422 A.2d 331 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1980
This action arose out of a contract dispute between the parties. In return for the plaintiff's promise to design sheet metal switch plates, the defendant partner, in his capacity as general partner of the defendant limited partnership, *620 Holton Company, agreed to pay a one cent royalty for each switch plate sold. The defendant corporation, Holton Electric Switch Plate Corporation, subsequently took over the partnership's switch plate business.
The case was transferred on motion of the defendants from the small claims docket to the regular docket of the Circuit Court. The plaintiff claimed from all three defendants an accounting, damages and attorney's fees. Judgment was rendered by the Court of Common Pleas for the plaintiff against the partner only. The plaintiff appealed from this decision, raising three claims of error.
The plaintiff first claims that the trial court erred in denying judgment against the limited partnership. As relevant here, General Statutes
The second claimed error is that the trial court erred when it denied the plaintiff's prayer for an *621
accounting of the partnership's switch plate sales. "Although an accounting is also a legal remedy, it `has become to a great extent equitable'; . . . particularly where it is used as a preliminary step in establishing other rights." Dick v. Dick,
"Courts of equity have original jurisdiction . to compel an accounting, where a fiduciary relationship exists between the parties and a duty rests upon the defendant to render an account. This right exists not only in the case of those relationships which are traditionally regarded as those of trust and confidence, but also in those informal relations which exist whenever one person trusts in and relies upon another. The relationship . . . between parties to a business agreement [has] . . . been held to involve such confidence and trust as to entitle one of the parties to an accounting in equity." 1 Am.Jur.2d, Accounts and Accounting 52.
In Strang v. Witkowski,
The present case is similar to Valdes v. Larrinaga, supra. The plaintiff's one cent equitable interest in the partnership's gross receipts created a fiduciary relationship sufficient, in and of itself, to sustain a demand for an accounting. When a demand for an accounting is based on a fiduciary relationship, it is irrelevant whether a complete and adequate discovery procedure exists at law. Any other conclusion would effectively destroy a beneficiary's equitable right to an accounting from his fiduciary. See 1 Am.Jur.2d, Accounts and Accounting 54. Since we have found that the fiduciary relationship between the plaintiff and the partnership is basis enough for an accounting, the trial court's conclusion that an accounting was not required because the information should have properly been obtained by discovery need not be considered.
The trial court's final ground for denying the plaintiff's claim for an accounting was based on its finding that the expense of auditor services would be inequitable in a case originating in a small claims proceeding. This finding was made without any supporting evidence of the cost of an audit. Furthermore, a plaintiff's equitable remedies in the *623 regular docket of the court should not be prejudiced because the action was originally a small claims matter.
The final issue is the plaintiff's claim that the attorney's fees awarded to it were not reasonable. See General Statutes
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with the law.
In this opinion PARSKEY and DALY, Js., concurred.