RIBEIRO v. FASANO, IPPOLITO & LEE, P.C.
Connecticut Appellate Court
GRUENDEL, J.
DISSENT
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GRUENDEL, J., dissenting. Distilled to its essence, this case concerns a return date that was two days too late. The question presented under the unique facts of this case is one of first impression: may a plaintiff, who properly files a return of service with the court in accordance with
The underlying facts are not disputed. The plaintiff’s complaint alleges that the plaintiff and the law firm of Fasano, Ippolito & Lee, P.C. (law firm), entered into a contract whereby Attorney Alphonse Ippolito agreed to represent the plaintiff in connection with the purchase and development of real property known as 339 Greene Street in New Haven (property). The complaint further alleged that pursuant to the contract, the law firm and Ippolito agreed to secure, inter alia, an easement from an adjacent property located at 329 Greene Street to enable the plaintiff ‘‘to tap into and use the existing water and sewer lines and pipes’’ that ran through that property. Ippolito and the law firm represented the plaintiff at the March 29, 2007 closing on the property. At that time, the owner of the adjacent property executed a utility easement that Ippolito had drafted. That owner thereafter refused to allow the plaintiff to tap into the water and sewer lines that transect its property. In so doing, it relied on the language contained in the utility easement drafted by Ippolito.
This civil action followed. The plaintiff’s complaint consisted of three counts. The first count sounds in breach of contract against the law firm and Ippolito. In the second and third counts, the plaintiff alleged that because the law firm and Ippolito also ‘‘represented the interests of and acted as and were the agents for’’ the defendants ‘‘at all times in connection with their representation of [the plaintiff] and in connection with [his] financing and purchase of the property,’’ the defendants were ‘‘liable to [him] for the damages he sustained as a result of the breaches, errors and/or omissions committed’’ by the law firm and Ippolito.
The plaintiff’s writ of summons and complaint were dated March 26, 2013. The return date specified on that summons and complaint was May 28, 2013. It is undisputed that the return date exceeded by two days the two month time period set forth in
On June 26 and June 27, 2013,4 the defendants filed respective motions to dismiss the action for lack of jurisdiction, claiming that the return date specified on the plaintiff’s summons failed to comply with the requirements of
In its November 29, 2013 memorandum of decision, the court acknowledged the plaintiff’s claim that
I
At the outset, I note that although the record before us does not contain an explicit ruling on the plaintiff’s request to file his amended return of process ‘‘nunc pro tunc on May 14, 2013’’; (emphasis omitted); the plaintiff in his principal appellate brief submits—and the defendants do not disagree—that the court implicitly denied that request in its memorandum of decision. I agree. Indeed, the court’s memorandum of decision can only be read to include such a denial. The return date specified on the plaintiff’s summons did not comply with
It nevertheless remains that the court specifically found that, even if the return date was amended pursuant to
II
The plaintiff contends that the court improperly determined that it lacked personal jurisdiction over the defendants due to his noncompliance with
With that standard in mind, I turn to the unique procedural facts of this case. In response to the motions to dismiss filed by the defendants predicated on a defective return date, the plaintiff sought leave, pursuant to
‘‘Whether the defect in the present case can be cured under
In accordance with
At the same time, the appellate courts of this state have suggested a broader reading of defective civil process, as that terminology is used in
As a result, the relevant language of
In so doing, this court is bound by the well established principle that, in construing a statute that is remedial in nature, ‘‘any ambiguities should be resolved in a manner that furthers, rather than thwarts, the [statute’s] remedial purposes.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-ted.) Finkle v. Carroll, 315 Conn. 821, 831, 110 A.3d 387 (2015); see also Vincent v. New Haven, 285 Conn. 778, 792, 941 A.2d 932 (2008) (same); Commissioner of Labor v. C.J.M. Services, Inc., 73 Conn. App. 39, 53, 806 A.2d 1105 (2002) (‘‘[a]mbiguities in a remedial statute must be resolved in favor of the persons whom the statute is intended to protect’’), rev’d in part, 268 Conn. 283, 842 A.2d 1124 (2004). Furthermore, ‘‘in
Our Supreme Court has stated that ‘‘[t]he purpose of [
In furtherance of that salutary aim, our Supreme Court has ‘‘refused to permit the recurrence of the inequities inherent in eighteenth century common law that denied a plaintiff’s cause of action if the pleadings were technically imperfect.’’ Andover Ltd. Partnership I v. Board of Tax Review, 232 Conn. 392, 399, 655 A.2d 759 (1995). For that reason, the court has held that the curative provision of
In addition, this court must be mindful that the Supreme Court, in interpreting
The present case is not one in which the plaintiff failed to file his return of process with the court; it is undisputed that he did so on May 21, 2013. The only defect arising from the plaintiff’s commencement of this civil action—and the only one identified by the defendants in their motions to dismiss—is a return date that was two days too late under
First, I note that our Supreme Court has held that
Second, it is axiomatic that we must construe
I respectfully disagree with the defendants and the majority that the plaintiff’s request to file his amended summons and complaint nunc pro tunc is substantive, rather than technical, in nature. See New England Road, Inc. v. Planning & Zoning Commission, supra, 308 Conn. 189 (‘‘the intent of the legislature [in enacting
In that regard, I note that our Supreme Court recently held that the ‘‘failure to attach a summons or citation to the complaint [is] a substantive defect [and] not the type of technical defect that is amendable pursuant to
That reasoning informs the analysis in the present case. While the return of a writ of summons and complaint to the court is, like the service of a writ, a statutory imperative, it remains that the plaintiff in this case complied with that requirement. In its memorandum of decision, the trial court made an express finding to that effect. Neither the defendants nor the majority have presented any sound basis to depart from the aforementioned reasoning in considering whether the plaintiff’s request to file his amended summons and complaint nunc pro tunc is technical, rather than substantive, in nature.
Furthermore, it bears emphasis that
Third, denying the plaintiff’s request to file his amended summons and complaint with the court nunc pro tunc, which results in the dismissal of his action for lack of personal jurisdiction, also leads to an unfortunate result and one ‘‘contrary to basic
Finally, I note that
The defendants claim, and the majority concludes, that the court properly determined that ‘‘the return of process date . . . cannot be amended to be in agreement with both
Also misplaced is the defendants’ reliance on Rogozinski v. American Food Service Equipment Corp., 211 Conn. 431, 559 A.2d 1110 (1989), in support of their contention that
Section
Moreover, our Supreme Court has recognized that the curative provision of
