Sclafani Properties, LLC v. Sport-N-Life Distributing, LLC ( 2020 )


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    SCLAFANI PROPERTIES, LLC v. SPORT-N-LIFE
    DISTRIBUTING, LLC, ET AL.
    (AC 40066)
    Prescott, Bright and Bishop, Js.
    Syllabus
    The plaintiff sought to recover damages from the defendants for breach of
    a commercial lease, and the matter was referred for a hearing to an
    attorney trial referee, who recommended judgment in favor of the plain-
    tiff. In her report, the referee noted that the plaintiff had offered itemized
    exhibits into evidence and testimony that the defendants had failed
    to make certain rental payments, to pay real estate taxes and hazard
    insurance premiums. The referee, however, concluded that the plaintiff
    failed to provide evidence regarding the real estate taxes or insurance
    premiums. The plaintiff filed an objection to the referee’s report, which
    the trial court denied, and, thereafter, the court rendered judgment for
    the plaintiff in accordance with the referee’s report. Subsequently, the
    plaintiff filed a motion for attorney’s fees, in which it sought $27,904.12.
    The court granted the motion but awarded the plaintiff only $6391.63,
    and the plaintiff appealed to this court. Held:
    1. The trial court improperly accepted the attorney trial referee’s findings
    of fact with respect to the unpaid real estate taxes and failed to include
    in its judgment an amount for unpaid real estate taxes; the record clearly
    reflected both testimonial and documentary evidence that supported
    the plaintiff’s claim that the defendants owed unpaid real estate taxes.
    2. The trial court abused its discretion in determining its award of attorney’s
    fees on the basis of the amount of damages awarded to the plaintiff:
    using the amount in controversy in determining a reasonable award of
    attorney’s fees is improper and the court indicated in its articulation
    that its award of attorney’s fees was linked to the amount of damages
    awarded to the plaintiff, and, accordingly a new hearing to determine
    such fees was ordered.
    Argued March 9—officially released June 23, 2020
    Procedural History
    Action to recover damages for breach of a lease, and
    for other relief, brought to the Superior Court in the
    judicial district of Stamford-Norwalk, Housing Session,
    where the matter was referred to an attorney trial ref-
    eree, who filed a report recommending judgment in
    favor of the plaintiff; thereafter, the court, Rodriguez,
    J., denied the plaintiff’s objection to the acceptance
    of the report and rendered judgment for the plaintiff;
    subsequently, the court granted in part the plaintiff’s
    motion for attorney’s fees, from which the plaintiff
    appealed to this court. Affirmed in part; reversed in
    part; further proceedings.
    Peter V. Lathouris, with whom were Victor Andreou
    and, on the brief, Michael P. Longo, Jr., for the appel-
    lant (plaintiff).
    Mario L. DeMarco, for the appellees (defendants).
    Opinion
    BISHOP, J. The plaintiff, Sclafani Properties, LLC,
    appeals from the judgment of the trial court awarding
    it damages and attorney’s fees for the failure of the
    defendants, Sport-N-Life Distributing, LLC (lessee), and
    its president, Gilbert Beck (guarantor),1 to pay amounts
    due to the plaintiff under a commercial lease for prop-
    erty located at 482 Glenbrook Road in Stamford (prop-
    erty). The plaintiff claims that the court (1) erred when
    it failed to include in its judgment for the plaintiff an
    amount for unpaid real estate taxes and (2) abused its
    discretion in awarding only $6391.63 in attorney’s fees.
    We reverse in part the judgment and remand the matter
    to the trial court.
    The record reflects the following undisputed facts
    and procedural history. On December 12, 2003, the
    plaintiff, as the landlord, and the defendants, as the
    tenant and guarantor respectively, entered into a writ-
    ten commercial lease (lease) for the property. The lease
    was modified by agreement on January 20, 2012, and
    the rent was set to $8500 per month beginning February
    1, 2012. The lease also required the defendants to pay
    all real estate taxes and to keep the property prop-
    erly insured.
