, as attested to by Albanese. Under the particular
    circumstances of this case, the defendant was not
    required to file an affidavit pursuant to § 17-47 in
    response to the plaintiff’s motion for summary judg-
    ment as to her special defenses because the record
    already makes clear that the defendant sought, but was
    denied, the discovery needed to develop and pursue
    her special defenses.
    Finally, we address whether the defendant has shown
    that she was harmed by the granting of the protective
    order. See Coss v. Steward, 
    supra,
     
    126 Conn. App. 47
    .
    ‘‘The harmless error standard in a civil case is whether
    the improper ruling would likely affect the result.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Kalams v. Giac-
    chetto, 
    268 Conn. 244
    , 249, 
    842 A.2d 1100
     (2004). In
    considering the question of harm, we reiterate that the
    defendant’s issue on appeal is not whether the court
    erred in rendering judgment based on the record before
    it. Instead, the defendant’s claim of error is that the
    court’s protective order prevented her from having the
    opportunity to pursue, develop and support the
    defenses she raised. Under the particular circumstances
    of this case, we conclude that the defendant has satis-
    fied her burden of establishing that she was harmed by
    the granting of the protective order.
    We initially note that our rules broadly allow for the
    discovery of information that is ‘‘reasonably calculated
    to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.’’ Prac-
    tice Book § 13-2.16 ‘‘[T]he purpose of the rules of discov-
    ery is to make a trial less a game of blindman’s bluff
    and more a fair contest with the basic issues and facts
    disclosed to the fullest practicable extent.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Krahel v. Czoch, 
    186 Conn. App. 22
    , 36, 
    198 A.3d 103
    , cert. denied, 
    330 Conn. 958
    ,
    
    198 A.3d 584
     (2018); see also Standard Tallow Corp. v.
    Jowdy, 
    190 Conn. 48
    , 58–59, 
    459 A.2d 503
     (1983) (court’s
    discretion in granting or denying discovery request lim-
    ited by provisions of discovery rules, especially manda-
    tory provision that discovery ‘‘shall be permitted if the
    disclosure sought would be of assistance in the prosecu-
    tion or defense of the action’’ (emphasis in original;
    internal quotation marks omitted)). Furthermore, the
    boundaries of discovery are clearly broader than the
    boundaries of admissible evidence. See Sanderson v.
    Steve Snyder Enterprises, Inc., 
    196 Conn. 134
    , 139, 
    491 A.2d 389
     (1985).
    Our rules of practice further provide the procedures
    governing the discovery process. As applied to the pres-
    ent case, Practice Book § 13-6 (a) provides in relevant
    part that ‘‘[w]ritten interrogatories may be served upon
    any party without leave of the judicial authority at any
    time after the return day. . . .’’ Similarly, Practice Book
    § 13-9 (d) provides in relevant part that ‘‘[r]equests for
    production may be served upon any party without leave
    of court at any time after the return day. . . .’’ By
    allowing discovery immediately after the return date,
    these rules implicitly acknowledge that a defendant
    might not know what special defenses are available in
    the absence of the discovery, and provide the defendant
    an opportunity to obtain any and all information that
    might be of assistance in the development and pursuit
    of special defenses. Cf. U.S. Bank National Assn. v.
    Blowers, supra, 
    332 Conn. 672
     (relevant circumstances
    that may form proper basis for defenses in foreclosure
    action include ‘‘conduct occurring . . . even after the
    initiation of the foreclosure action . . . .’’ (emphasis
    added)). In accordance with these rules, on September
    21, 2017, the defendant served interrogatories and
    requests for production on the plaintiff, seeking infor-
    mation relating to the plaintiff’s knowledge of Francis’
    actions. Specifically, the defendant requested that the
    plaintiff identify all communications between Francis
    and the plaintiff and produce all written communica-
    tions received by the plaintiff or any of its predecessors
    from Francis or the decedents or any attorney pur-
    porting to represent any of them.
