DocketNumber: No. CV87 24 61 45 S
Citation Numbers: 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 2872
Judges: FULLER, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 3/16/1994
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
1. Claim under the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act
The fifth count of the amended complaint claims damages against the defendants for unfair or deceptive acts or practices in the conduct of their trade or business under the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act (CUTPA). This claim was not submitted to the jury and was tried to the court over the objection of the plaintiff. In some cases CUTPA claims have been decided by a jury in conjunction with the trial of other jury issues without objection or a ruling by the court on whether CUTPA claims should CT Page 2873 be tried to the court or to the jury. In other cases Superior Court judges have held that CUTPA claims brought as counterclaims in foreclosure actions were collateral to the main, equitable issues in the case, and should not be tried to the jury. There is also a split of authority whether CUTPA claims in another context can be heard by a jury. This issue is apparently on appeal to the Supreme Court in a case that was argued September 23, 1993 but which has not been decided.
In the absence of controlling precedent this court is of the opinion that a CUTPA claim is not properly triable to a jury as it is a statutory cause of action based upon a federal statute which does not codify a common law cause of action, and because the relief granted by the trier is essentially equitable. A party is entitled to a jury trial under Article
A civil action under
Another consideration here is that the relief in addition to actual damages provided for a CUTPA violation is primarily equitable, and is awarded by the court. Section
In this case the question of whether the court or jury should CT Page 2875 have decided the CUTPA claim has become academic, since the facts here, even if construed most favorably to the plaintiff do not support a recovery under the statute. Accordingly the court would have been required to direct a verdict in favor of the defendants even if the jury tried the CUTPA issues. The claimed unfair and deceptive acts or practices are based on the claimed fraudulent misrepresentation and legal fraud of the defendants in the fraudulent and negligent misrepresentation counts of the complaint. See Fifth Count, paragraph 22. At trial, the plaintiff proceeded on two claims of misrepresentation by the defendants: (1) that Southport Manor could convey good and marketable title to the plaintiff, and (2) that the plaintiff would receive enough land to operate a nursing home.
The plaintiff's claim that the defendants could not convey marketable title was based solely on the fact that the Fairfield Zoning Regulations contain a maximum building coverage requirement of 10 percent of a parcel, and conveyance of the land covered by the contract, 3.74 acres, created lot coverage above that amount. That claim fails as a matter of law since a violation of zoning regulations is not considered a title defect. Frimberger v. Anzellotti,
The test for an unfair trade practice is now well defined, and three factors are considered: (1) whether the practice without necessarily having been previously considered unlawful, offends public policy as it has been established by statutes, the common law, or otherwise — whether, in other words, it is within at least the penumbra of some common law, statutory or other established concept of unfairness; (2) whether it is immoral, unethical, oppressive, or unscrupulous; (3) whether it causes substantial injury to consumers, competitors or other businessmen. A-G Foods, Inc. v. Pepperidge Farm, Inc., supra, 215; McLaughlin Ford, Inc. v. Ford Motor Co., supra, 567-68; Cheshire Mortgage Service, Inc. v. Montes,
In order to meet the third factor, the "substantial injury" prong of the cigarette rule, the injury must satisfy three tests: it must be substantial; it must not be outweighed by any countervailing benefits to consumers or competition that the practice produces; and it must be an injury that consumers CT Page 2877 themselves could not reasonably have avoided. A-G Foods, Inc. v. Pepperidge Farm, Inc., supra, 216; McLaughlin Ford, Inc. v. Ford Motor Co., supra, 569, 570. This test is equally applicable where a business person or competitor claims substantial injury. Id., 570; A-G Foods, Inc. v. Pepperidge Farm, Inc., supra, 216.