    During the term of the lease, as modified, the lessee
    defaulted on its obligations under the lease. Thereafter,
    on September 9, 2013, the plaintiff brought a complaint2
    against the lessee and the guarantor alleging, among
    other things, that the lessee had breached the lease by
    failing to make payments as required by the lease. The
    plaintiff sought payment of those amounts and reason-
    able attorney’s fees as provided for in the lease. The
    plaintiff also sought a prejudgment remedy in the
    amount of $75,000. Its application for a prejudgment
    remedy was supported by the affidavit of Bruce Scla-
    fani, the plaintiff’s managing member. Sclafani averred
    that the defendants owed $17,000 for the unpaid July
    and August rent, $33,934.33 in unpaid real estate taxes,
    and $2266 in unpaid insurance premiums. Subsequently,
    the court granted a stipulated prejudgment remedy in
    the amount of $75,000. Once the pleadings were closed,
    the matter was referred by the trial court to an attorney
    trial referee for a hearing and report pursuant to the
    provisions of Practice Book § 19-2a. Thereafter, the
    attorney trial referee conducted an evidentiary hearing
    during which testimony was taken and documents were
    admitted into evidence. On February 26, 2016, the attor-
    ney trial referee filed her report pursuant to Practice
    Book § 19-8.
    In her report, the attorney trial referee noted that the
    plaintiff had offered testimony that the defendants had
    failed to pay rent from August, 2013, through February,
    2014, that the defendants had failed to pay the real
    estate taxes due in July, 2012, and January and July,
    2013, in the amount of $33,934.33, and had failed to pay
    hazard insurance premiums in the amount of $2266.
    She noted, as well, that the plaintiff had testified that
    the defendants had caused damage to the property in
    the amount of $30,785.74. The defendants disputed that
    they had caused any damage to the property, but did
    not dispute the plaintiff’s evidence of the unpaid taxes.
    Having acknowledged the plaintiff’s testimony that the
    defendants failed to pay the real estate taxes amounting
    to $33,934.33 and hazard insurance premiums in the
    stated amount, the attorney trial referee nevertheless
    concluded in her report that the plaintiff had failed to
    provide any evidence regarding either the real estate
    taxes or insurance premiums.
    The attorney trial referee recommended judgment
    enter for the plaintiff in the form of $51,000 for rent, less
    the security deposit of $15,000; $5535.74 for damages
    to the property; interest in the amount of $543.90; and
    taxable costs of the action; and she recommended that
    the court issue an award of attorney’s fees in favor of
    the plaintiff.
    Following the issuance of the report, the plaintiff filed
    an objection to the report and the entry of judgment
    in accordance with the attorney trial referee’s recom-
    mendations. Specifically, the plaintiff alleged that the
    attorney trial referee erroneously had concluded that
    the plaintiff had failed to adduce evidence of the defen-
    dants’ failure to pay real estate taxes or hazard insur-
    ance premiums as the transcript of the hearing, as well
    as documentary evidence submitted during the hearing,
    provided evidence contrary to the report. On July 28,
    2016, the court denied the objection. The court rendered
    ‘‘[j]udgment for the plaintiff in the amount of $41,535.74
    in damages3 and $543.90 in interests and costs in the
    amount of $531.25, for a total of $42,610.89.’’ Notably,
    the judgment included no provisions for real estate
    taxes or insurance payments.
    On August 9, 2016, the plaintiff filed a motion for
    attorney’s fees pursuant to Practice Book § 11-21 in the
    amount of $26,604.12.4 With its motion, the plaintiff
    attached an affidavit and supporting invoices detailing
    the hours expended and the hourly rates charged for
    legal services. At the hearing on the plaintiff’s motion,
    the plaintiff argued that the fees associated with this
    case were reasonable under the circumstances. In
    response, the defendants declined the opportunity to
    examine counsel as to the reasonableness of his hourly
    rate or the hours expended. In asking the court to order
    a reasonable amount of attorney’s fees, the defendants’
    counsel claimed, without any supporting evidence, that
    the plaintiff had been overly litigious. The defendants’
    counsel asked the court to issue an order for fees com-
    mensurate with the underlying relief sought by the
    plaintiff and he sought the sympathy of the court.