    It is important to note that the plaintiff does not argue
    on appeal that the information sought by the defendant
    in her discovery request was not ‘‘reasonably calculated
    to lead to the discovery of admissible evidence.’’ Prac-
    tice Book § 13-2. Furthermore, during oral argument
    before this court, counsel for the plaintiff conceded
    that the grounds stated in the motion for a protective
    order related only to the confidentiality of the requested
    information pursuant to federal and state law; the
    motion did not assert that the requested information
    was not likely to lead to the discovery of relevant and
    admissible evidence. Indeed, there can be no dispute
    that the discovery requests were reasonably seeking
    evidence in support of recognized and valid equitable
    defenses to the plaintiff’s mortgage foreclosure action.
    Similarly, the plaintiff does not argue on appeal that
    the special defenses alleged by the defendant were not
    pleaded in good faith. In fact, a review of the record
    amply supports the defendant’s good faith belief in her
    special defenses. Specifically, after the granting of the
    protective order, the defendant responded to the plain-
    tiff’s first set of interrogatories and requests for produc-
    tion. Her response explained how the decedents had
    no need for the additional money generated by the
    mortgage and set forth how the decedents managed
    their finances over the course of their lives with the
    intent of avoiding the type of mortgage transaction at
    issue.17 The defendant’s response also stated that Fran-
    cis had been charged with first and second degree lar-
    ceny for stealing an amount in excess of $500,000 from
    Evelyn Francis’ home equity account and that both the
    defendant and an investigator had been unsuccessful
    in their attempts to contact the plaintiff to obtain infor-
    mation regarding the subject transaction.18 At the hear-
    ing on the motion for the protective order, counsel
    for the defendant advised the court that the state was
    prosecuting Francis for larceny. The plaintiff does not
    contend that any of these statements were not made
    in good faith.
    When the trial court in the present case granted the
    plaintiff’s motion for a protective order, it effectively
    prevented the defendant from pursuing, developing and
    supporting her special defenses. To be clear, in order
    for the defendant to pursue her special defenses of fraud
    and duress, she needed to establish that the plaintiff
    participated in or knew of the alleged fraud or duress.
    See, e.g., Chase Manhattan Mortgage Corp. v. Machado,
    supra, 
    83 Conn. App. 188
    –90. Although it is true that
    the defendant did not allege facts in her special defenses
    regarding the plaintiff’s involvement in Francis’ con-
    duct, the record amply supports the defendant’s good
    faith basis for requesting the discovery that would have
    enabled her to amend her special defenses to include
    those allegations. Moreover, we reiterate that the
    court’s order granting the plaintiff’s motion specifically
    precluded the defendant from obtaining the requested
    discovery of all communications between Francis and
    the plaintiff, and all written communications received
    by the plaintiff or any of its predecessors from Francis
    or the decedents or any attorney purporting to represent
    any of them. Under the limited circumstances of this
    case, and given the broad scope of our discovery rules,
    as well as the equitable nature of a foreclosure proceed-
    ing; see, e.g., U.S. Bank National Assn. v. Blowers,
    supra, 
    332 Conn. 670
    –71; we conclude that the defen-
    dant has satisfied her burden of establishing that she
    was harmed by the granting of the protective order.
    The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded
    for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.19
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    The Department of Revenue Services and the Judicial Branch also were
    named as defendants. The trial court thereafter granted the motion filed by
    the plaintiff, CIT Bank, N.A., to cite in James M. Francis as a defendant. On
    September 26, 2017, those three defendants were defaulted for failure to
    appear. We refer in this opinion to Johanna Francis as the defendant.
    2
    We note that, after the court ruled on the motions at issue in this appeal,
    CIT Bank, N.A., assigned the mortgage at issue to Cascade Funding RM1
    Alternative Holdings, LLC. The court thereafter granted the plaintiff’s motion
    to substitute Cascade Funding RM1 Alternative Holdings, LLC, as the plain-
    tiff. For clarity, we refer in this opinion to CIT Bank, N.A., as the plaintiff.
    3
    On November 27, 2017, the court summarily granted the plaintiff’s motion
    for a protective order. On December 13, 2017, the defendant filed a motion
    to reargue. By order dated December 20, 2017, the court vacated its ruling
    on the plaintiff’s motion for a protective order and conducted a hearing on
    January 29, 2018.
