DocketNumber: No. CV90 0109303 S
Judges: KATZ, J.
Filed Date: 9/26/1990
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The first count of the complaint alleges that on May 21, 1986 the plaintiff was employed by Arthur Goldblatt to provide brokerage services in the sale of real estate owned by Arthur Goldblatt located at 105 Richards Avenue, Norwalk, Connecticut, and further alleges that pursuant to the plaintiff's agreement with Arthur Goldblatt, the plaintiff was to receive 10% of the sale price as a real estate commission. The complaint does not allege that plaintiff had a written agreement; nor is there any written agreement annexed to the complaint.
On May 29, 1986, the defendants, along with Martin Wolf, entered into an agreement to purchase the subject property from Arthur Goldblatt for $500,000. On July 21, 1986 they agreed to assume Arthur Goldblatt's obligation to pay the $60,000 real estate commission that he owed to the plaintiff. That agreement has been annexed to the complaint. (Exhibit C) There is no question but that the $60,000 was deemed to be the brokerage commission. Id.
It appears undisputed that Connecticut General Statutes
Although the plaintiff goes to great lengths to remove this case from the realms of what it truly is, as Gertrude Stein once wrote, "a rose is still a rose is still a rose." The only consideration for the $60,000 fee was for services as a real estate broker. There is nothing in its supplemental brief that persuades this court that the fee in question was anything other than a brokerage commission, particularly in light of the specific language in Exhibit C. Finally, that the plaintiff is suing the buyers of the subject property (who assumed Arthur Goldblatt's debt which originated by virtue of an oral agreement) and not its sellers is a distinction without a difference. See
The second count of the information must be similarly stricken. The Appellate Court in Currie v. Marano,
Finally, because the second count has been incorporated into the third count as a basis for a CUTPA claim, this last count is also fatally flawed.
All these counts, as drafted, pertain to a brokerage agreement that was not reduced to writing prior to the services being performed. As such, the motion to strike is granted for the aforementioned reasons.3
KATZ, J.