    On November 14, 2016, the court, Rodriguez, J.,
    granted the plaintiff’s motion for attorney’s fees in the
    amount of $6391.63. The plaintiff moved for articulation
    with regard to the court’s decision with regard to attor-
    ney’s fees on November 21, 2016, which the court
    denied. This appeal followed and, thereafter, the plain-
    tiff moved for articulation with regard to both the
    court’s July 28, 2016 judgment and its November 14,
    2016 decision as to attorney’s fees. The court again
    denied the plaintiff’s motion for articulation but this
    court ordered the court to provide such an articulation.5
    Additional facts will be set forth as necessary. At issue
    are whether the court abused its discretion in failing
    to make an award for unpaid real estate taxes and
    whether the court’s award of attorney’s fees was reason-
    able. We review each claim in turn.
    I
    The plaintiff claims that the trial court erred in render-
    ing judgment for the plaintiff without awarding any
    damages related to the defendants’ failure to pay the
    real estate taxes as required by the lease. More specifi-
    cally, the plaintiff argues that the defendants made judi-
    cial admissions as to their liability for the taxes and,
    moreover, that the attorney trial referee’s finding that
    there was no evidence of the defendants’ failure to pay
    the taxes was clearly erroneous in light of the undis-
    puted evidence of the defendants’ liability and their
    failure to pay. We agree with the plaintiff’s second
    argument.6
    We begin with the relevant legal principles that guide
    our analysis of this claim. ‘‘It is axiomatic that [a]
    reviewing authority may not substitute its findings for
    those of the trier of the facts. This principle applies no
    matter whether the reviewing authority is the Supreme
    Court . . . the Appellate Court . . . or the Superior
    Court reviewing the findings of . . . attorney trial ref-
    erees. . . . This court has articulated that attorney trial
    referees and [fact finders] share the same function . . .
    whose determination of the facts is reviewable in accor-
    dance with well established procedures prior to the
    rendition of judgment by the court. . . .
    ‘‘The factual findings of a [trial referee] on any issue
    are reversible only if they are clearly erroneous. . . .
    [A reviewing court] cannot retry the facts or pass upon
    the credibility of the witnesses. . . . A finding of fact
    is clearly erroneous when there is no evidence in the
    record to support it . . . or when although there is
    evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire
    evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction
    that a mistake has been committed.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Gould v. Hall, 
    64 Conn. App. 45
    , 49–50,
    
    779 A.2d 208
     (2001).
    Furthermore, ‘‘it is the function of this court to deter-
    mine whether the decision of the trial court is clearly
    erroneous. . . . This involves a two part function:
    where the legal conclusions of the court are challenged,
    we must determine whether they are legally and logi-
    cally correct and whether they find support in the facts
    set out in the memorandum of decision; where the fac-
    tual basis of the court’s decision is challenged we must
    determine whether the facts set out in the memorandum
    of decision are supported by the evidence or whether,
    in light of the evidence and the pleadings in the whole
    record, those facts are clearly erroneous. . . .
    ‘‘[Additionally], we note that, because the attorney
    [fact finder] does not have the powers of a court and
    is simply a fact finder, [a]ny legal conclusions reached
    by an attorney [fact finder] have no conclusive effect.
    . . . The reviewing court is the effective arbiter of the
    law and the legal opinions of [an attorney fact finder],
    like those of the parties, though they may be helpful,
    carry no weight not justified by their soundness as
    viewed by the court that renders judgment.’’ (Citation
    omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Walpole
    Woodworkers, Inc. v. Manning, 
    126 Conn. App. 94
    , 99,
    
    11 A.3d 165
     (2011), aff’d, 
    307 Conn. 582
    , 
    57 A.3d 730
    (2012).
    The following additional facts are relevant to our
    resolution of this claim. During the hearing before the
    attorney trial referee, the plaintiff elicited evidence
    from its managing member, Bruce Sclafani. He testified
    that the defendants did not meet their respective obliga-
    tions under the lease and guarantee; specifically, that
    the defendants did not pay the real estate taxes, rent,
    and insurance. During direct examination, Sclafani con-
    firmed the amounts due as set forth in the plaintiff’s
    exhibit 4—plaintiff’s statement of amount due—which
    provided an itemized list of the amounts outstanding,
    including the real estate taxes in the amount of
    $33,934.33. At one point during his direct examination,
    when Sclafani was asked by his counsel to read aloud
    from the exhibit the specific amounts listed, the defen-
    dants’ counsel objected. He stated: ‘‘The document
    speaks for itself. I think it’s in evidence. It’s a—if we’re
    talking about the plaintiff’s statement of amount due.’’
