SEAPORT CAPITAL PARTNERS, LLC v. SHERI SPEER
(AC 43467)
Appellate Court of Connecticut
Argued January 7—officially released February 2, 2021
Prescott, Moll and Suarez, Js.
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Syllabus
The plaintiff in error, who had been appointed the receiver of rents in certain foreclosure actions, filed a writ of error, claiming that the court improperly granted a motion for a protective order filed by the defendant in error, S Co., to preclude certain of his discovery requests and held him liable to pay a certain sum to S Co. The plaintiff in error filed the writ of error in the Supreme Court, which transferred it to this court. Held that because the plaintiff in error failed to brief his claims adequately and to comport his brief and appendix with the appellate rules of practice, this court declined to review his claims and dismissed the writ of error; any meaningful comprehension or review of the plaintiff in error‘s claims was made virtually impossible because of the significant deficiencies in his appellate brief and sprawling appendix, which was not appropriately limited in accordance with the rules of practice and appeared to contain materials that were not part of the proceedings at issue.
Argued January 7—officially released February 2, 2021
Procedural History
Writ of error from the orders of the Superior Court in the judicial district of New London, Cosgrove, J., granting the motion filed by the defendant in error, Seaport Capital Partners, LLC, for a protective order to preclude certain discovery requests and holding the plaintiff in error personally liable for certain sums, brought to the Supreme Court, which transferred the matter to this court. Writ of error dismissed.
Lloyd L. Langhammer, with whom, on the brief, was Donna R. Skaats, for the defendant in error (Seaport Capital Partners, LLC).
Opinion
PER CURIAM. In this writ of error,1 the plaintiff in error, Edward Bona, an attorney appointed by the court to act as a receiver of rents in the underlying foreclosure action, challenges the judgment of the court granting a motion for a protective order filed by the defendant in error, Seaport Capital Partners, LLC (Seaport), to preclude certain discovery requests Bona made to Seaport and holding Bona personally liable to Seaport for $11,903.47.2
Both this court and our Supreme Court “repeatedly have stated that [w]e are not required to review issues that have been improperly presented to this court through an inadequate brief. Analysis, rather than mere abstract assertion, is required in order to avoid abandoning an issue by failure to brief the issue prop-erly.... [F]or this court judiciously and efficiently to consider claims of error raised on appeal ... the parties must clearly and fully set forth their arguments in their briefs.... The parties may not merely cite a legal principle without analyzing the relationship between the facts of the case and the law cited.” (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Buhl, 321 Conn. 688, 724, 138 A.3d 868 (2016); see also Parnoff v. Mooney, 132 Conn. App. 512, 518, 35 A.3d 283 (2011) (“[i]t is not the role of this court to undertake the legal research and analyze the facts in support of a claim or argument
In the present case, any meaningful comprehension or review by this court of the claims that Bona attempts to raise in the present writ of error is made virtually impossible because of the significant deficiencies in his appellate brief. The brief first fails to provide a cogent narrative of the underlying proceedings necessary to place into context the factual and legal bases of the claims raised. The argument section is difficult to comprehend and contains little to no relevant legal citations or citations to relevant portions of the record. The sprawling appendix is not appropriately limited in accordance with our rules of practice and appears to contain materials that were not part of the proceedings at issue. Adequate briefing is necessary in order to avoid abandoning an issue on appeal. See, e.g., Connecticut Light & Power Co. v. Dept. of Public Utility Control, 266 Conn. 108, 120, 830 A.2d 1121 (2003). Because we conclude that Bona has failed to meet this burden with respect to any of the claims he seeks to advance in the present writ of error, we deem his claims abandoned and dismiss the writ.
The writ of error is dismissed.