    4
    In its order granting the motion to strike, the court stated: ‘‘In the third
    special defense, the [defendant alleges] that a third party made misrepresen-
    tations to the [decedents], but there is no allegation concerning the subject
    of the misrepresentation. There is no allegation that the plaintiff made the
    misrepresentation or that the third party who allegedly made the misrepre-
    sentation was in any way acting on behalf of or as the agent of the plaintiff
    or the plaintiff’s predecessors in interest. These are essential elements of
    the special defense. Similarly, the fourth special defense alleges that the
    [decedents] were acting under the undue influence of the third party. But,
    again, the defense is lacking in any allegation that even infers that the
    third party was acting on behalf of or as the agent of the plaintiff or [its]
    predecessors, or even that they knew or had reason to know of the influence.
    The court also observes that the [defendant has] not filed a memorandum
    in opposition to the plaintiff’s motion to strike, though [she] sought and
    received additional time to do so.’’
    5
    In its decision, the court stated that the defendant’s first special defense
    ‘‘rests solely on speculation. [The defendant] acknowledges [that] she has
    no personal knowledge of the closing or, by extension, of [the decedents’]
    condition at the closing. On the other hand, the plaintiff submits the affidavit
    of Attorney Christopher J. Albanese, who handled the closing for the [dece-
    dents] and the bank. His affidavit attests that, although elderly, the [dece-
    dents] were lucid and pleased to be able to withdraw additional funds by
    refinancing the loan on their home. As a result, the first special defense is
    not supported by evidence and is insufficient to defeat the motion for
    summary judgment.
    ‘‘[The] defendant’s second special defense fares no better. [The] defendant
    claims that the loan is invalid because of lack of consideration and suggests
    that the money was stolen by [Francis]. . . . The evidence set forth in
    [Albanese’s] affidavit is that the loan was funded, a prior mortgage was paid
    off, and the [decedents] received cash and retained a balance in the new
    home equity account. In [her response to the plaintiff’s interrogatories], the
    defendant says that [Francis] has been charged with first and second degree
    larceny for stealing money from [the] home equity account [belonging to
    his mother, the decedent Evelyn Francis]. [The defendant] states that he
    used a power of attorney that had been executed by [the decedent Evelyn
    Francis]. As a result, any money taken by [Francis] would have come from
    [the decedent Evelyn Francis’] accounts after the loan had been funded by
    the lender. Accordingly, there was no lack of consideration demonstrated
    by the defendant. [The] defendant’s complaint is with her father, not the
    bank.’’ (Citation omitted.)
    6
    Practice Book § 13-5 provides in relevant part: ‘‘Upon motion by a party
    from whom discovery is sought, and for good cause shown, the judicial
    authority may make any order which justice requires to protect a party
    from annoyance, embarrassment, oppression, or undue burden or expense,
    including one or more of the following . . . (2) that the discovery may be
    had only on specified terms and conditions. . . .’’
    7
    At oral argument before this court, counsel for the defendant clarified
    that the ‘‘key special defenses’’ were the third and fourth special defenses
    alleging fraud and duress.
    8
    General Statutes § 36a-42 provides: ‘‘A financial institution may not dis-
    close to any person, except to the customer or the customer’s duly authorized
    agent, any financial records relating to such customer unless the customer
    has authorized disclosure to such person or the financial records are dis-
    closed in response to (1) a certificate signed by the Commissioner of Admin-
    istrative Services or the Commissioner of Social Services pursuant to the
    provisions of section 17b-137, (2) a lawful subpoena, summons, warrant or
    court order as provided in section 36a-43, (3) interrogatories by a judgment
    creditor or a demand by a levying officer as provided in sections 52-351b
    and 52-356a, (4) a certificate issued by a medical provider or its attorney
    under subsection (b) of section 17b-124, provided nothing in this subsection
    shall require the provider or its attorney to furnish to the financial institution
    any application for medical assistance filed pursuant to an agreement with
    the IV-D agency under subsection (c) of section 17b-137, (5) a certificate
    signed by the Commissioner of Veterans Affairs pursuant to section 27-117,
    (6) the consent of an elderly person or the representative of such elderly
    person provided to a person, department, agency or commission pursuant
    to section 17b-454, provided the financial institution shall have no obligation
    to determine the capacity of such elderly person or the representative of
    such elderly person to provide such consent, (7) a request for information
    served upon a financial institution in accordance with subsection (e) of
    section 12-162, or (8) a request for information made by the Commissioner
    of Revenue Services pursuant to section 12-39cc.’’