    The court sustained this objection. Additionally, during
    cross-examination, counsel for the defendants pre-
    sented Sclafani with defendants’ exhibit A, which was
    the affidavit signed by Sclafani in conjunction with the
    plaintiff’s application for a prejudgment remedy. This
    document purported to itemize amounts due, at that
    time, for rent, taxes, and insurance. During this cross-
    examination, the defendants’ counsel elicited testimony
    from Sclafani that the exhibit entered on behalf of the
    defendants stated that the defendants owed real estate
    taxes in the amount of $33,934.33.7 In response to that
    questioning, Sclafani confirmed that the information
    contained in defendants’ exhibit A was correct. In short,
    at the defendants’ prodding and in response to a docu-
    ment placed into evidence by the defendants, the plain-
    tiff confirmed that the defendants owed $33,934.33 in
    taxes.
    Later, in closing arguments before the attorney trial
    referee, counsel for the defendants twice referred to
    defendants’ exhibit A, Sclafani’s affidavit of amounts
    due to the plaintiff at the time the prejudgment remedy
    application was filed, and asked the court to note that
    exhibit and to enter orders consistent with its contents.
    At one point, counsel sought to direct the court’s atten-
    tion to Sclafani’s affidavit and later, in the same argu-
    ment, counsel for the defendants asked the court to
    use Sclafani’s affidavit to calculate damages and then
    to add to it amounts for rent due for the months the
    lessee occupied the premises after the date of Sclafani’s
    affidavit. The only portion of the plaintiff’s damages
    claim that the defendants disputed was that related to
    alleged physical damage caused to the property by the
    defendants, as to which, the defendants argued that
    there was insufficient evidence. Consequently, counsel
    argued that if he were correct about the plaintiff’s fail-
    ure to prove that the defendants caused physical dam-
    age to the property, ‘‘[t]hen my client owes the $53,000
    stated in the affidavit, minus the $15,000 security
    [deposit].’’ There is no dispute that the $33,934.33 owed
    for the real estate taxes was included in Sclafani’s affi-
    davit to which counsel referred. In short, our review
    of the record of the hearing before the attorney trial
    referee reflects that the amount of taxes due to the
    plaintiff from the defendants was not only introduced
    into evidence but was undisputed by the defendants.8
    Notwithstanding the testimony of Sclafani, the item-
    ized exhibits admitted during the hearing, and the defen-
    dants’ acknowledgement of this debt, the attorney trial
    referee concluded that the plaintiff failed to provide
    any evidence of the real estate taxes owed. When the
    trial court reviewed the attorney trial referee’s report
    and the exhibits presented at trial, it accepted the find-
    ings in the report and rendered judgment in accordance
    with the recommendation of that report.
    On the basis of our careful review of the record, we
    conclude that the decision of the trial court to accept
    the attorney trial referee’s factual findings, with respect
    to the real estate taxes, was improper. Contrary to the
    attorney trial referee’s factual findings, the record
    clearly reflects testimony and documentary evidence
    in support of the plaintiff’s tax claim. Both the plaintiff
    and the defendants provided evidence, either through
    testimony or full exhibits, that the defendants were
    obligated to pay the taxes for the property, that the
    defendants failed to meet that obligation, and, as a
    result, the defendants then owed the plaintiff $33,934.33
    in real estate taxes. Given that the defendants did not
    dispute the amount of the real estate taxes due to the
    plaintiff, and there was ample evidence to support the
    plaintiff’s claim regarding taxes, the court should have
    added the undisputed amount of $33,934.33 to the dam-
    ages it awarded the plaintiff.
    II
    Next, the plaintiff claims that the trial court abused
    its discretion in awarding only $6391.63 in attorney’s
    fees. More specifically, the plaintiff contends that the
    court considered only one factor in determining the
    award of attorney’s fees, it did not determine a reason-
    able hourly rate or a reasonable number of hours
    expended upon litigation, and it improperly awarded
    attorney’s fees based on the amount of damages
    awarded to the plaintiff.
