Thе defendants in this commercial real estate dispute appeal from the trial court’s judgment awarding the plaintiffs damages for unjust enrich
The plaintiffs cross аppeal, claiming that the trial court improperly calculated their damages by (1) reducing the damages award by $14,096.47, an amount equal to certain mortgage payments on the subject parcel, (2) reducing the damages award by $54,826.08, an amount equal to real estate taxes paid on the parcel, and (3) failing to include $60,000, an amount equal to funds that the partners spent to comply with an environmental permit. We affirm the trial court’s judgment in all respects.
The trial court rеasonably found the following facts, which are necessary to resolve both the appeal and the cross appeal. The individual defendant, William T. Peatt, Jr., was at all times pertinent to this case the president and sole stockholder of the corporate defendant, Sugar Hollow Park, Incorporated (Sugar Hollow Park). In the mid 1960s, Sugar Hollow Park acquired a 14.8 acre parcel of land with eight vacant buildings on Sugar Hollow Road in Danbury. On July 11, 1984,
The plaintiffs Kenneth Polverari, Vincent C. Pannozzo and Anthony Tucciarone, experienced real estate investors, wanted to purchase the parcel. Although they lacked the $1,800,000 that Peatt was asking, they knew of a prospective tenant, Linde Homecare Medical Systems (Linde), that was interested in relocating its offices. On August 1, 1985, after some preliminary negotiations, Polverari, Pannozzo, Tucciaronе and Peatt entered into a written “agreement in principle” (preliminary agreement), under which they declared their intention, “subject to their being able to agree on the terms and conditions of final agreements governing [the] transaction, to enter into a joint venture” to purchase, develop and either rent or sell the property. The preliminary agreement also contained the following provisions. The signatories would form a partnership at some unspeсified time in the future for the purpose of carrying out the aforementioned activities. Sugar Hollow Park would convey the parcel to the partnership for $1,350,000, to be paid by the signatories’ assuming $550,000 in mortgages on the property and signing a five year $800,000 promissory note, at 9 percent interest, in favor of Sugar Hollow Park. Principal on the note was to be paid periodically, in amounts and under conditions to be agreed on in the final agreement.
Prior to executing any additional agreements, the four signatories, with Peatt acting as a consultant, began managing the parcel. Each borrowed $15,000 from the Union Trust Company to improve the pond area in accordance with the environmental impact commission permit.
On November 13, 1985, the signatories to the preliminary agreement entered into a written pаrtnership agreement (partnership agreement), thereby creating the plaintiff Sugar Hollow Park Partnership (partnership). The agreement provided that Polverari, Pannozzo, Tucciarone and Peatt were equal partners in the partnership and that the business of the partnership would be to own, develop, invest in, operate, lease, manage and/or sell the parcel. Sugar Hollow Park, however, never conveyed the parcel to the partnershiр. Although both the mortgage deed and the note were prepared, neither was executed. Nonetheless, the plaintiffs commenced paying interest on the $800,000 note on September 4, 1985.
On March 1,1984, the DownUnder Restaurant, a tenant of a building located on the parcel, entered into a ten year lease with Sugar Hollow Park. Pannozzo and Polverari purchased the restaurant in the fall of 1985 and sold it to Akre’s, Incorporated (Akre’s), in April, 1987. Sugar Hollow Park and Akre’s then executеd a seven year lease, which was negotiated by Polverari and Pannozzo. Although the new lease required rental payments that were lower than those paid by the DownUnder Restaurant, it, unlike the prior lease, granted Akre’s an option to extend the lease term for an additional three years.
On October 14,1987, Polverari, Tucciarone and Peatt obtained a $675,000 mortgage commitment from the Village Bank. The plaintiffs claimed that this mortgage was needed to pay the existing mortgages on the property, as well as the loans made to the partnership by the individual partners, a $15,000 debt to the Union Trust Company, and development and engineering expenses. Pannozzo’s name was not on the mortgage commitment because he expressed a desire to leave the partnership. Peatt refused to sign the commitment because (1) it did not involvе a construction mortgage, (2) he feared that because the mortgage would be used to purchase the property, the partnership would have to obtain yet another mortgage to develop the parcel, and (3) he felt that a bank would insist that the development mortgage be subordinated to his prior $800,000 mortgage.
In April, 1988, the plaintiffs recorded both the preliminary agreement and the partnership agreement on the Danbury land records. In June, 1988, Polverari, Pannozzо and Tucciarone, with Peatt abstaining, voted to dissolve the partnership. At that time, the parcel had been neither developed nor transferred to the partnership as contemplated by the signatories to the partnership agreement.