The facts of this case do not meet these tests. Plaintiff would have a stronger case if in reliance upon the representation, he accepted a conveyance of the subject property and then later discovered that he could not use the nursing home because of the zoning problem. Here there was no substantial loss as a result of the misrepresentation. At most the plaintiff proved loss of a $5,000 application fee, which he already recovered under the negligent misrepresentation count, and could have recovered instead under the breach of contract count, but this fee was non-refundable whether the plaintiff closed title or not. No other damages were proven based on the misrepresentation. In addition this was an injury which the plaintiff, whether considered a business person or competitor, could have avoided. The evidence showed that the seller assumed no responsibility for checking zoning, the plaintiff indicated that he would do so, but never did prior to signing the contract. The Supreme Court has recognized that CUTPA is not so far reaching as to provide redress to another person for any ascertainable harm caused by any person in the conduct of any trade or commerce. Jackson v. R. G. Whipple, Inc.,
2. Claim of prejudgment interest CT Page 2878
There is no right to recover interest in a civil action unless the defendant agreed to pay interest or a statute provides for it. Section
The determination of whether or not prejudgment interest is allowed as an element of damages is made on an equitable basis rather than by the application of any arbitrary rule. Bertozzi v. McCarthy, supra, 466. The real question in each case is whether the detention of the money is or is not wrongful under the circumstances. Id., 66; O'Hara v. State,
In this case the defendants contested in good faith whether there was a breach of contract by them. They claim that they were ready, willing and able to convey to the plaintiff the 3.74 acre parcel of land described in the written contract between the parties, and that the closing would have occurred except that the plaintiff refused to accept a conveyance because of the zoning problem that was discovered prior to the closing. Even though damages for breach of contract are determined as of the date of the CT Page 2879 occurrence of the breach of contract, the court is not required to grant prejudgment interest from that date until the date of judgment. O'Hara v. State, supra, 642, 643. Another factor in this case is that the amount of damages was not determined until the jury determined at trial that there was a breach of contract and decided the amount of the damages. The plaintiff contended that the highest and best use of the property at the time of breach in December of 1984 was $7,000,000, while the defendants contended that if there was a breach, the fair market value of the property was $5,250,000, the purchase price, so that there was no ascertainable loss to the plaintiff. The jury evidently picked another number between these figures, which it could do within its discretion, but the amount of the judgment was not determined until that time.
The defendants' refusal to pay monetary damages to the plaintiff was justified even though the jury finally ruled against them. Since there was no wrongful detention of funds, the plaintiff is not entitled to interest under
3. Specific Performance
The sixth count of the amended complaint is for breach of contract. In its answer to interrogatory #6 the jury concluded that the plaintiff and the defendants intended the written contract to cover their rights and obligations as to the purchase and sale of Southport Manor, superseding all prior agreements. In interrogatory #7 the jury concluded that Foley agreed to buy and the defendants agreed to sell the property described in the written contract. The jury also concluded that the defendants breached the contract (Interrogatory 11), and awarded the plaintiff $938,000 damages.
The evidence at trial showed that both parties were unaware of the ten percent maximum coverage requirement in the Fairfield Zoning Regulations when they entered into the contract. A provision in of the contract prepared by the plaintiff containing a representation that the property, the structures on it, and the conduct of a business of a nursing home are in compliance with the zoning regulations, was deleted before the contract was signed. Section 1.1 provided that the premises were to be conveyed by warranty deed giving good record and marketable title free from all encumbrances except for those specifically listed; the excepted encumbrances included zoning restrictions of the town in which the CT Page 2880 property was located.
