515 A.2d 383 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1986
The plaintiff brings this summary process action seeking possession of a dwelling unit on the ground that the defendant's rental agreement has expired by lapse of time. The defendant's answer admits the allegations of the plaintiff's complaint but, by way of special defense, the defendant contends that the *471
plaintiff's action is retaliatory and therefore prohibited by §
The allegations of the plaintiff's complaint as admitted by the defendant, indicate that on March 1, 1985, the parties entered into a month to month parol lease of a rental unit known as apartment number 3, 113 North Street, Stamford. The defendant took possession of the premises on that date and on November 20, 1985, the plaintiff caused her to be served with a notice to quit possession on or before December 1, 1985. The reason set out in the notice to quit is expiration of the lease by lapse of time.
After a hearing, the following additional facts are found. On at least two occasions prior to November 8, 1985, the plaintiff informed the defendant, in writing, that he wanted her to vacate the subject premises. The defendant refused to leave and on November 8, 1985, the plaintiff, a landlord for approximately fifteen years and presently the owner of thirty-five rental units, went with three other men to the defendant's apartment. At the time, the defendant was not at home although her brother was in the apartment babysitting. The plaintiff ordered the defendant's brother out of the unit and then caused both entrances to the apartment, which contained many of the defendant's possessions, to be boarded up.
The defendant, upon hearing of the plaintiff's actions, contacted the Stamford police department to complain and, as a result, was restored to her apartment through the police department's efforts. Twelve days later the plaintiff caused the defendant to be served with a notice to quit in the present action.
The defendant maintains that under §
In pertinent part §
The defendant also contends that the presumption may not be rebutted by reasons other than those set forth in §
Section
The plaintiff argues that §
In the case of Alteri v. Layton,
It is this court's opinion that the defendant has established a prima facie case under §
As indicated above, the presumption afforded by §
While no case cited to the court establishes whether the presumption of §
The plaintiff also argues that prior to the defendant's complaint to the police, he had provided her with notice that he was terminating her periodic tenancy, that such notice substantially conforms with §
Such notice "serves the purposes of establishing that the notice was not given because of plaintiff's complaint. However, such notice must be an unequivocal act and it must be formal." Ziokower v. Pelletier, Superior Court, judicial district of Hartford-New Britain, Housing Session at Hartford, Docket No. 12388 (January 11, 1982).
When questioned regarding the notice, the defendant testified that she had received several requests from the plaintiff asking her to move. The plaintiff, when asked if he had given the defendant written notice answered "yes" and responded further by saying, "I gave her notice some time around June and another notice in the beginning of November asking her to *475
please vacate the premises." This being the sum and substance of the testimony regarding notice, the court finds that this notice is certainly not the unequivocal notice envisioned by the Ziokower case, cited by both the plaintiff and the defendant in their briefs, and certainly not sufficiently unequivocal to constitute a notice to terminate a tenancy under §
In accordance with the above, the court finds that the present action is barred by §