    9
    Section 1692c (b) of title 15 of the United States Code provides: ‘‘Except
    as provided in section 1692b of this title, without the prior consent of the
    consumer given directly to the debt collector, or the express permission of
    a court of competent jurisdiction, or as reasonably necessary to effectuate
    a postjudgment judicial remedy, a debt collector may not communicate, in
    connection with the collection of any debt, with any person other than the
    consumer, his attorney, a consumer reporting agency if otherwise permitted
    by law, the creditor, the attorney of the creditor, or the attorney of the debt
    collector.’’
    10
    Section 6802 (a) of title 15 of the United States Code provides: ‘‘Except
    as otherwise provided in this subchapter, a financial institution may not,
    directly or through any affiliate, disclose to a nonaffiliated third party any
    nonpublic personal information, unless such financial institution provides
    or has provided to the consumer a notice that complies with section 6803
    of this title.’’
    11
    The letter, addressed to counsel for the plaintiff and counsel for the
    defendant, stated: ‘‘This is to inform you that I, as the executor of the Estate
    of Evelyn S. Francis, give permission to [the plaintiff] to comply with the
    [d]efendant’s [f]irst [s]et of [i]nterrogatories and [r]equests for [p]roduction
    dated September 21, 2017, filed by [the defendant].’’
    12
    Evelyn Francis intentionally made no provision for Francis in her last
    will and testament.
    13
    Although the plaintiff argues on appeal that the consent of the estate
    of Norbert Francis was also required in order to comply with the defendant’s
    discovery request, the plaintiff did not make this argument before the trial
    court. During the hearing, after counsel for the defendant pointed out that
    Miller had consented to the discovery, the court asked counsel for the
    plaintiff, ‘‘[w]hat’s wrong with that?’’ In response, counsel for the plaintiff
    stated that the reason he filed the motion for a protective order was because
    the defendant’s discovery request went beyond requesting the note, mort-
    gage, assignments and payment history. Because the plaintiff did not argue
    before the trial court that it needed the consent of the estate of Norbert
    Francis in order to comply with the discovery request, we decline to address
    this issue on appeal. See Guzman v. Yeroz, 
    167 Conn. App. 420
    , 426, 
    143 A.3d 661
     (‘‘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.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.)), cert. denied, 
    323 Conn. 923
    , 
    150 A.3d 1152
     (2016).
    14
    In Chase Manhattan Mortgage Corp. v. Machado, supra, 
    83 Conn. App. 188
    –90, this court held that the defendant in a foreclosure action could not
    prevail on her special defenses of fraud and duress because there was no
    allegation that the plaintiff or its predecessor had knowingly participated
    in the alleged fraud or duress. The facts of this case are distinguishable
    from those of Machado because in this case, unlike Machado, the defendant
    sought, by way of discovery, information regarding the plaintiff’s participa-
    tion in or knowledge of Francis’ alleged conduct. The court, however, granted
    the plaintiff’s motion for a protective order, thus precluding the defendant
    from obtaining this discovery.
    15
    Practice Book § 17-47 provides: ‘‘Should it appear from the affidavits
    of a party opposing the motion that such party cannot, for reasons stated,
    present facts essential to justify opposition, the judicial authority may deny
    the motion for judgment or may order a continuance to permit affidavits
    to be obtained or discovery to be had or may make such other order as
    is just.’’
    16
    Practice Book § 13-2 provides in relevant part that ‘‘[d]iscovery shall
    be permitted if the disclosure sought would be of assistance in the prosecu-
    tion or defense of the action and if it can be provided by the disclosing
    party or person with substantially greater facility than it could otherwise
    be obtained by the party seeking disclosure. It shall not be ground for
    objection that the information sought will be inadmissible at trial if the
    information sought appears reasonably calculated to lead to the discovery
    of admissible evidence. . . .’’
