27 Conn. App. 466 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1992
This case is before us on remand from the Supreme Court. We previously considered the matter in Billington v. Billington, 23 Conn. App. 45, 578 A.2d 674 (1990), where we held that the plaintiff was barred from opening the judgment because she had not exercised due diligence in attempting to discover the defendant’s alleged fraud. Consequently, we did not reach the plaintiff’s other appellate claims. The Supreme Court granted certification, reversed our decision and remanded the case to this court for consideration of the unresolved claims. Billington v. Billington, 220 Conn. 212, 225, 595 A.2d 1377 (1991). The unresolved claims are that the trial court improperly opened the judgment because (1) there was no clear evidence of fraud, (2) the plaintiff lacked clean hands, and (3) the plaintiff’s motion was barred by the doctrine of laches.
A complete recitation of the facts is available by reference to our prior decision. Billington v. Billington, supra, 23 Conn. App. 45. A brief synopsis is adequate for the purposes of this opinion. On June 19, 1987, the
The trial court, Harrigan, J., held a hearing on the plaintiff’s motion and concluded that the defendant’s failure to disclose the written offer to purchase the property established fraud by clear and satisfactory evidence. The court also found that there had been no laches on the plaintiff’s part in bringing the motion to open, nor did the plaintiff lack diligence in attempting to discover the fraud. Because the court further found that there was a substantial likelihood that the result of a new hearing would be different, Judge Harrigan ordered a new hearing. At that hearing, the court, F. Freedman, J., rendered new financial orders, including an order that the defendant pay the plaintiff an additional $45,000 plus interest. The new financial orders are not the subject of this appeal.
The defendant is asking this court to reverse Judge Harrigan’s factual findings. It is fundamental jurisprudence that “[a] factual finding may be rejected by this court only if it is clearly erroneous. . . . The trier of fact has wide latitude in its interpretation of the evidence and the conclusions to be drawn therefrom. Trial courts have a distinct advantage over an appellate court
In the present case, Judge Harrigan based his decision in part on his finding that the plaintiff was a more credible witness than the defendant.*
The trial court properly recognized that to open a judgment on the basis of fraud the following criteria must be satisfied: “(1) There must have been no laches
The three claims put forth by one defendant would require us to retry the trial court’s factual findings. Because of the extensive discretion afforded a trial court in making determinations of credibility and fact-finding, we may not disregard such findings unless the defendant has demonstrated that those findings were clearly erroneous. Both the laches and fraud issues, as well as the question of whether the plaintiff lacked clean hands, necessarily involve factual determinations that are presumed to be correct on review. Here, the defendant failed to overcome this presumption.
The second criteria involving opening a judgment based on fraud was determined on appeal by the Supreme Court in Billington v. Billington, supra, 220 Conn. 217, and, therefore, we need not address it here. The fourth criteria that “there must be a substantial likelihood that the result of the new trial will be different”; id., 218; in some cases requires prognostication of the outcome of a future proceeding.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
The trial court’s attitude concerning the credibility of the parties is indicated in the following quotation from the court’s remarks contained in the transcript of the defendant’s motion for reargument and reconsideration of the issue of laches. “We had a full blown trial, and you [defendant’s counsel] were wide ranging on everything you wanted to go into. And I heard the witnesses, and I heard the parties, and part of my decision, who I would believe was based upon my judgment of credibility, and I frankly found Mrs. Billington to be a much more credible witness than Mr. Billington. I found his lame explanation of what he did to be very uncredible, and I think it was very self-serving, and this claim that you make for him now that he has been inflicted with prejudice has been self-inflicted, and it’s simply a matter where his house of cards collapsed upon him. . . .’’(Emphasis added.)
Prognostication would be necessary on review only where the motion to open the judgment was denied by the trial court. See Jackson v. Jackson, 2 Conn. App. 179, 194-96, 478 A.2d 1026 (1984). If, however, the motion is granted, as in the present case, the final judgment doctrine would prevent an appeal until the new hearing had been held.