The plaintiffs allege in count four of their complaint that all three defendants, including AHES, were negligent in creating a cloud on the plaintiffs' title by failing to record and/or correct the non-recordation of the first assignment of the mortgage from OFC to SPFC. The specific claim of negligence is that the defendants knew or should known that an assignment of the mortgage from OFC to SPFC without a recording of this assignment on the land records would create a cloud on plaintiffs' title that the plaintiffs would cure; and that despite this knowledge, the defendants proceeded with the transaction, created this cloud on the title, and caused plaintiffs' injury.
In count five of the complaint, the plaintiffs allege that all three defendants violated the Connecticut Unfair Trades Practices Act, C.G.S. Sec.
AHES moves to strike count four of the complaint on the ground that AHES owed no duty to the plaintiffs to obtain and record an assignment CT Page 9160 from OFC. OFC was not AHES's direct predecessor in interest. It is not alleged that AHES had any involvement in the dealings between OFC and SPFC. It is not alleged that AHES had any control over OFC or had any direct business dealings or contractual arrangements with OFC.
AHES moves to strike count five of the complaint because the complaint fails to assert as a matter of law that AHES's actions were unfair or deceptive under CUTPA and because the complaint fails to establish that the plaintiffs suffered an ascertainable loss necessary to maintain a CUTPA action.
The plaintiffs have provided no authority to support their claim that a mortgagee has a duty to record an assignment of the mortgage from a previous holder of the mortgage. In the absence of a statutory or contractual requirement, a mortgagee generally has no obligation to record an assignment in order for its validity to be maintained. See General Statutes §
Recordation is, however, desirable in order to protect the interests of the mortgagee against a subsequent holder in due course of a note secured by the same collateral without notice of the prior mortgage. See General Statutes §
In short, there appears to be no "duty" arising to the level of a common law, due care obligation owed by an assignee of a mortgage to the mortgagor that the assignee must record the assignment. As an essential element of a cause of action in negligence is the existence of a legally, cognizable duty, the law does not impose liability in tort for every conceivable harm that may in some way flow from another's conduct. See generally, Waters v. Autuori,
Assuming arguendo that there was a "duty" to record the first assignment of mortgage to SPFC, the plaintiffs have not cited any authority making AHES, the holder and recorder of the second assignment, legally responsible to the plaintiffs in tort for the actions of OFC and SPFC, its predecessors in interest, for what they recorded or failed to record; nor have the plaintiffs cited any authority to support their position that a mortgagee has a duty to correct any defect in the chain of title caused by some prior holder of the mortgage interest. See generaly, 59 C.J.S. 237, Mortgages § 193 (1998) (where, by reason of intervening rights, the failure to record a mortgage results in a loss, the mortgagee who failed to record must suffer the loss.)1
Thus, the court concludes that AHES does not owe a duty to the plaintiffs to record or correct the non-recording of the assignment of mortgage received by SPFC, and the motion to strike count four should be granted. CT Page 9162
STEVENS, J.
