This action, sounding in negligence, was instituted by the plaintiff, a real estate developer, against the defendant, an electric utility company. The gravamen of the plaintiff’s complaint is that the defendant, in installing underground utilities in the roadway of a residential subdivision pursuant to an easement granted it by the plaintiff, performed this work on the road negligently, causing the plaintiff additional expenses which reduced profits from the subdivision.
The trial court found that the defendant’s negligence required additional work by the plaintiff to restore the roadbed and shoulder and awarded damages of $13,700.50 on the first count. It further found that the plaintiff was unable to continue the development of the residential subdivision for nine months because of the delay and nеglect of the defendant in its installation work and awarded as additional damages interest on the plaintiff’s subdivision improvement loan that accrued during that period in the amount of $13,132.53 on the second count.
The defendant raises three issues on appeal: (1) whether the court erred in excluding claimed admissions of fact made by the plaintiff’s president
With reference to the defendant’s claim that the court improperly excluded claimed admissions, the circumstances are as follows: Mr. Thomas Connell was the defendant’s claims adjuster, and on two occasions he met with Mr. Anthony Simone, the plaintiff’s president, to discuss settlement of the plaintiff’s claim. Over the plaintiff’s objection that the statements were made during the course of settlement discussions, the adjuster was allowed to testify as follows: “And he [Simone] said that he was not interested in the shoulders of the road because they will be torn up during the course of development by excavating equipment, cement trucks, building supply trucks, subcontractors’ vehicles, and that when he put the—the material that was excavated from the foundations and did the landscaping, that he would take care of the shoulders of the road anyway. He was not сoncerned about that. He simply wanted help with the road surface in the area where the silt from the open trench had allegedly washed onto a portion of his road.” The court, rejecting the claim of the defendant that the statеment ascribed to Simone was “not part of settlement talk” ordered the statement stricken because he [Connell] “got in settlement things there.” Thereafter, the defendant
It has long been the law that offers relating to compromise are not admissible on the issue of liability.
Nearing
v.
Bridgeport,
The court concluded that it was not clear whether the proffered evidence related to compromise or factual admission. 1 “Where it is not clear whether the statement is an offer of compromise or an admission of liability [or other fact] and the motive of the declarant is subject to speculation and conjecture, the statement must be excluded.” Tait & LaPlante, Handbook of Conn. Evidence (1976) § 11.5 (d) (2), p.189.
Later, the further attempt by the defendant to cull out of the entire settlement discussions statements made by Simone without eliciting the
The defendant next challenges the conclusion оf the trial court that the defendant’s negligence delayed the work on the subdivision project for nine months. It further opposes the award of road construction expenses as damages. With reference to these two contentions, there was evidence before the trial court, succinctly stated, as follows:
As of September 21, 1972, the roads on the subdivision had been boxed and graveled. Blacktop was to be applied upon the utility installation. The shoulders were shapеd and pitched down into the roadbed. The plaintiff granted an easement to the defendant on that date. The plaintiff could have reasonably expected the electrical installation to be complete within eight to ten working dаys. The defendant did not open the treneh until October 13, 1972. The plaintiff’s subdivision was selected as a good site to demonstrate the effectiveness of a new trenching machine.
Connecticut Light & Power returned to the site in February of 1973. At that time the road was barely passable. Upon the plаintiff’s request, a civil engineer inspected the site in March of 1973. He recommended that all the clay material be removed from the road before it could be paved. The defendant completed work on the site in April of 1973. As of June, 1973, the road was washed out, and not ready for paving. During June and July the damage to the roadway was corrected and the
A review of the evidence, the record, and statements of fact in the briefs makes it readily apparent that there was, as to certain aspects of the respective positions of the parties, conflicting evidence with respect to claimed delay and road repair damages. “Where there is conflicting evidence . . . we do not retry the facts or pass upon the credibility of the witnesses. The trial court determines the credibility of witnesses .... Where the evidence, as here, is in conflict, its probative force is for the trier.” (Citations omitted.)
Robert Lawrence Associates, Inc.
v.
Del Vecchio,
The plaintiff conceded in oral argument that the most which the court could have logically found was a six month delаy from November through April. Assuming, arguendo, that the time delay was six months, such a finding would not invalidate the court’s conclusion that that delay was instrumental in the deterioration of the road conditions requiring restoration expense. The evidence prоvided a factual basis for the court’s decision concerning both delay and resulting expenses. “It is only in the clearest circumstances, where no other conclusion could reasonably be reached, that the determination of fact by the trier may be disturbed.”
McLaughlin
v.
Chicken Delight, Inc.,
Construing the decision of the court as an award to the plaintiff for lost profits, we find no foundation laid for such a conclusion. There was no evidence as to what the plаintiff’s profits would have been had the defendant installed its electric wires in a reasonable time and manner, or what its profits actually were after the defendant had laid its cable. To have justified an award in the nature of profits in this case, it wаs incumbent upon the plaintiff to establish what those profits would have been had there been no delay and what they were in fact. These factors, which the plaintiff was required to prove, were patently absent in the evidence. Thus,
There is error in part, the judgment is set aside, and the case is rеmanded with direction to render judgment for the plaintiff in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The Court: “I don’t get a whole idea of the whole conversation in what context it was said. I don’t get an idea of the whole conversation of what contеxt it was said, whatever remark it may be, because I don’t get a whole picture of the situation.”
For analogies in jury cases with reference to this rule of law in cases involving claimed error predicated upon detached sentences of a charge, see
State
v. Guthridge,
At the outset it is uoted that the defendant in argument asserted that the court’s award of interest was in reality one based on lost profits. The plaintiff, taking the position that the judgment was for interest paid by it, expressed surprise at this position. It need not have been surprised since an award of damages must conform to the pleadings and the claim was made for lost profits. Nowhere does it request repayment of interest. The respective position taken by thе parties is one of semantics rather than substance—a distinction without difference. Furthermore, our resolution of the basie issue—-whether termed a claim to recoup interest paid or for lost profits—applies regardless of difference in theories.