From September 4,1985, through December 7,1987, when the payments on the $800,000 note ceased, the partnership paid $165,000 in interest payments to Peatt on the note. Between August 8, 1985, and June 10, 1988, the partnership paid $216,213.19 toward the three mortgages on the property, reducing the principal on the three mortgages by $15,000. The partnership, howevеr, failed to pay $14,096.47 in mortgage payments due during May and June, 1988. Peatt paid $54,826.08 in real estate taxes on the parcel and $3041.06 for attorney’s fees incurred by the partners between August, 1985, and June 10, 1988.
In 1988, the plaintiffs commenced suit against the defendants, who responded by filing an answer and a counterclaim. On August 27,1991, the trial court rendered judgment for the plaintiffs on the third count of their revised complaint, in which the plaintiffs sought damages for unjust enrichment. The trial court ordered the defendants to pay $243,000.10 intо an account, to be disbursed as follows: $24,027 to satisfy miscellaneous partnership debts, $41,193.28 to Pannozzo, $77,693.27 to Tucciarone, $78,893.27 to Polverari and $21,193.27 to Peatt.
The trial court arrived at these figures as follows. The court began by finding that the defendants should pay back the $165,000 in interest payments received
The trial court also ordered the plaintiffs, upon receiving these disbursements, to file on the Danbury land records whatever releases were necessary to remove any encumbrances attributable to their recording of the preliminary and partnership agreements.
This appeal and cross appeal followed.
I
The defendants argue first that the trial court incorrectly granted the plaintiffs equitable relief despite find
“ ‘[P]arties who have entered into controlling express contracts are bound by such contracts to the exclusion of inconsistent implied contract obligations.’ H. B. Toms Tree Surgery, Inc. v. Brant,
The trial court expressly found that the parties entered into two contracts — the preliminary agreement and the partnership agreement. The existence of neither of these contracts, however, precluded the trial court from granting the plaintiffs equitable relief because the equitable relief granted was not inconsistent with either of the two contracts. Indeed, neither agreement obligated any of the parties to do anything at all. The preliminary agreement specifically stated that it was “not intended to obligate any party to proceed should such party at any time decide, for any reason, prior to the signing of a definitive agreement, that to so proceed would not be in his best interests.”
Because the trial court’s award of damages for unjust enrichment was not inconsistent with the preliminary agreement or the partnership agreement, the defendants cannot prevail on this claim.
II
The defendants next assert that the trial court incorrectly found that the plaintiffs had proven the elements of their unjust enrichment claim. We do not agree.
“The right of recovery for unjust enrichment is equitable, ‘its basis being that in a given situation it is contrary to equity and good conscience for the defendant to retain a benefit which has come to him at the expense of the plaintiff.’ Schleichler v. Schleichler,
The defendants claim that the plaintiffs failed to prove that the defendants’ retention of $165,000 in monthly interest payments made by the plaintiffs was unjust. Whether the payments were unjust is an issue of fact. Stabenau v. Cairelli, supra, 581. “[Wjhere the factual basis of the court’s decision is challenged we must determine whether the facts set out in the memorandum of decision are supported by the evidence or whether, in light of the evidence and the pleadings in the whole record, those facts are clearly erroneous.” Pandolphe’s Auto Parts, Inc. v. Manchester,
The trial court’s findings of fact and the conclusions that it drew from those findings are supported by the evidence and are not clearly erroneous. The purpose of the $800,000 note, which generated the disputed interest payments, was to secure the transfer of the parcel from Sugar Hollow Park to the new partnership. The trial court could reasonably have concluded that because the defendants allowed themselves to become enriched by accepting the interest payments on the note but refused to allow the parcel to be transferred to the partnership in accordance with the parties’ expectations, the defendants’ retention of the interest payments on the note was unjust.
The defendants cannot prevail on this claim.
The defendants nеxt assert that the trial court incorrectly found that the clean hands doctrine did not preclude the plaintiffs from obtaining equitable relief. We do not agree.
“One who seeks to prove that he is entitled to the benefit of equity must first come before the court with clean hands. Cohen v. Cohen,
The defendants claim that the plaintiffs come into equity with unclean hands in two respects. First, they claim that the fact that the rental income from the property declined during the period that the plaintiffs managed the premises indicates that the plaintiffs mismanaged the property. Second, they claim that the plaintiffs aсted in bad faith and abdicated their duty to manage the parcel when they voted in June, 1988, to terminate the partnership.
