DocketNumber: No. CV 93-0704722
Citation Numbers: 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 3799
Judges: AURIGEMMA, J.
Filed Date: 4/29/1996
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
At all times relevant to this action, the plaintiffs, Service Road Corporation and Cousin Vinnie's, Inc., operated adjacent exotic dance clubs known as "Uncle Al's" and "Cousin Vinnie's", at 145-147 West Service Road in Hartford and the defendant, Daniel Quinn, operated an adult bookstore, known as "Danny's Adult Book World", at 151 West Service Road. During the time period at issue in this case, Quinn also owned and operated two exotic dance clubs, "Kahoots" in East Hartford, and "Carrie-Ann's" in Vernon. Those establishments were competitors of Unde Al's and Cousin Vinnie's.
On September 7, 1993 the plaintiffs' attorney notified Quinn and the Hartford Police Department by letter of alleged sexual activity and drug use by customers of Danny's Adult Book World at the rear of Quinn's property. Approximately two weeks thereafter, Quinn installed two video surveillance cameras on the south side of Quinn's building facing the plaintiffs' clubs. One of the cameras pointed at Uncle Al's front door and the other at Cousin Vinnie's front door. Within a short time thereafter Quinn installed four to five additional cameras on his building. Four of those cameras were also trained on the front entranceways of Uncle Al's and Cousin Vinnie's.
A short time after the cameras were installed, the defendant Gordon Debigare, one of Quinn's employees, telephoned several of the plaintiffs' patrons and informed them that he had seen them CT Page 3800 entering the plaintiffs' exotic dance clubs on the security television which was connected to the aforementioned video cameras. During the same period of time Debigare posted signs or banners, advertising Quinn's other "adult oriented;' establishments, on the premises of Danny's Adult Book World facing the plaintiffs' property. Debigare also I provided the plaintiffs' patrons with coupons to Kahoots and Carrie-Ann's.
The plaintiffs claim that the primary, if not sole, purpose of Quinn's camera installation was to intimidate and harass their customers and harm their businesses and, therefore, that such installation constituted an unfair or deceptive practice within the meaning of §
The defendant Quinn has claimed that he installed the cameras purely for security reasons. However, the court does not find that claim to be credible. A disproportionately large number of the video cameras were placed on the side of Quinn's building which was nearest to Uncle Al's and Cousin Vinnie's with no camera surveillance of the entranceway to Quinn's store or its main parking lot. A security expert who testified at the trial described Quinn's camera configuration as "absurd" in terms providing optimum security surveillance of Quinn's premises.
A business is certainly permitted to install security cameras for its own protection and cannot be accused of an unfair practice if one or more of those cameras incidentally picks up activity on the premises of a nearby business. In this case the purpose of the camera installation was to interfere with the plaintiffs' business and the security benefits to the defendant Quinn's property was incidental. The number and placement of the video cameras described above, the temporal proximity of the camera installation to a complaint directed at Quinn by the plaintiffs, and the contacting of the plaintiffs' patrons concerning their appearance on Quinn's video cameras, indicates a primary intention to impact the plaintiffs' business.
At trial representatives of the plaintiffs testified that they had no evidence that Quinn's actions caused them a loss of profits. This may be due in part to the entry of a temporary injunction on April 22, 1994, under the terms of which the cameras were pointed away from the plaintiffs' front doorways. Not surprisingly, the plaintiffs also failed to present the testimony of any patron or prospective patron concerning the effect Quinn's cameras had on their willingness to enter the CT Page 3801 plaintiffs' exotic dance clubs. Nevertheless, the court finds that Quinn's cameras, when pointed at the entrance to the plaintiffs' exotic dance clubs, were intended to and probably would have a negative impact on the plaintiffs' business because they would deter certain prospective patrons from entering the clubs.
Connecticut General Statutes §
"`[T]he plaintiff who establishes CUTPA liability has access to a remedy far more comprehensive than the simple damages recoverable under common law'; Hinchliffe v. American Motors Corp., supra,
The remedies available under CUTPA were designed to be broader than those available at common law and to provide redress CT Page 3802 for conduct which `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;" or "is immoral, unethical, oppressive, or unscrupulous". Conaway v.Prestia,
Failure to prove actual monetary loss to their businesses might prevent the plaintiffs from prevailing under the common law claim of tortious interference with a business relationship, but it does not prevent them from establishing that the Quinn's conduct was an unfair trade practice within the meaning of §
The permanent injunction sought by the plaintiffs is granted. The terms of the injunction are set forth in the attached Order. The plaintiffs may also recover attorneys' fees and costs from Quinn. The amount of those fees will be determined at a subsequent hearing. The court finds that at all times Debigare was acting as an agent of Quinn, and, therefore, declines to award attorneys' fees against him. The court exercises its discretion not to award punitive damages.
By the court,
Aurigemma, J.