DocketNumber: No. CV91 0119821S
Judges: ALANDER, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 1/20/1995
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
As part of the underlying state court action, the plaintiffs recorded a notice of lis pendens on the land records for the property at 38 Cartbridge Road in Weston, Connecticut. The defendants have filed the instant amended motion to discharge the lis pendens.
According to General Statutes § 52-35b, the plaintiffs have the burden of proving that there is probable cause to sustain the validity of their claim. The standard of probable cause does not CT Page 776 require this court to decide whether the plaintiffs have proven their case by a preponderance of the evidence. McCahill v. Townand Country Associates, Ltd.,
The plaintiffs seek to set aside the conveyance on the grounds that it was fraudulent. A fraudulent conveyance must be proven by clear and convincing evidence. Tessitore v. Tessitore,
A party endeavoring to prove that a conveyance was fraudulent must show either that: (1) the conveyance was made without substantial consideration and rendered the transferor unable to meet his or her obligations; or (2) the conveyance was made with fraudulent intent in which the grantee participated. Tyers v.Coma,
The plaintiffs here have demonstrated probable cause to believe that the transfer of 38 Cartbridge Road, Weston, Connecticut by the defendant Samuel Brown to the defendant Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc. was fraudulent. Although not required to do so, the plaintiffs have satisfied both tests for a fraudulent conveyance. They have provided sufficient evidence of constructive fraud and of actual fraud to establish reasonable grounds for a reasonable person to continue to prosecute this action.
At the hearing on the motion to discharge the lis pendens, CT Page 777 the plaintiffs established the following facts. On January 8, 1991, Brown purchased 38 Cartbridge Road, Weston, Connecticut from Richard Perlman for $465,000.00. The purchase was financed in substantial measure through a loan from Great Western Mortgage Company to Brown in the amount of $370,000.00. That same day, January 8, 1991, Brown conveyed the property to Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc. At the time of the conveyance, Brown's daughter, Sarah DeHaven Brown, was the sole shareholder of Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc. She was nine years old. Brown resides at 38 Cartbridge Road while his daughter lives there only occasionally.
At the time of the conveyance, the only assets of the corporation were a few dollars in a checking account. The real estate conveyance tax return for the transfer of 38 Cartbridge Road stated that no consideration was paid for the conveyance from Brown to Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc. All of the funds used by Brown to purchase 38 Cartbridge Road came from one particular Union Trust account that Brown established under the name Samuel Brown as Trustee for Sarah DeHaven Brown. Brown placed the vast majority of his own funds into the account including all his earnings and the net proceeds from the sale of his former residence.
Under the test for constructive fraud, the plaintiffs must show that the conveyance by Samuel Brown to Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc. was made without substantial consideration and rendered Brown insolvent. The plaintiffs presented compelling evidence that the conveyance was made without substantial consideration. The real estate conveyance tax return filed by Brown stated no consideration was paid. The tax return is supported by Brown's own testimony that the entire purchase was financed with funds from the Union Trust bank account into which Brown had deposited the bulk of his own funds. No credible testimony was heard by this court that this fund contained any money from Brown's daughter. Brown was also very vague in the particulars of his assertions that his daughter provided consideration for the conveyance.
The plaintiffs have also shown that the conveyance of 38 Cartbridge Road rendered Brown unable to meet his obligations. Up until approximately August 1990, the defendant Brown had been employed by Colonial Realty selling real estate investments. At that time, the defendant terminated his employment with them. Brown's income could be expected to decrease sharply and it did. CT Page 778 Brown's income tax return shows that his net business income for 1990 was approximately $99,000.00. His income tax return for 1991 indicates that his net business income fell to approximately $8,000.00.
While his income dropped dramatically, his expenses did not. He continued to have substantial ongoing expenses, including $30,000.00 for alimony annually, $36,000.00 in yearly mortgage payments and $17,000.00 in expenses for a condominium in Massachusetts. As a result, throughout 1991, Brown admitted that he had a negative cash flow. Brown also had significant debts, including a $370,000.00 mortgage for 38 Cartbridge Road and $52,000.00 owed on two other loans.
There is no particular test for determining whether a conveyance leaves a grantor unable to meet his financial obligations. See Patrocinino v. Yalanis, supra,
The defendant Samuel Brown's insolvency after the transfer of 38 Cartbridge Road is apparent. He knew he no longer had the job that served as his primary source of income. Yet, he proceeded to purchase the property at 38 Cartbridge Road, incur a mortgage of $370,000.00, and transfer the substantial asset he had acquired to his daughter's corporation. This transfer, in light of his dramatically reduced income, rendered him unable to pay his large and ongoing obligations. See Molitor v. Molitor,
In light of the above, Brown was clearly insolvent under the income stream test. The plaintiffs also offered substantial evidence that Brown was insolvent under the balance sheet test as he had conveyed his primary asset, 38 Cartbridge Road, and he had not reduced his liabilities, including the $370,000.00 mortgage on Cartbridge Road and other loans.