By stipulated judgment the closing date was extended from October 30, 1984 to December 30, 1984. Shortly before the extended closing date, an attorney for the buyer discovered that conveyance of a separate parcel of 3.74 acres would create a violation of the Fairfield Zoning Regulations as to the ten percent maximum coverage provision for buildings. The total area occupied by buildings and structures was approximately one acre so that the coverage on a 3.74 acre parcel would be 25 to 30 percent. The plaintiff was not willing to take the property described in the contract with the zoning restriction on coverage. (Interrogatory #9). Foley made several subsequent proposals to modify the contract and suggested alternative ways that the defendants could perform. The defendants rejected all of these proposals, insisting that the rights and obligations of the parties were governed by the written contract they signed, and that the defendants had no obligation to modify the contract to satisfy the plaintiff. In Foley v. Southport Manor Convalescent Center, Inc.,
In paragraph 14 of the sixth count plaintiffs allege that the defendants' refusal to perform the contract has caused and continues to cause the plaintiff irreparable damages for which he has no adequate remedy at law. In the prayer for relief the plaintiff requests among other things, monetary damages and an order directing the defendants to specifically perform the agreement as modified on November 9, 1984. The defendants have claimed prior to and during the trial that the plaintiff cannot obtain both the monetary damages for breach of contract and specific performance of the contract itself, and that the plaintiff was required to make an election of remedies. The defendants also claim that the evidence does not support the jury finding of breach of contract, and filed a motion to set aside the verdict. Obviously if there is no breach of contract, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover either damages or specific performance, and deciding on the proper remedy proceeds on the assumption that the CT Page 2881 jury could properly find breach of contract.
A buyer of land is entitled to damages for breach of a contract to convey it, but in the alternative may elect to have the contract specifically performed to the extent of the seller's ability to comply, with an abatement in the purchase price if appropriate, subject to the qualification that specific performance is a form of equitable relief which rests in the sound discretion of the court. Lanna v. Greene,
"The doctrine of election of remedies is equitable in nature, and is purpose is not to prevent recourse to any remedy, but to prevent double recovery for a single wrong." DeLucia v. Burns,
An action for specific performance of a contract to sell real estate is an equitable claim which is determined by equitable principles. Frumento v. Mezzanotte,
When the parties commenced negotiations on the contract, the defendants wanted 8.5 million dollars for the entire 10.09 acre parcel. Foley did not want to pay that price and only wanted enough land to operate a nursing home. The parties finally agreed on $5,250,000 for the nursing home buildings and an area around them, which a surveyor later determined was 3.74 acres. This became the land to be conveyed, described in Schedule A of the contract. At that time neither the plaintiff or the defendants were aware of the ten percent maximum coverage problem in the zoning regulations. In essence, the parties agreed that Foley was to receive 3.74 acres for $5,250,000, and Garofalo was to retain the remaining six acres for his own use and development. After the zoning problem was discovered, Garofalo was not willing to reform the contract by changing the purchase price or including the entire 10.09 acres, which he had been unwilling to sell initially for less than 8.5 million dollars. While he could have agreed to a modification of the contract, he had no legal obligation to do so. Garofalo also had no legal obligation to obtain a variance from the Fairfield Zoning Board of Appeals or apply to the Fairfield Zoning Commission for a change in the zoning regulations. Foley v. Southport Manor Convalescent Center, Inc., supra, 538. Foley has CT Page 2883 also requested the court to in fact reform the contract, and order the defendants to convey for the same price, "enough land to operate a nursing home" or to give Foley a ground lease for the 3.74 acre parcel. The zoning officials in Fairfield have indicated that since a ground lease does not create a separate parcel, that a lease rather than a conveyance of fee simple title would not place the nursing home in violation of the ten percent maximum coverage requirement.