    ‘‘[T]he amount of attorney’s fees to be awarded rests
    in the sound discretion of the trial court and will not
    be disturbed on appeal unless the trial court has abused
    its discretion: A court has few duties of a more delicate
    nature than that of fixing counsel fees. The degree of
    delicacy increases when the matter becomes one of
    review on appeal. The principle of law, which is easy
    to state but difficult at times to apply, is that only in
    cases of a clear abuse of discretion by the trier may
    we interfere. . . . The trier is always in a more advanta-
    geous position to evaluate the services of counsel than
    are we.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Schoon-
    maker v. Lawrence Brunoli, Inc., 
    265 Conn. 210
    , 258–
    59, 
    828 A.2d 64
     (2003).
    The trial court’s exercise of discretion, however, is
    not unbounded as there are parameters for the court’s
    reasonable exercise of its judgment. ‘‘[T]he initial esti-
    mate of a reasonable attorney’s fee is properly calcu-
    lated by multiplying the number of hours reasonably
    expended on the litigation times a reasonable hourly
    rate. . . . The courts may then adjust this lodestar cal-
    culation by other factors [outlined in Johnson v. Geor-
    gia Highway Express, Inc., 
    488 F.2d 714
    , 717–19 (5th
    Cir. 1974)]. . . . The Johnson factors may be relevant
    in adjusting the lodestar amount, but no one factor is
    a substitute for multiplying reasonable billing rates by
    a reasonable estimation of the number of hours
    expended on the litigation.’’ (Footnote omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Carrillow v. Goldberg, 
    141 Conn. App. 299
    , 317–18, 
    61 A.3d 1164
     (2013).
    ‘‘It is well established that a trial court calculating a
    reasonable attorney’s fee makes its determination while
    considering the factors set forth under rule 1.5 (a) of
    the Rules of Professional Conduct.9 . . . A court utiliz-
    ing the factors of rule 1.5 (a) considers, [among other
    things], the time and labor spent by the attorneys, the
    novelty and complexity of the legal issues, fees custom-
    arily charged in the same locality for similar services,
    the lawyer’s experience and ability, relevant time limita-
    tions, the magnitude of the case and the results
    obtained, the nature and length of the lawyer-client
    relationship, and whether the fee is fixed or contingent.’’
    (Citations omitted; footnote omitted; internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Schoonmaker v. Lawrence Brunoli,
    Inc., supra, 
    265 Conn. 259
    ; see also Altschuler v. Min-
    grone, 
    98 Conn. App. 777
    , 781, 
    911 A.2d 337
     (2006), cert.
    denied, 
    281 Conn. 927
    , 
    918 A.2d 276
     (2007); Rules of
    Professional Conduct 1.5. ‘‘[This] list of factors is not,
    however, exclusive. The court may assess the reason-
    ableness of the fees requested using any number of
    factors . . . .’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Glastonbury v. Sakon, 
    184 Conn. App. 385
    , 394, 
    194 A.3d 1277
     (2018).
    After the court rendered judgment for the plaintiff,
    it conducted a hearing regarding attorney’s fees on
    October 13, 2016. During that hearing, the plaintiff’s
    counsel submitted time sheets and affidavits in support
    of his argument that he was owed $27,904.12 in attor-
    ney’s fees. Defense counsel declined the opportunity
    to examine the plaintiff’s counsel and he made no argu-
    ment that counsel’s hourly rates were unreasonable.
    Rather, he argued, without any supporting evidence,
    that the plaintiff had been overly litigious and, as noted,
    he sought the court’s sympathy on behalf of the defen-
    dant guarantor. Specifically, he claimed to the court
    that the plaintiff had sold the property at a windfall
    profit and that his client, the guarantor, on the other
    hand, had lost his business, was elderly, on a fixed
    income, and would have to pay the judgment by secur-
    ing a reverse mortgage while trying to hold on to his
    home.10
    Subsequent to the October 13, 2016 hearing, the court
    rendered judgment granting the plaintiff’s motion for
    attorney’s fees in the amount of $6391.63. Following an
    order from this court, Judge Rodriguez articulated that
    he awarded that amount because $27,904.12 was
    ‘‘excessive and unreasonable under the circumstances’’
    and ‘‘[a]n attorney’s fee award of $6391.63 is reasonable
    based on the judgment of $41,535.74.’’ (Emphasis
    added.)