The plaintiffs also established probable cause to believe that the defendant Brown engaged in actual fraud in the conveyance to Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc. To determine whether Brown actually intended to defraud creditors through the CT Page 779 conveyance of the property, one must look at the facts and reasonable inferences from those facts. Matthews v. Converse,
The plaintiffs also need not prove that the defendant Brown intended to defraud the plaintiffs in this case by transferring the property. "There is no requirement that the transferor's intent to defraud be directed against any particular person. Our courts have long held that ``since every person is conclusively presumed to intend that the natural and necessary consequences of his acts', if he makes a fraudulent conveyance with specific intent to avoid the debt of one with the necessary effect of avoiding it as to another, the conveyance is fraudulent as to the latter debt as well." (Citations omitted). Rocklen, Inc. v.Radulesco,
Facts which constitute strong evidence of fraudulent intent on the part of Brown include the following: (1) the transfer of the property was to a corporation in which his daughter, who was only nine years old at the time, was the sole shareholder; (2) Brown and the only other shareholder in the corporation transferred their shares in the corporation to Brown's daughter only days before the conveyance; (3) Brown retained control of the property and resided there, while his daughter only occasionally did so; (4) Brown received no consideration for the conveyance; and (5) the transfer was made after he had recently ended his job and it left him insolvent.1
Most telling, the defendant Brown unequivocally admitted in testimony before this court that he was capable of engaging in fraud to deceive his creditors. In an effort to explain away the real estate conveyance tax return form which stated that no consideration was paid for the transfer to Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc., Brown stated that consideration was paid and that the form was falsely completed in an attempt to "beat" the Town of Weston out of the conveyance tax. While this court does not credit this testimony for the truth of the matter asserted, Brown's statement does reveal a candid willingness to engage in fraud.
The reasonable inference the court draws from these facts is CT Page 780 that Brown fraudulently intended to convey his most substantial asset so that it could not be reached by present and future creditors.
There is also probable cause to believe that Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc. participated in the fraudulent transfer. Brown's daughter was the sole shareholder of the corporation. Since she was a minor, Brown controlled the actions of the corporation, obstensibly on her behalf. Since Brown acted on behalf of the corporation in making the transfer and since he acted with a fraudulent intent at the time, his fraudulent intent and his knowledge of the fraud can and should be imputed to the corporation. See Clark v. Fuller,
The defendants claim that the plaintiffs are not a creditor of the defendant Brown for purposes of the Fraudulent Conveyance Statute because the conveyance was made prior to the federal court litigation being filed by the plaintiffs. The defendants' claim is erroneous.
The Fraudulent Conveyance Statute, General Statutes §
Moreover, even assuming that the plaintiffs were future creditors and not existing creditors at the time of the conveyance, the conveyance still may be set aside as to them. The plaintiffs have produced evidence of an actual fraudulent intent on the part of Brown. If proven, the conveyance is fraudulent as to both present and future creditors. Rocklen, Inc. v. Radulesco,
supra,
The defendants also claim that the lis pendens should be discharged because the subject action does not affect an interest in real property. They assert that the underlying action is one for violation of securities law in which the plaintiffs may only obtain money damages and, as a result, it does not involve title to 38 Cartbridge Road. CT Page 781
General Statutes §
General Statutes §
The action before this court is one to set aside the transfer of real estate from the defendant Brown to the defendant Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc. on the grounds that it was a fraudulent conveyance. The action is intended to effect real property as that term is defined under either subsections (1) or (3) of General Statutes §
The purpose of a notice of lis pendens is to inform potential buyers of real estate and creditors of its owners that title to the real property may be adversely affected by contemplated or pending litigation. Garcia v. Brooks Street Associates,
This action may effect the defendant Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc.'s title to 38 Cartbridge Road in a very significant way. Its title to the property could be voided. The plaintiffs seek and, if successful, are entitled to set aside the transfer of the property by Brown to Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc. Gaudio v. Gaudio,
The subject action could also effect the defendant Brown's interest in the property. If Brown's transfer of the property to CT Page 782 Cardinal Ridge Investments, Inc. is set aside, the plaintiff could attach Brown's interest in the property. See Murphy v.Dantowitz, supra,
Finally, the defendants' claim that the lis pendens statute, Connecticut General Statutes §
The Connecticut Supreme Court, in Kukanskis v. Griffith,
In Williams v. Bartlett,
This court does not share the defendants' view that the United States Supreme Court's decision in Connecticut v. Doehr,
The Superior Court, DeMayo, J., in Wallingford Staffordshirev. Staffordshire,
The defendants' motion to discharge the lis pendens is denied.
JON ALANDER, JUDGE