382 A.2d 541 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1977
On August 6, 1974, the defendant, as owner, entered into an agreement to sell to John B. Wnukowski certain land consisting of eleven acres, more or less, situated on the westerly *639 side of Zuella Drive in the town of Waterbury. The agreement provided that all necessary plans and applications for the approval of group dwellings by the city plan commission, building permits and other site plan approvals were to be at the expense of the buyer. On August 27, 1974, the plaintiff entered into an agreement with John B. Wnukowski, individually, for field and design work to be performed on the land of the defendant which was the subject of the agreement to sell. The plaintiff was aware that the agreement to sell was conditioned on the buyer being able to obtain a building permit as well as the approval of the various town commissions for the erection of multi-family dwellings. The plaintiff prepared subdivision plans and topographic surveys of the land in performance of its contract. The plaintiff filed and perfected its mechanic's lien on the land owned by the defendant.
John Zuella, the president of the defendant corporation, observed the plaintiff's engineering crews on its land on at least one occasion and had actual notice of the services rendered on behalf of John B. Wnukowski.
The plaintiff appealed from the granting of the application to discharge the mechanic's lien assigning numerous claims of error. Those which have not been briefed are considered abandoned. Gebrian v. Bristol Redevelopment Agency,
The consent referred to in the statute means consent of an owner for whom or for whose benefit the work is being done. It refers to an owner who is so closely identified with the work being done that he could be held liable under an implied contract in the absence of an express contract. Battistelli v. Jacobson,
Mere knowledge on the part of the defendant that engineering work was being performed on its land does not constitute the consent necessary to support the right to file a mechanic's lien against the defendant's land. Avery v. Smith,
In Torno Donaher, Inc. v. Covino,
This court agrees with the conclusions of the trial court that the defendant did not consent, within the meaning of
The court found that the defendant never authorized John B. Wnukowski to incur any obligation at its expense; that the agreement between the plaintiff and John B. Wnukowski was never approved or consented to by the defendant; and that John B. Wnukowski, individually, was never the agent of the defendant. The court concluded that no agency relationship existed. The court's conclusion is tested by the finding, not by the evidence, and this conclusion must stand unless it is legally or logically inconsistent with the facts or unless it involves the application of some erroneous rule of law material to the case. Roby v. Connecticut General Life Ins. Co.,
There is no error.
In this opinion PARSKEY and D. SHEA, Js., concurred.