RONALD F. BOZELKO v. STATEWIDE CONSTRUCTION, INC., ET AL.
(AC 40459)
Connecticut Appellate Court
Argued November 29, 2018—officially released April 23, 2019
DiPentima, C. J., and Moll and Sullivan, Js.
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Syllabus
The plaintiff, who owned property that abutted property of the defendants, sought to quiet title to a triangular strip of land to which all of the parties claimed title. Following a trial to the court, at which the parties submitted evidence of their chains of title, the trial court found in favor of the defendants, concluding that the defendants are the owners of the parcel and that the plaintiff had no right, title or interest in the disputed parcel. From the judgment of the trial court quieting title in favor of the defendants, the plaintiff appealed to this court. Held that the trial court‘s factual finding that there was a break in the plaintiff‘s chain of title and, thus, that the plaintiff had no right, title or interest in the disputed parcel was not clearly erroneous; in making that determination, the court credited the conclusions of the defendants’ expert witness that the disputed parcel was outside the plaintiff‘s chain of title, it was not for this court to pass on the credibility of the witnesses, the court‘s factual finding was supported by the evidence in the record, and the plaintiff, having failed to establish that he has title to the disputed parcel, was not entitled to challenge the court‘s conclusion that the defendants own the parcel.
Procedural History
Action to quiet title to certain real property, brought to the Superior Court in the judicial district of New Haven and tried to the court, Hon. Richard E. Burke, judge trial referee; judgment for the defendants, from which the plaintiff appealed to this court. Affirmed.
Ronald F. Bozelko, self-represented, with whom, on the brief, was Ira B. Grudberg, for the appellant (plaintiff).
Michael E. Burt, for the appellees (defendants).
Opinion
DiPENTIMA, C. J. The plaintiff, Ronald F. Bozelko, appeals from the judgment of the trial court, rendered following a trial to the court, in favor of the defendants, Statewide Construction, Inc., and Robert Pesapane, in an action to quiet title under
The following facts and procedural history are relevant to the resolution of this appeal. In 2011, the plaintiff commenced an action against the defendants seeking to quiet title to property known as 105 McLay Avenue in East Haven. In their amended answer, the defendants admitted the allegation in the operative complaint that they may claim an interest in whole or in part in 105 McLay Avenue. The defendants denied the remainder of the allegations in the complaint and did not assert any special defenses or counterclaims, but made a statement in their amended answer, pursuant to
On appeal, the plaintiff contends that the court erred in its conclusion as to the ownership of 105 McLay Avenue. Specifically, he argues that the evidence he submitted at trial established that he has title to 105 McLay Avenue. We disagree.
We first set forth our standard of review.
“Whether a disputed parcel of land should be included in one or another chain of title is a question of fact for the court to decide. . . . In such a determination, it is the court‘s duty to accept the testimony or evidence that appears more credible. . . . It is well settled that we review the court‘s findings of fact under
At trial, both parties agreed that the first deed in the plaintiff‘s chain of title, a warranty deed recorded in July, 1924, by which Lyman A. Granniss transferred a thirty acre parcel of land known as “Pond Lot” to John H. Howe, included a parcel that would later become known as 105 McLay Avenue. The next deed in the plaintiff‘s chain of title is an October, 1924 warranty deed by which Howe transferred to Gertrude H. LaBell and Emma G. McLay the parcel of land referenced on a 1924 McLay Heights subdivision map (1924 subdivision map), with the exception of lots one through forty. The plaintiff claimed that the deed from Howe to LaBell and McLay included 105 McLay Avenue, and the defendants disagreed.
The 1924 subdivision map included a street named McLay Avenue. It is not disputed that 105 McLay Avenue is a triangular portion of land that comprises a portion of McLay Avenue as shown on the 1924 subdivision map, and that 105 McLay Avenue appears to have been created in the late 1980s when McLay Avenue was reconfigured. See footnote 2 of this opinion.
The remaining conveyances in the plaintiff‘s chain of title are as follows. By a judgment of strict foreclosure in 1972, the town of East Haven obtained LaBell and McLay‘s property. By a quitclaim deed dated January 24, 1985, East Haven conveyed the parcel, which the plaintiff claims included 105 McLay Avenue, to Joseph J. Farricielli, who then transferred that same parcel to Laurelwood Associates, Inc., by warranty deed dated February 22, 1985. In 1985, Laurelwood Associates, Inc., transferred the parcel by quitclaim deed to Edward Coventry and Walter T. Nichols, who conveyed the property back to Laurelwood Associates, Inc., by quitclaim deed in 1986. Laurelwood Associates, Inc., then conveyed 105 McLay Avenue to Chalja, LLC, by a 2005 warranty deed, which company then transferred 105 McLay Avenue to the plaintiff by quitclaim deed in 2010. The defendants submitted evidence of a number of breaks in the plaintiff‘s chain of title and contended that East Haven had conveyed 105 McLay Avenue to Statewide Construction, Inc., in August, 2005, by quitclaim deed, and Statewide Construction, Inc., subsequently conveyed a portion of 105 McLay Avenue to Pesapane in October, 2005.1
In its memorandum of decision, the court found that
The deed from East Haven to Farricielli states that the property to be conveyed is bounded northerly “by McLay Avenue (undeveloped), as shown on said map, 303.18 feet . . . .” The map showing the property to be acquired by Farricielli from East Haven, which was revised in 1983 (1983 map), shows the parcel being conveyed as being bounded on the north by McLay Avenue. Ioime marked the 1983 map to show the placement of the parcel that would later become 105 McLay Avenue in relation to the land contained within the description of the deed.2
Ioime also marked the 1983 map to demonstrate that lots 50, 51, and 52, which correspond to 91, 95, and 99 McLay Avenue, were located on the northerly side of McLay Avenue, and marked the property conveyed as being located to the south of McLay Avenue. The 1924 subdivision map shows lots 50, 51, and 52 as being located on the northerly side of McLay Avenue, and Ioime testified that the parcel drawn in red, which abutted those lots, represented 105 McLay Avenue. Ioime stated that lots 50, 51, and 52 were outside the description in the deed from East Haven to Farricielli.3
Ioime testified that 105 McLay Avenue was outside the description of the property conveyed in the quitclaim deed to Farricielli by East Haven. Ioime further testified that the warranty deed from Farricielli to Laurelwood Associates, Inc., which contains the same legal description of the property as the quitclaim deed from East Haven to Farricielli, does not include 105 McLay Avenue. The court credited Ioime‘s testimony that 105 McLay Avenue was outside the plaintiff‘s chain of title. “We cannot retry the facts or pass on the credibility of the witnesses.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Highstead Foundation, Inc. v. Fahan, supra, 105 Conn. App. 759.
Accordingly, the court‘s finding that there was a break in the plaintiff‘s chain of title is not clearly erroneous. See FirstLight Hydro Generating Co. v. Stewart, 328 Conn. 668, 678, 182 A.3d 67 (2018) (“issue [of whether] land [is] included in one or the other chain of title [is] a question of fact for the court to decide”
The plaintiff next makes several additional arguments that challenge the court‘s conclusion that the defendants own 105 McLay Avenue.5 Because we conclude that the court‘s finding that the plaintiff has no title or interest in 105 McLay Avenue was not clearly erroneous, however, we need not address his remaining claims. Having failed to prove his own title in 105 McLay Avenue, “the [plaintiff is] not permitted to question that of the defendant[s], nor to assign as error the rulings of the trial court relating thereto. . . . This is but an application of the settled rule that in a controversy under . . .
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