    17
    The defendant’s response stated in part: ‘‘[The decedents] were both
    elderly retirees at the time the loan documents at issue were executed. They
    were also wealthy individuals. I do real estate development and million
    dollar loan transactions, and I was not told that they were applying for
    anything. They had no need for additional money, either in a lump sum or
    as a stream of payments to supplement their income. During their entire adult
    lives, both [decedents] were frugal individuals that did not incur unnecessary
    expenses or incur unnecessary debts. They lived in such a manner as to
    protect them from needing any type of financial assistance whatsoever in
    their elderly years and to insure that the family would not be burdened with
    financial expenses upon their death[s]. As a result, over the course of their
    lifetimes, both [decedents] accumulated significant assets for the purpose—
    and with the intent—of avoiding the need to engage in the type of mortgage
    transaction [at] issue in this civil action. With my going so far as to even
    pay for funeral expenses upon my grandfather’s death and make prearrange-
    ments for my grandmother’s plot.
    ‘‘In sum, [the decedents] would not have entered into the mortgage transac-
    tion at issue had they understood their true nature. I became fully aware
    of [the decedents’] mental incapacity when I learned that they had been
    duped into signing the loan documents.’’
    18
    The defendant’s response stated in part: ‘‘The state of Connecticut’s
    Department of Social Services concluded that [Francis] may have stolen an
    amount in excess of $500,000 from [the decedent Evelyn Francis] and the
    amount stolen ‘may have been from a home equity.’ The Department of
    Social Services urged the chief state’s attorney ‘to commence a criminal
    investigation into this especially egregious case.’ [Francis] has been charged
    with larceny in the [first] and [second] degree. His criminal trial is currently
    scheduled for November, 2019. I am aware that the Ct investigator tried to
    contact [the plaintiff] on various occasions, and I personally tried to contact
    them on various occasions prior to her death and upon her death and no
    information [was] forthcoming nor was I added as per POA which was
    provided to them on more than one occasion prior to her death and after
    her death. I also did not receive information as was requested by the estate
    executor to communicate with me right after her death.’’
    19
    We note that the plaintiff contends, in an alternative argument, that the
    defendant does not have standing to raise any claims concerning this loan
    as she was not a party to this transaction. In support of this alternative
    argument, the plaintiff cites Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Strong, 
    149 Conn. App. 384
    , 401, 
    89 A.3d 392
    , cert. denied, 
    312 Conn. 923
    , 
    94 A.3d 1202
     (2014),
    and Deutsche Bank National Trust Co. v. Cornelius, 
    170 Conn. App. 104
    ,
    118, 
    154 A.3d 79
    , cert. denied, 
    325 Conn. 922
    , 
    159 A.3d 1171
     (2017). These
    cases are readily distinguishable from the present case. In Strong, this court
    held, inter alia, that the defendant in a foreclosure action, who had raised
    a defense based on the plaintiff’s alleged noncompliance with a pooling and
    servicing agreement, had failed to meet her burden of establishing that
    summary judgment as to liability should not have been rendered for the
    plaintiff. We stated in Strong that ‘‘[i]t is well settled that one who [is]
    neither a party to a contract nor a contemplated beneficiary thereof cannot
    sue to enforce the promises of the contract.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Wells Fargo Bank, N.A. v. Strong, supra, 401. In Cornelius, this
    court held that the plaintiff’s purported failure to comply with the mortgage’s
    notice provision did not implicate the jurisdiction of the trial court or deprive
    this court of jurisdiction over the foreclosure action. See Deutsche Bank
    National Trust Co. v. Cornelius, supra, 116. In so holding, we noted that
    the defendant was not a party to the mortgage. See id., 116 n.10.
    In the present case, the defendant was named as a party in this action
    by virtue of her being an heir of the decedents. ‘‘[I]f a mortgagee brings a
    foreclosure action against a decedent’s property during the settlement of
    the decedent’s estate, the mortgagee must name the heirs or devisees as
    defendants because they hold title to the equitable right of redemption
    . . . .’’ Connelly v. Federal National Mortgage Assn., 
    251 F. Supp. 2d 1071
    ,
    1075 (D. Conn. 2003). As a defendant and proper party in this foreclosure
    action, the defendant had the right to seek discovery relevant to her special
    defenses of fraud and duress.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: AC43121

Filed Date: 8/9/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/8/2022