LYNWOOD PLACE, LLC v. SANDY HOOK HYDRO, LLC
AC 35483
Appellate Court of Connecticut
Argued March 5—officially released June 3, 2014
Sheldon, Keller and Harper, Js.
Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of Danbury, Pavia, J.
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Linda Pesce Laske, with whom, on the brief, was Joel Z. Green, for the appellee (plaintiff).
Opinion
KELLER, J. In this summary process action, the defendant, Sandy Hook Hydro, LLC, appeals from a judgment of immediate possession rendered by the trial court in favor of the plaintiff, Lynwood Place, LLC, regarding demised commercial premises located at 75 Glen Road, Newtown. The defendant claims that the court improperly (1) found that the defendant had not paid certain additional rent that was due and owing under the terms of the parties’ lease (lease) and (2) failed to find that the plaintiff was barred by the doctrine of laches from denying that the defendant had paid the additional rent. We disagree and, accordingly, affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The following facts, found by the court, and procedural history are relevant to our review of the defendant’s claims. The plaintiff is the owner of the 75 Glen Road property, and the defendant is a business that operates a hydroelectric generating station located on the property. The parties entered into a thirty year lease on July 2, 2004, for the use and occupancy of a portion of the property, which consists of a hydroelectric turbine pit area located on the first floor of an office building on the property, and an open canal located elsewhere on the property. The lease also provided the defendant with the right to pump water in and out of the turbine pit area through an existing pipe. Pursuant to the terms of the lease, the defendant agreed, inter alia, to pay a base annual rent of $1500 and, starting in the second year of the lease, to pay additional rent that was to be calculated as a proportionate share of any increase in yearly operating expenses.1 The lease provided: ‘‘As used herein, the term ‘proportionate share’ shall mean six (6%) percent.’’ At the time the lease was negotiated and executed, both parties were represented by counsel.
The defendant paid its base annual rent in full in accordance with the terms of the lease; however, a dispute arose in 2005 over the plaintiff’s calculation of additional rent pursuant to the operating expenses clause of the lease. The defendant refused to pay the additional rent as billed by the plaintiff. After multiple discussions and negotiations with the defendant regarding its continued failure to pay in full the additional rent due and owing under the lease, and providing the defendant with opportunities to cure its breach, on November 29, 2011, the plaintiff served the defendant with a notice to quit possession and to vacate the premises by December 16, 2011. The defendant did not comply with the notice to quit possession, and, consequently, the plaintiff commenced this summary process action. The summary process complaint alleged that the defendant had breached the lease by failing to pay additional rent due to the plaintiff thereunder for the years 2007 through 2010, and that the plaintiff had
The defendant filed an answer and special defenses on February 28, 2012. The defendant denied that it had breached its lease with the plaintiff and raised several special defenses, including the equitable defense of laches. In support of that defense, the defendant alleged that it had begun disputing the plaintiff’s calculation of additional rent in September, 2005, and that the plaintiff had ‘‘accepted the defendant’s tendered base rent, and the tendered ‘additional rent’ in 2005, and for the years up and through the time the plaintiff caused the notice to quit to be served.’’ The defendant further alleged that it had spent significant sums in maintenance and improvements to the premises in reliance upon the plaintiff’s acceptance of those tendered payments. According to the defendant, the plaintiff should be estopped from trying to enforce the lease and to collect additional rents some seven years later. In its reply to the special defenses, the plaintiff acknowledged the receipt of partial payments toward the additional rent due, but denied the allegation that it should be estopped from enforcing the lease by collecting the balance due above and beyond the amount of additional rent already tendered.2
The matter was tried to the court, Pavia, J., on December 17, 2012. On March 8, 2013, the court issued a memorandum of decision in which it found, on the basis of the evidence adduced at trial and its assessment of the testimony and credibility of the witnesses, that the plaintiff had proven, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, all of the elements necessary to secure a judgment of possession in its favor. With regard to its rejection of the defendant’s special defense of laches, the court stated: ‘‘The court credits the testimony of [Jack] Braverman, [the plaintiff’s] manager, that he had made multiple attempts to collect the additional rent pursuant to the terms of the lease. Detailed itemized bills were provided to the defendant, who rebuffed the submitted costs. The defendant and the plaintiff discussed and negotiated the utility costs on multiple occasions during the period of time in which the defendant asserts undue delay. The court finds that this was an ongoing issue which both sides attempted to resolve for many years. As such, the defendant has failed to prove an inexcusable delay with resulting prejudice, both of which are necessary for a valid defense of laches.’’ The court rendered a judgment of immediate possession in favor of the plaintiff. This appeal followed.