It is clearly inequitable for the court to order conveyance of "enough land to operate a nursing home." First of all, this would require the conveyance of all or almost all of the 10.09 acre parcel for $5,250,000, a price over $3,000,000 less than the sellers' valuation of the entire property. In the alternative, such a conveyance would deprive Garofalo of over six additional acres of valuable land which he thought he was retaining under the contract. It would also give Foley 2.7 times as much land as he bargained for under the contract. Since neither party was aware of the zoning problem when the written contract was signed, it would be inequitable for Garofalo to sustain such a disproportional economic loss, particularly when the problem was not caused by him. [It is completely illogical to assume that the defendants would enter into a contract that if performed would create a zoning problem for both buyer and seller]. The case of Sink v. Meadow Wood Country Estates, Inc.,
In order to form a binding and enforceable contract, there must exist an offer and acceptance based on a mutual understanding by the parties. Cavallo v. Lewis,
It would also be inequitable for the court to order the defendants to give the plaintiff a ground lease for 3.74 acres. Such an order would have the practical effect of tying up the entire property, including the six acres retained by Garofalo. The ten percent coverage requirement would allow Foley to operate the nursing home on the 3.74 acres covered by the ground lease, but that use would exhaust the ten percent coverage for the entire parcel, so that the six acres remaining to Garofalo would become useless unless he could obtain a variance or change in the zoning regulations. Such a result is clearly not within the understanding and expectations of the parties when they entered into the contract. Reformation of an instrument should only be ordered in compelling cases, and only to implement and carry out the intent of both parties to the agreement. Lopinto v. Haines,
"A cause of action for reformation of a contract rests on the equitable theory that the instrument sought to be reformed does not conform to the real contract agreed upon and does not express the intention of the parties and that it was executed as a result of mutual mistake, or mistake of one party coupled with actual or constructive fraud, or inequitable conduct on the part of the other. "Id., 531, citing Greenwich Contracting Co. v. Bonwit Construction Co.,
The court rejects the plaintiff's claim that specific performance can be ordered for a 99 year ground lease of 3.74 acres under the concept of a lesser estate. The plaintiff concedes on page 10 of his trial brief of January 25, 1994 that there is no legal precedent which has ordered specific performance of a ground lease in lieu of a transfer of fee simple title. A lease is not a conveyance of title to the property. It creates a materially different estate from fee simple title and entirely different future obligations of the parties to each other and to others. A lease has tax, insurance and other legal consequences for the parties. The plaintiff's position in effect requires the court to write a long term lease for the parties covering terms which they never negotiated. Its fundamental that courts do not rewrite contracts for the parties. Heyman v. CBS, Inc.,
Foley also relies on 5.2(b) of the Contract, which provides in part that if the seller is unable to convey the title to the property to the buyer free and clear of encumbrances or defects in title (other than those excepted from the contract), the buyer may elect to accept such title as the seller can convey upon payment of the purchase price. This provision only applies in the event of a defect in title. As previously noted, the zoning problem discovered by the parties after the contract was signed is not a problem of marketable title. Frimberger v. Anzellotti, Supra, 409; see also Holly Hill Holdings v. Lowman,
Another barrier to specific performance is that Foley did not prove that he was ready, willing and able to purchase the property on the closing date, or within a reasonable time thereafter. In order to be awarded specific performance, the buyer must prove that he was ready, willing and able at all times to purchase the property, and must meet this burden even in a situation where the defendant-seller indicates refusal to participate in any closing. Frumento v. Mezzanotte, supra, 616; DiBella v. Widlitz,
Finally, Foley's financial arrangements with Health Care REIT also demonstrate another problem with his ground lease proposal. By his own testimony, Health Care REIT required legal title in fee simple to the property, and Foley would then lease it back from the buyer. The conveyance would go directly from the defendants-sellers to Health Care REIT, not Foley, and it required fee simple title, not a long term lease.
Under the circumstances here, the plaintiff is not entitled to specific performance. Moreover, assuming there was a breach of contract, the jury has already awarded the plaintiff damages for the breach. The buyer may be limited to damages where under the circumstances the granting of specific performance would be inequitable. Botticello v. Stefanovicz,
4. Refund of Deposit; Interest Claim
If is undisputed that the plaintiff paid the defendants $155,000 as a deposit on the reformed contract. The defendants have retained these funds since 1984. In addition to damages for breach of contract (the difference between the contract price and the market value of the property at the time of the breach) there must be a credit of any deposits made by the buyer towards the purchase price. Williams v. Breyer,
Foley also claims interest on the deposit from 1985 to date. While not controlling, it is noted that the parties deleted the provision providing for interest in the event of rejection of title due to a title defect or encumbrance in Paragraph 5.2(b) of the Contract, and in paragraph 7.7 which covers damages where the seller defaults. As previously discussed, where parties have not contracted for payment of interest, the right of a party recovering damages to receive interest is based upon whether or not the funds were wrongfully withheld from the other party. Bertozzi v. McCarthy, supra, 466. The fact that the sum is liquidated is a factor, but is not controlling. Id., 467.