The trial court specifically found that the decline in rental income from the property was not due to bad faith on the part of the plaintiffs and that the plaintiffs used their best efforts to develop the parcel. Our review of the record indicates that these findings were not clearly erroneous. See Stabenau v. Cairelli, supra. Further, nothing in the record supports the dеfendants’ argument that the termination of the partnership was
The defendants’ claims are without merit.
IV
The defendants next argue that the trial court incorrectly included $134,000, the value of loans that the plaintiffs made to the partnership, in its calculation of damages for unjust enrichment. We are not persuaded.
The right of recovery for unjust enrichment is rooted in the equitable principle that it is contrary to “ ‘equity and good conscience for the defendant to retain a benefit which has come to him at the expense of the plaintiff.’ ” National CSS, Inc. v. Stamford, supra, 597; Schleicher v. Schleicher, supra; Garwood & Sons Construction Co. v. Centos Associates Limited Partnership,
The defendants cannot prevail on this argument.
V
The defendants next claim that the trial court incorrectly found that the plaintiffs had not acted to the defendants’ detriment by renegotiating the lease for the premises occupied by the DownUnder Restaurant. We do not agree.
The defendants argue that the trial court should have deducted $73,391.74, an amount equal to the reduced rental income under the renegotiated lease, from its award of damages. They do not contest either the trial court’s finding that Peatt signed the new lease on behalf of Sugar Hollow Park or its finding that the plaintiffs did not renegotiate the lease to the defendants’ detriment. Rather, they argue that because they were ordered to repay funds received by the partnership, less the losses that they sustained, the reduction in rental income should have been considered a loss that was deducted from the trial court’s unjust enrichment award. It should be noted that the rental payments
As we noted earlier, the trial court is vested with broad discretion in balancing the equities of the parties for the purpose of calсulating restitution damages. Cecio Bros., Inc. v. Greenwich, supra; Kimbrell v. Rossitto, supra. In light of the trial court’s undisputed finding that Peatt signed the renegotiated lease on behalf of Sugar Hollow Park, the trial court acted within its discretion when it determined that the equities of this case dictated that the partnership absorb any losses attributable to the lease before the partnership was dissolved, and that Sugar Hollow Park alone be responsible for any losses attributable to the lease after the partnership was dissolved.
The defendants’ claim is without merit.
VI
The defendants’ final claim is that the trial court improperly denied their request for an injunction directing the plaintiffs to release both the preliminary and partnership agreements from the Danbury land records. We disagree.
The trial court, in its judgment, ordered the plaintiffs to release the agreements upon receiving the payments specified in the judgment. Thus, the defendants appear to contest the trial court’s deferring the releases until they have satisfied their financial obligations under the judgment. As we have repeatedly noted, the trial court is afforded broad discretion in fashioning an equitable remedy. See, e.g. Cecio Bros., Inc. v. Greenwich, supra; Kimbrell v. Rossitto, supra. The trial court’s orders, which served to provide an incentive to the defendants to satisfy their obligations under the
The defendants’ claim is without merit.
VII
In their cross appeal, the plaintiffs argue that the trial court incorrectly computed the amount of damages to which they were entitled. Specifically, they argue that the trial court (1) should not have reduced the damages award by $14,096.47, an amount equal to mortgage payments that became due on the three mortgages on the parcel between February, 1988, and June, 1988, (2) should not have reduced the damages award by $54,826.08, an amount equal to real estate taxes paid on the property, and (8) should have included in its damages award $60,000, an amount equal to funds that the partners spent to comply with the environmental impact сommissions permit. We disagree with each of the plaintiffs’ claims.
As we have previously stated, the amount of damages for unjust enrichment rests within the trial court’s sound discretion. National CSS, Inc. v. Stamford, supra. Unjust enrichment is, consistent with its equitable nature, a broad, flexible remedy that allows the trial court to award that sum of money that the court deems just under the particular circumstances of the case. Cecio Bros., Inc. v. Greenwich, supra. The amount of damages to be awarded depends on the degree to which one party wrоngfully has retained a benefit to the detriment of another.
The plaintiffs bear the burden of establishing, on their cross appeal, that the trial court abused its discretion in calculating damages. Our review of the record convinces us that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in calculating damages. The trial court reasonably could have concluded that the mortgage and tax pay
Accordingly, the cross appeal is without merit.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The plaintiffs in this action are Kenneth Polverari, Vincent C. Pannozzo, Anthony Tucciarone and the Sugar Hollow Park Partnership. The defendants are William T. Peatt, Jr., and Sugar Hollow Park, Inc.
