DocketNumber: No. AC 16753
Citation Numbers: 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 8464
Judges: SHAPIRO, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 7/16/1998
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
The trial court found that the lease had been terminated by the actions of the parties. It stated several reasons for its finding that there was a termination of the lease. These included the service of the notice to quit1, the filing of the summary process action2, and the statements of the landlord threatening to invoke legal action3. The trial court also specifically addressed the claim that only a judgment in the summary process could confirm the termination of the lease, and rejected this on the facts found4.
In the pending matter there was never a dispute over the validity of the notice to quit that was served by the plaintiff in 1991. The findings of the trial court, accepted by this Court in its decision, included that there had been a rental arrearage that preceded the issuance of the notice to quit5. Following that, the plaintiff not only served a notice to quit, but CT Page 8466 commenced a summary process action. As discussed below, each of those actions was sufficient to terminate the lease, although this Court's opinion only discusses the notice to quit.
This Court's opinion states that the trial court erred in finding that the notice to quit acted to terminate the lease and that the trial court "incorrectly equated a notice of intent to terminate a lease with actual termination of a lease" (Opinion
To rule that a notice to quit does not effect a lease termination, or does not do so without some other "determination" that the landlord had the right to terminate the lease (Opinion,supra at 359) is in conflict with the underlying theory behind our summary process law as set forth in numerous opinions7.
"A breach of a covenant to pay rent does not automatically result in the termination of a lease. Rosa v. Cristina
135 Conn. 364 ,64 A.2d 680 (1949). The failure to pay rent gives the landlord a right to terminate the lease. Id. In order to terminate a lease, a landlord must perform some unequivocal act which clearly demonstrates his intent to terminate the lease. Chapel-High Corporation v. Cavallaro,141 Conn. 407 ,411 106 A.2d 720 (1954)." Bridgeport, supra, at 583, footnote 8.
The unequivocal act need not be in any form, and the notice to quit is but one form of words or deeds that can evince the unequivocal act necessary to terminate the lease. Bridgeport,supra, at 583, footnote 9, citing Sandrew v. Pequot Drug, Inc.
CT Page 8467
That the service of a notice to quit is, in fact, such unequivocal notice of the termination of the lease had been repeatedly set forth. "The issuance of the notice to quit is the undeniable exercise of this option [to terminate the lease]. SeeChapel-High Corporation v. Cavallaro,
There is no requirement that a judgment enter in a summary process action before the termination is deemed to occur, nor to "confirm" the effect of the unequivocal act which terminated the lease. In fact, our law is precisely to the contrary. This is essential because the termination must actually occur prior to a summary process action. "The necessary and only basis of a summary process proceeding is that the lease has been terminated.Webb v. Ambler,
Our law also provides, prior to any judgment or other "determination", that upon the termination of a lease following a notice to quit that the tenant becomes a tenant at sufferance.Bargain Mart, supra at 136; Bushnell Plaza, supra at 686. While there may be occasion for the lease to come back into play, such as when the tenant prevails at a summary process trial, the fact remains that the lease was terminated by the unequivocal act, and is subject to being later revived. As stated by Judge Borden in his dissent in Bridgeport, judgment for the tenant or a withdrawal of a summary process action will revive a lease, but CT Page 8468 between the service of the notice and the revival of the lease, the tenant is a tenant at sufferance, and during that time, the lease is terminated. Bridgeport, supra at 595 (dissent footnote 8).
Because there were no issues regarding the validity of the notice to quit in the pending case, the cited cases of Bridgeport and Bargain Mart should not apply, and reargument or reconsideration in that regard is requested. To the extent that the opinion holds that a notice to quit is not accepted as an unequivocal act which terminates a lease, even where there exists no issue with regard to a notice to quit, it is in conflict with other decisions, and reconsideration, or reargument, or reargument en banc is requested given the importance of this issue to future summary process litigation.
As set forth in Section II, above, the trial court made numerous findings in addition to the those regarding the notice to quit that went into its decision that there had been a termination of the lease. The court found that the termination occurred not merely by the service of the notice to quit, but also by the filing of the summary process action. Initiating a summary process action is an unequivocal act that shows the exercise of the option to terminate, Bargain Mart, supra at 132. The Stipulation was entered into at the courthouse by the parties when they appeared for the trial of the action and the trial court heard much disputed testimony as to the negotiations leading up to the entry of the Stipulation. This Court's opinion overlooks these trial court findings, not clearly erroneous, which demonstrate a termination of the lease regardless of the notice to quit issue.
In addition, the trial court found that the later correspondence of the landlord "clearly" evidenced his termination of the lease (Tr. 11/21/96, p. 9, line 25). This Court's decision should be reconsidered in that it was limited solely to the effect of a notice to quit, and did not address CT Page 8469 these additional findings of the trial judge specifically related to the termination issue.
The trial court decision was heavily fact based and related to a lengthy time period, but was premised in part upon a ruling that may now be reversed. The defendant's urge the court to reconsider the terms of the remand to order the retrial of the matter consistent with its Opinion. To do otherwise is to ignore the complicated factual issues that follow the notice to quit, which itself was related to a completely different lawsuit, with completely different issues than the pending action. Because so many parts of the complicated trial court decision were intertwined in the portion that may be reversed, it would be inappropriate to reverse on one legal premise without putting the entire matter back before the trial court's consideration.
Any remand should have the trial court take into account such termination by the subsequent conduct of the landlord even if the ruling remains that the notice to quit did not initially terminate the lease. Again, this trial court finding was not found to be clearly erroneous, and a remand without consideration of this issue would improperly deprive the defendants of proper factual findings made by the trial court.
THE DEFENDANTS/APPELLANTS
By _____________________
Richard J. Shapiro Weinstein, Weiner, Ignal, Napolitano Shapiro PO Box 9177 Bridgeport, CT 06601 (203) 333-1177 Juris: 66912
This is to certify that a copy of the Motion for Reargument, Reconsideration, and/or Reargument En Banc has been mailed this day to:
The Honorable Leonard M. Cocco Superior Court Housing Session
17 Belden Avenue Norwalk, CT 06850
Hale C. Sargent, Esquire Sargent Sargent
830 Post Road East Westport, CT 06880
Richard J. Shapiro Weinstein, Weiner, Ignal, Napolitano Shapiro, P.C. PO Box 9177 Bridgeport, Connecticut 06601 (203) 333-1177 Facsimile (203) 384-9832 Juris # 66912 CT Page 8471