Opinion
The plaintiff, Unifund CCR Partners, appeals from the denial by the trial court of its motion to open a judgment rendered in its favor. The plaintiff claims on appeal that the court (1) improperly found that the judgment rendered in its favor was invalidly
The following facts and procedural history, as previously set forth by this court, are relevant to the resolution of this claim. “On July 27, 2004, the plaintiff filed a complaint seeking to collect credit card debt allegedly owed by the defendants [Ellen A. Schaeppi and Ernest A. Schaeppi]. A hearing was held on October 31, 2005, before an attorney fact finder. In his January 5, 2006 report, [the fact finder] recommended judgment in favor of the defendants because the plaintiff had failed to establish that the credit card debt had been assigned to the plaintiff. The plaintiff objected to the acceptance of the findings of fact on February 6, 2006. The court, Miller, J., remanded the matter to the attorney fact finder for a rehearing on the issue of whether there had been a valid assignment of the credit card debt. After the hearing on remand was held on March 27, 2006, the attorney fact finder recommended, in a report dated March 30, 2006, that judgment enter in favor of the plaintiff. On June 19,2006, the court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, stating: ‘Judgment shall enter in favor of the plaintiff on the fact finder’s report as revised after remand.’ The plaintiff placed a judgment lien on real property owned by the defendants, which was recorded in the Glastonbury land records on July, 18, 2006. The plaintiff then filed with the court a motion for an order of weekly payments on August 25, 2006, seeking payments of $35 per week. On September 11, 2006, the court, Miller, J., granted the motion and set payments of $25 per week to commence on October 11, 2006.
“By complaint filed on November 13, 2006, the plaintiff then sought foreclosure on the judgment hen. On
“On March 28, 2008, the plaintiff filed a motion with the court, Miller, J., seeking clarification of its June 19, 2006 judgment. The court held a hearing on the matter on May 12, 2008, during which the plaintiff indicated
“On July 31, 2008, the defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, attaching Judge Satter’s March 20, 2008 memorandum of decision addressing the plaintiffs motion for partial summary judgment. . . . After a hearing was held on the matter, Judge Satter, by memorandum of decision filed October 15, 2008, granted the motion, concluding that, as a matter of law, a judgment of no amount, underlying a judgment hen in an incorrect amount cannot form the basis of a foreclosure action.” Unifund CCR Partners v. Schaeppi,
The plaintiff then appealed from the court’s granting of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, claiming, inter aha, that “the court improperly concluded that the judgment hen that formed the basis of the foreclosure action was invalid as a matter of law because it sought to secure a money judgment of no amount.” Id., 379. The plaintiff advanced two alternate arguments in support of that claim. First, the plaintiff argued that the judgment rendered by Judge Miller on June 19, 2006, “was a full and final judgment as to liability and damages because the amount of the judgment was ascertainable from the record.” Id., 380. The plaintiff argued that, in the alternative, “the order for weekly payments entered by the court on September 11, 2006, was a money judgment” and, could, therefore, serve as the basis for a judgment hen. Id., 382.
On June 21, 2011, following this court’s affirmance of the trial court’s granting of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the plaintiff filed a motion to open and modify the judgment of June 19, 2006. The court denied that motion and the plaintiffs subsequent motion for reargument and reconsideration filed on August 2, 2011. The plaintiff, on November 7, 2011, filed a motion for articulation, requesting that the court articulate its rationale for denying the plaintiffs motion to open and modify the June 19, 2006 judgment. On December 2, 2011, the court granted the plaintiffs motion for articulation and explained in its articulation that the judgment the plaintiff sought to open, lacking a specific dollar amount, was not a valid judgment. Thus, the court explained, it did not “have the ability to open a judgment that was never really a judgment.” The plaintiff now appeals from the court’s denial of the June 21, 2011 motion to open and modify the judgment rendered on June 19, 2006.
“Our review of a court’s denial of a motion to open . . . is well settled. We do not undertake a plenary review of the merits of a decision of the trial court . . .
The plaintiff argues that the court abused its discretion because it has the authority to open a judgment after the expiration of the four month period prescribed under General Statutes § 52-212a in cases where the judgment was obtained by mutual mistake. Because this argument rests on the faulty premise that there exists a judgment to open, we are unpersuaded.
As this court already has determined that the judgment rendered on Juñe 19, 2006, was not a “full and final judgment”; Unifund CCR Partners v. Schaeppi, supra,
The plaintiff next argues, as it did in its first appeal to this court, that even if the June 19, 2006 judgment is invalid, the court’s order of installment payments is a judgment that the court abused its discretion in declining to open. We see no merit in that argument.
General Statutes § 52-350a (9) and (13), which define, respectively, “ [installment payment order” as “the fixing by the court of a sum to be paid periodically by the
The plaintiff further contends that when the court entered the installment payment order, this action somehow remedied the defect in the underlying judgment. While the entering of an installment payment order without a basis in a valid judgment may have implications with respect to the validity of the subsequent installment payment order, it does not, conversely, validate an invalid judgment. Not only is this logically untenable, there is no legal authority for the proposition that the entering of an installment payment order corrects an underlying defective judgment. We, therefore, conclude that the court did not abuse its discretion in declining to find that the installment payment order was a judgment it had the authority to open.
Finally, the plaintiff requests that this court invoke its supervisory powers to modify the judgment to include a precise dollar amount or to remand the matter to the fact finder for a determination of the specific amount of debt owed to the plaintiff. As our supervisory powers
“Appellate courts possess an inherent supervisory authority over the administration of justice. . . . [T]he standards are flexible and are to be determined in the interests of justice. . . . [0]ur supervisory authority [however] is not a form of free-floating justice, untethered to legal principle. . . . [T]he integrity of the judicial system serves as a unifying principle .... [0]ur supervisory powers are invoked only in the rare circumstance where [the] traditional protections are inadequate to ensure the fair and just administration of the courts . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Connor,
The present case is not one where the “traditional protections are inadequate to ensure the fair and just administration of the courts . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Connor, supra,
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Despite the plaintiffs contention in its reply brief to this court that Ballou v. Law Offices Howard Lee Schiff, P.C., supra,
