This case arises out of two contracts for the construction and sale of a new one-family residence in the town of Brookfield. In 1973, a construction contract was negotiated between the plaintiffs, H. Ascher Sellner and his wife Sandra A. Sellner, and the defendant Beeehwood Construction Company, Inc. This contract was signed on behalf of Beechwood by its president, the defendant Simon Aragi. Aragi himself, on his own behalf, subsequently convеyed the land and the building to the Sellners in 1974. When the plaintiffs took possession they encountered problems with the basement, the plumbing, and the septic system. After unsuccessful attempts to have the defendants remedy these alleged defects, the plaintiffs sued both defendants in a four-count complaint alleging: (1) breach of contract; (2) breach of the statutory warranty contained in § 52-563a of the General Statutes; (3) breach of the exрress warranty in the construction contract; and (4) negligence. After a trial to a jury, the plaintiffs were awarded $15,000 on .a general verdict. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs in this amount after denial of the defendants’ motiоn to set aside the verdict. Both defendants have appealed.
The defendants’ appeal challenges: (1) the legality of a prejudgment remedy afforded to the plaintiffs; (2) the propriety of amendment of the plaintiffs’ complaint late in the trial in order to establish a basis for piercing the corporate veil to make Aragi personally liable on the Beeehwood construction contract; and (3) the amount of the verdict awarded to the plaintiffs. These various claims must be addressed separately.
The plaintiffs’ action was begun through an application for a prejudgment remedy in the form of an attachment on rеal estate, under 1973 Public Acts, No. 73-431, § 5.
1
Under that statute, enacted in response to the constitutional instructions of
Fuentes
v.
Shevin,
In accordance with the procedures specified by § 52-278e, the defendants moved promptly to dissolve the prejudgment remedy, but this motion was denied after a hearing. The defendants subsequently moved to reduce the amount of the attachment, but this motion also was denied after a hearing which the defendants’ counsel did not attend. No direct appeal was taken from the denial of either motion. We hаve held that “prejudgment remedy proceedings pursuant to the provisions of Public Act 73-431 [now §§ 52-278a et seq.] are not involved with the adjudication of the merits of the action brought by the plaintiff or with the progress or result of that adjudication. They are only concerned with whether and to what extent the plaintiff is entitled to have property of the defendant
The defendants admit that they havе failed to take a timely appeal, or to file a timely notice of appeal, of the disputed prejudgment remedy order. They urge, however, that the issue of its validity is one of constitutional dimension, that prоcedural due process is at stake. This court has on occasion decided untimely appeals on their merits when a constitutional issue would otherwise remain unresolved, or in order “to facilitate business and advance justice.”
Silverman
v.
St. Joseph’s Hospital,
The defendants do not attack § 52-278e as inherently procedurally incompatible with the requirements of constitutional due process. They concede that they were afforded the prompt postseizure hearings that the statute prescribes. They claim
II
The defendants do not on this appeal contеst the substantive judgment below insofar as it imposed liability upon the corporate defendant Beeehwood. They do challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict against the individual defendant Aragi. In this connection, they argue that the trial court acted improperly in permitting the plaintiffs, late in the trial, to amend their complaint in order to allege that Beeehwood was a “mere instrumentality” for its рresident, Aragi, and to hold Aragi personally liable on the breach of contract and breach of warranty counts on which he had previously not been personally charged. Aragi had from the outset been a named defendant on the fourth count of negligence. The defendants allege error in the allowance of this amendment on the ground that it was untimely and that no excuse was offered for the delay.
in
Finally, both defendants assert that the verdict should have been set aside as excessive. We have often held that the amount of an award is a matter within the province of the trier of fact, and that the denial of a motion to set aside an allegedly excessive verdict is entitled to great weight.
Gorczyca
v.
New York, N.H. & H. R. Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
At the time this action was instituted, Public Act No. 73-431 required, in order to obtain any ex parte prejudgment remedy, a showing of “reasonable likelihood” that one оf six extenuating circumstances existed. The act was later designated General Statutes §§ 52-278a to 52-278g, and was amended to provide additionally for an attachment on real estate upon a showing of “probablе cause to sustain the validity of the plaintiff’s claim.” Public Acts 1976, No. 76-401.
“[General Statutes, Rev. to 1975] Sec. 52-278e. allowance of PREJUDGMENT REMEDY WITHOUT HEARING. SUBSEQUENT MOTION, hearing and order. The court or a judge of the court may allow the prejudgment remedy to be issuеd by an attorney without hearing as provided in sections 52-278e and 52-278d, upon verification by oath of the plaintiff or of some competent afSant, that there is reasonable likelihood that the defendant (a) neither resides in nor maintains an office or place of business in this state or (b) has hidden or will hide himself so that process cannot be served on him or (e) is about to remove himself or his property from this state or (d) is about to fraudulently dispose of or has fraudulently disposed of any of his property with intent to hinder, delay or defraud his creditors or (e) has fraudulently hidden or withheld money, property
