12 Havemeyer Place Co., LLC v. Gordon

888 A.2d 141, 93 Conn. App. 140, 2006 Conn. App. LEXIS 27
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedJanuary 17, 2006
DocketAC 25864
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 888 A.2d 141 (12 Havemeyer Place Co., LLC v. Gordon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
12 Havemeyer Place Co., LLC v. Gordon, 888 A.2d 141, 93 Conn. App. 140, 2006 Conn. App. LEXIS 27 (Colo. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

*142 Opinion

DRANGINIS, J.

This appeal concerns a mundane matter of increasing importance in today’s urban society, parking spaces. The determinative issue on appeal is whether the claims for declaratory relief, equitable reformation of a lease, injunctive relief and breach of the lease are barred by the doctrines of res judicata and collateral estoppel pursuant to 12 Havemeyer Place Co., LLC v. Gordon, 76 Conn. App. 377, 820 A.2d 299, cert. denied, 264 Conn. 919, 828 A.2d 618 (2003) (Havemeyer I), a summary process action. On appeal, the plaintiff, 12 Havemeyer Place Company, LLC, has raised numerous claims related to the judgment rendered by the trial court after the granting of the motion for summary judgment filed by the defendant, Allan S. Gordon. 1 Because the legality of the lease at issue was adjudicated in Havemeyer I, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The parties agree as to the historical facts giving rise to their ongoing dispute, which were set out in Havemeyer I 2 The “dispute relates to the parties’ interests in sixteen parking spaces located in an underground parking garage, which currently is owned by the plaintiff . . . .” Id., 379. “The defendant leases the sixteen parking spaces from the plaintiff for the benefit *143 of a building owned by the defendant at 71 Arch Street [in Greenwich], ... In 1980, John Jay Ginter Development and Construction, Inc., the then owner of both 60 Arch Street and 71 Arch Street, filed a site plan for 60 Arch Street with the town of Greenwich planning and zoning commission (commission). The commission approved the site plan, which showed a three story office retail building with a total of fifty-eight parking spaces. The preliminary site plan application, dated November 12,1980, designated forty-eight of the spaces for 60 Arch Street and ten for 71 Arch Street. This designation, however, was deleted from the application for final site plan approval, dated December 8, 1980, which merely proposed fifty-eight spaces without any reference to 71 Arch Street. In a subsequent site plan, dated December 10,1980, the designation of forty-eight spaces required for 60 Arch Street and the ten spaces for 71 Arch Street reappeared.

“By 1988, Greenwich Cove Associates (Greenwich Cove), a predecessor of both the plaintiff and the defendant, had acquired both 60 Arch Street and 71 Arch Street. In August, 1988, Greenwich Cove negotiated the sale of 60 Arch Street to Skanska, Inc. As a final negotiated term of the sale, Skanska, Inc., the new owner of 60 Arch Street, leased sixteen of 60 Arch Street’s fifty-eight parking spaces to Greenwich Cove for use by 71 Arch Street, thereby increasing the number of spaces for 71 Arch Street as described in the site plan by six spaces. This left 60 Arch Street’s tenants with the use of only forty-two parking spaces, six fewer than required by the site plan. The lease had a term of fifty years, was renewable thereafter in five year increments and was recorded in the town of Greenwich land records. It is this lease, to which neither the defendant nor the plaintiff originally were parties, which is the subject of [on-going litigation between the parties].

*144 “In 1989, the defendant purchased 71 Arch Street from Greenwich Cove, thus obtaining the benefit of the lease, as a successor lessee. The defendant testified [in Havemeyer T] that the lease, which provided him with sixteen parking spaces in the 60 Arch Street garage, for his tenants at 71 Arch Street, was a major factor for the purchase. In 2000, the plaintiff, which was fully aware of the recorded lease, purchased 60 Arch Street from Skanska, Inc., and became the successor lessor. The purchase price paid by the plaintiff was less than it would have been had there been forty-eight parking spaces allocated to 60 Arch Street instead of forty-two spaces.

“The dispute involved in [Havemeyer T\ arose when the plaintiff, as the new owner of 60 Arch Street, inquired of the town of Greenwich [town] about the recorded lease, which left 60 Arch Street with forty-two parking spaces, and about the possible conflict of the lease with the site plan, which required forty-eight spaces for 60 Arch Street. In the preceding twelve years, no tenant, neighbor or predecessor in title of either building had complained to any zoning authority of any site plan violation as it related to parking. The town’s zoning enforcement officer responded to the plaintiffs inquiry by stating that he believed there was a violation of a zoning regulation. . . .

“[I]n January, 2001, the plaintiff rejected the defendant’s tender of rent and informed the defendant by letter that it was of the opinion that the lease was void or voidable because it violated the site plan. In February, 2001, in a separate action, the defendant in this case instituted an action against the plaintiff in this case seeking declaratory judgment as to the enforceability of the lease, injunctive relief and damages. [The defendant here] also claimed damages for tortious interference with his leases with his tenants, which leases granted the tenants the right to use the parking spaces *145 at 60 Arch Street. [He] withdrew his application for a temporary restraining order against [the plaintiff here] in exchange for [the latter’s] agreement to seek a variance of the site plan. The zoning board of appeals denied the application for a variance because a hardship was not demonstrated, but the plaintiff in this case did not appeal to the Superior Court from the denial.

“After the variance was denied, the zoning enforcement officer cited the plaintiff for the reduction of on-site parking as a violation of § 6-16 of the municipal building code regulations and directed the plaintiff to restore the forty-eight parking spaces as provided in the site plan.

“Subsequently, the plaintiff served the defendant with a notice to quit and then brought the summary process action for immediate possession of the sixteen parking spaces, which [was] the subject of [Havemeyer T\. The defendant asserted three special defenses to the summary process action. He alleged that the lease was not illegal or void, that equity barred the plaintiffs claim ‘by virtue of, among other things, the facts set forth at length in [his] Complaint dated February 14, 2001, in the action [Gordon v. Havemeyer Place Co., LLC, Docket No. CV 01-01844544S] and the doctrines of equitable estoppel, laches, unclean hands and unjust enrichment,’ and that the plaintiff failed to state a claim on which relief could be granted. The court granted judgment in favor of the defendant.” 12 Havemeyer Place Co., LLC v. Gordon, supra, 76 Conn. App. 380-83.

The plaintiff appealed to this court. The precise question addressed in Havemeyer I

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Bluebook (online)
888 A.2d 141, 93 Conn. App. 140, 2006 Conn. App. LEXIS 27, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/12-havemeyer-place-co-llc-v-gordon-connappct-2006.