    This court has ‘‘consider[ed] problematic [a] court’s
    use of the amount in controversy as a gauge for the
    award of attorney’s fees. This court previously has held
    that the consideration of the amount involved, isolated
    from all other factors, is an improper gauge for a reason-
    able award of attorney’s fees.’’ Costanzo v. Mulshine,
    
    94 Conn. App. 655
    , 664, 
    893 A.2d 905
    , cert. denied, 
    279 Conn. 911
    , 
    902 A.2d 1070
     (2006). Because the court
    indicated in its articulation that it tied its award of
    attorney’s fees to the amount of the damages awarded
    to the plaintiff, we conclude that the amount awarded
    for attorney’s fees must be vacated and a new hear-
    ing held.
    The judgment is reversed with respect to the trial
    court’s failure to award real estate taxes and with
    respect to its award of attorney’s fees and the case is
    remanded with direction to award the plaintiff
    $33,934.33 for past due real estate taxes and to conduct
    a hearing and issue a reasonable order for the payment
    of attorney’s fees consistent with the requirements of
    law; the judgment is affirmed in all other respects.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    Gilbert Beck, who is the president of Sport-N-Life Distributing, LLC,
    executed a personal guarantee in which he obligated himself to complete
    ‘‘prompt payment of all rent, and the performance of all the terms, covenants,
    and conditions provided in [the] [l]ease.’’
    2
    The complaint contained two counts, one against the lessee for its failure
    to make payments as required by the lease and the second count against
    the guarantor for his failure to meet his obligations as the guarantor of the
    payments. Because, as a practical matter, their obligations were merged,
    we refer to them as the defendants without distinction.
    3
    The court’s award of damages corresponds to the attorney trial referee’s
    recommendation ($51,000 minus $15,000 plus $5535.74 equals $41,535.74).
    4
    During the hearing, the plaintiff provided the court with updated time
    sheets that reflected a new total of $27,904.12 in legal fees due to counsel
    for the plaintiff.
    5
    Following the trial court’s denial of the plaintiff’s motion for articulation,
    the plaintiff filed an appeal with this court together with a motion to review
    the trial court’s denial, pursuant to Practice Book § 66-6. This court granted
    the motion for review and ordered the trial court to ‘‘articulate (1) why it
    rendered judgment in favor of the defendants on the issue of real estate
    taxes and (2) why it only awarded the plaintiff $6391.63 in attorney’s fees
    when the plaintiff sought $27,904.12 in such fees.’’ Judge Rodriguez issued
    his articulation on November 30, 2018. The contents of that articulation will
    be addressed throughout this opinion.
    6
    Because we reverse in part the judgment of the trial court and remand
    the case on the basis of the plaintiff’s second argument, we need not address
    the first argument.
    7
    It appears that the defendants offered this exhibit because it reflected
    a lower amount due for rent, a discrepancy that was resolved at trial once
    it became evident that the lessee had remained on the premises for additional
    months without paying rent.
    8
    During oral argument before this court, counsel for the defendants
    acknowledged that the defendants owed real estate taxes in the amount
    claimed by the plaintiff.
    9
    The criteria set forth in rule 1.5 (a) of the Rules of Professional Conduct
    parallel, in large part, those factors set forth in Johnson v. Georgia Highway
    Express, Inc., supra, 
    488 F.2d 717
    –19, with the exception of two that are
    found in Johnson but not in rule 1.5 (a) of the Rules of Professional Conduct.
    Those two factors include the undesirability of the case and awards in
    similar cases.
    10
    It is axiomatic that appeals to the sympathy of the court are not appro-
    priate argument concerning an award of attorney’s fees, and that the court
    is required to decide the plaintiff’s entitlement to attorney’s fees by dispas-
    sionately assessing the relevant facts in light of the legal criteria for such
    an award.