I
Whether a summary process defendant has paid rent in accordance with the terms of a lease presents a question of fact for the trier. See 19 Perry Street, LLC v. Unionville Water Co., 294 Conn. 611, 626, 987 A.2d 1009 (2010). ‘‘Factual findings are subject to a clearly erroneous standard of review. . . . It is well established that [a] finding of fact will not be disturbed unless it is clearly erroneous in view of the evidence and pleadings in the whole record. . . . A finding of fact is clearly erroneous when there is no evidence in the record to support it . . . or when although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed . . . . Our authority, when reviewing the findings of a judge, is circumscribed by the deference we must give to decisions of the trier of fact, who is usually in a superior position to appraise and weigh the evidence. . . . The question for this court . . . is not whether it would have made the findings the trial court did, but whether in view of the evidence and pleadings in the whole record it is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Ursini v. Barnett, 124 Conn. App. 855, 858, 10 A.3d 1055 (2010), cert. denied, 299 Conn. 924, 11 A.3d 152 (2011).
‘‘A lease is a contract . . . .’’ Robinson v. Weitz, 171 Conn. 545, 551, 370 A.2d 1066 (1976). ‘‘A contract must be construed to effectuate the intent of the parties, which is determined from the language used interpreted in the light of the situation of the parties and the circumstances connected with the transaction. . . . [T]he intent of the parties is to be ascertained by a fair and
The defendant concedes in its brief to this court that ‘‘the terms of the lease in question were committed to writing, as between sophisticated parties, each represented by counsel . . . .’’ Accordingly, the trial court was entitled to impart a presumption of definitiveness as to the language of the lease. See Tallmadge Bros, Inc. v. Iroquois Gas Transmission System, L.P., supra, 252 Conn. 496–97. Article III, § 4, of the lease governed the payment of ‘‘additional rent,’’ and provided that, beginning one year after the lease commenced, the defendant, as the tenant, would pay, in addition to the base annual rent, ‘‘the [t]enant’s proportionate share of the increase in the [o]perating expenses incurred by the [plaintiff] during the calendar year commencing January 1, 2003 and ending December 31, 2003 . . . .’’ The lease further provided that ‘‘[a]s used herein, the term ‘proportionate share’ shall mean six (6%) percent.’’ Read together, it is clear and unambiguous that, beginning in year two of the lease, the defendant agreed to pay additional rent equal to 6 percent of any increase in operating expenses incurred by the plaintiff as set forth in the lease.
Richard Fattibene, the defendant’s owner and operator, testified at trial on behalf of the defendant that the defendant had disputed many of the items that the plaintiff included in its calculation of the relevant operating expenses. In addition, he testified that the defendant also believed that it should only be required to pay 1.77 percent of any applicable operating expenses because 1.77 percent equated to the percent-
II
The defendant additionally claims that the court improperly failed to find that the plaintiff was estopped pursuant to the doctrine of laches from claiming that the defendant had failed to pay additional rent. We disagree.
Laches is an equitable defense; Florian v. Lenge, 91 Conn. App. 268, 281–82, 880 A.2d 985 (2005); and equitable special defenses may be raised in summary process actions.
The defendant argued at trial that six years had passed between the date that the parties first exchanged letters about their dispute over the calculation of the additional rent due and the date that the plaintiff served its notice to quit possession. The court, however, determined that the period of delay by the plaintiff in initiating the present summary process action was excusable because, during that time, the parties had been engaged in continuous discussions and negotiations to resolve their differences concerning the additional rent payments. The court’s finding that the delay was excusable is supported by the testimony of Braverman, the plaintiff’s principal owner and general manager, whose testimony the court specifically credited. Braverman testified on cross-examination in response to counsel’s question about the delay in serving a notice to quit on the defendant that the parties ‘‘were constantly having discussions . . . [a]nd we constantly had meetings to try and get [the defendant] . . . to come to some agreement on this.’’ He later explained that he usually had been able to work out disputes with tenants and that this was the first tenant against whom he had to bring a legal action. Fattibene also testified that the parties had engaged in ‘‘numerous, numerous discussions’’ over the issue of proper allocation of operating expenses. Evidence that parties had engaged in continual negotiations or discussions to resolve a legal dispute prior to one of the parties initiating a legal action ordinarily would preclude a finding that there was unreasonable delay in bringing the action. See, e.g, Dochelli v. Dochelli, 125 Conn. 468, 471, 6 A.2d 324 (1939) (laches not applicable in divorce action where parties in continual negotiation over support and education of children from time of separation); 30A C.J.S. 463, Equity § 156 (2007) (‘‘[e]fforts to obtain a settlement or satisfaction without litigation will generally excuse a delay in bringing suit’’). The court’s finding that the defendant had failed to prove an inexcusable delay in the present case is fully supported by evidence in the record and, thus, was not clearly erroneous. The court properly rejected the defendant’s laches defense on the basis of that finding.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