Under the facts of this case, the plaintiff is not entitled to interest on the deposit. After the zoning problem became apparent, and Foley was not willing to take the 3.74 acres described in the contract due to the zoning restriction on coverage, the defendants offered to return the $155,000 deposit. Foley then refused to accept it. He has consistently opposed rescission of the contract. Under the circumstances, the deposit has not been wrongfully withheld by the defendants.
5. Declaratory Judgment
The first count of the defendants counterclaim requests a declaratory judgment determining the rights and obligations of the parties to the agreement dated September 30, 1984 and a decree rendering the contract null and void. The conditions for a declaratory judgment are contained in 390 of the Practice Book. See also
Most of the factual and legal issues in the counterclaim have been resolved by the jury's verdict or the court's previous rulings on the plaintiff's other claims. It is undisputed that the closing did not take place because of the zoning problem discovered by the buyer's attorneys in December 1984. The obligations of the parties were governed by the written contract, as reformed by the stipulated judgment of November 9, 1984. The defendants made no representations that the property and the nursing home business on it was in full compliance with the building and zoning regulations. See Paragraph 28, Counterclaim. However, the jury found that the defendants made a negligent misrepresentation which Foley relied upon, to the effect that the 3.74 acre parcel was large enough to operate a nursing home. This representation was made verbally prior to signing the contract. It was not incorporated into or made part of the representations in the contract itself. When Foley was unwilling to close because of the zoning problem, the defendants agreed to refund the deposit, but that offer was not accepted.
The rights of the parties are governed by the contract as revised by the stipulated judgment. Defendants had no legal obligation to correct the zoning problem by rewriting the contract, and were not required to perform some other contract. The jury has determined that the contract was breached and has determined the amount of the plaintiff's damages resulting from the breach. The court has refused to grant specific performance. The time for performance of the contract has long since passed. Neither party wants to perform the contract as written. Performance would not carry out the intent of the parties. A declaratory judgment is determined by the situation existing at the time of trial. Preston v. Connecticut Siting Council,
The plaintiff is entitled a refund of $155,000.00, the amount of the deposit on the contract, in addition to any amounts that the plaintiff may be entitled to based upon the jury's verdict.
ROBERT A. FULLER, JUDGE CT Page 2889
Robert Lawrence Associates, Inc. v. Del Vecchio , 178 Conn. 1 ( 1979 )
H. B. Toms Tree Surgery, Inc. v. Brant , 187 Conn. 343 ( 1982 )
Tim Bartolomeo, D/B/A Quality Brands, Inc. v. S.B. Thomas, ... , 889 F.2d 530 ( 1989 )
Greenwich Contracting Co. v. Bonwit Construction Co. , 156 Conn. 123 ( 1968 )
Gendelman v. Mongillo , 96 Conn. 541 ( 1921 )
Lopinto v. Haines , 185 Conn. 527 ( 1981 )
Lanna v. Greene , 175 Conn. 453 ( 1978 )
Pigeon v. Hatheway , 156 Conn. 175 ( 1968 )
Heyman v. CBS, INC. , 178 Conn. 215 ( 1979 )
Bertozzi v. McCarthy , 164 Conn. 463 ( 1973 )
Botticello v. Stefanovicz , 177 Conn. 22 ( 1979 )
Schneidau v. Manley , 131 Conn. 285 ( 1944 )
Frabicatore v. Negyesi , 105 Conn. 412 ( 1926 )
Slattery v. Maykut , 176 Conn. 147 ( 1978 )
Conaway v. Prestia , 191 Conn. 484 ( 1983 )