A & M Towing & Recovery, Inc. v. Guay

923 A.2d 628, 282 Conn. 434, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 196
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 15, 2007
DocketSC 17717
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 923 A.2d 628 (A & M Towing & Recovery, Inc. v. Guay) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A & M Towing & Recovery, Inc. v. Guay, 923 A.2d 628, 282 Conn. 434, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 196 (Colo. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

KATZ, J.

In this action for unpaid rent under a lease of commercial premises and other relief, the defendants, Bernard Guay and Bemie’s Repair Service, LLC (Bernie’s), appeal from the judgment of the trial court rendered in favor of the plaintiff, A and M Towing and Recovery, Inc. The defendants’ principal claim on appeal is that the trial court improperly awarded damages to the plaintiff for unpaid rent despite the plaintiffs failure to have a certificate of occupancy for the property, as required under General Statutes § 29-265 (a), 1 during the defendants’ occupancy. The defendants essentially contend that the plaintiffs failure to obtain the certificate of occupancy was unlawful and in contravention to the public policy of protecting public safety underlying the requirement for obtaining such certification and, therefore, should preclude it from recovering under the lease. We affirm the trial court’s judgment.

The trial court found the following facts that are uncontested on appeal to this court. The plaintiff has owned the subject property, located at 422 Tolland Street in the town of East Hartford (town), since at least 1983. The plaintiff applied for a certificate of occupancy for the premises, but did not receive one, despite *437 efforts that continued after the defendants’ occupancy of the premises began. In early 2003, the parties entered into an oral agreement for a month-to-month lease of the premises for $800 per month. The defendants planned to operate a towing and motor vehicle repair business on the premises. The plaintiff did not inform the defendants that there was no certificate of occupancy for the premises. The defendants took possession in March, 2003, and, a few days later, discovered that there was no certificate of occupancy when Guay went to the town hall to apply for a business license. The defendants thereafter informed the plaintiff that they intended to vacate the premises. In response, the plaintiff offered to provide the defendants with repair work if the defendants continued to stay on the premises. From March, 2003, through March, 2004, the defendants performed repair work on the plaintiffs vehicles, and the defendants billed and were paid thousands of dollars for that work. Shortly after March, 2004, the volume of business from the plaintiff tapered off noticeably, and the defendants subsequently refused to accept further work from the plaintiff.

The defendants stopped paying rent after November, 2003. Sometime in 2004, the plaintiff initiated a summary process action to evict the defendants, who thereafter vacated the premises in mid-December in accordance with the judgment in that action. Thereafter, the plaintiff initiated the present action in the Housing Session of the Superior Court in the judicial district of Hartford to recover from Guay unpaid rent for the period from December, 2003, through December, 2004, and to recover from Bemie’s payment for towing services that the plaintiff had performed. The plaintiff also sought prejudgment interest and costs. The defendants admitted in their answer to the complaint that there was an oral lease for the terms alleged, but denied that Guay was liable for the unpaid rent, asserting as *438 a special defense that the plaintiffs failure to obtain a certificate of occupancy had “precluded [him] from using the rental premises for the intended purpose.” After a trial to the court, Guay claimed in his posttrial brief that the evidence had established that, after he was unable to get his repairer’s license from the town due to the absence of a certificate of occupancy, the parties had agreed to change the lease agreement to a barter arrangement whereby the plaintiff would refer business to the defendants and would take rent out of the profits.

Thereafter, the court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, awarding $10,400 in damages for the unpaid rent, $2551.43 in interest on the rent, $1476.30 in damages for unpaid towing services and $295.26 in interest on the services. The court rejected Guay’s claim that the parties had changed the lease agreement to a barter arrangement, concluding that the parties never had a meeting of the minds as to such an arrangement and that the evidence did not support the conclusion that such an arrangement had existed. The court also rejected Guay’s special defense, concluding that the defense failed as a matter of fact and law, in that: he had offered no statutory or common-law authority to support his position; the evidence established that, for almost two years, from March, 2003, to December, 2004, the defendants had operated a towing and repair business from the premises servicing the vehicles of the plaintiff and others; and Guay had continued to pay rent for some time after learning that there was no certificate of occupancy. This appeal followed. 2

The defendants raise two claims on appeal. First, Guay claims that the trial court improperly rendered *439 judgment in favor of the plaintiff as to the unpaid rent in light of the plaintiffs failure to obtain a certificate of occupancy. He contends that allowing recovery of rent under such circumstances violates the public policy of ensuring public safety that underlies the certificate requirement and that the plaintiff should not benefit from its unlawful conduct. 3 Second, both defendants claim that the trial court improperly awarded interest on the damages in excess of the statutorily mandated percentage. We reject both claims.

I

We first turn to the principal issue in this appeal, namely, whether a lessor of commercial property is *440 barred, as a matter of public policy, from recovering rent if the lessor has failed to obtain a certificate of occupancy for the property. As this issue is a question of law, our review is plenary. Brown v. Soh, 280 Conn. 494, 501, 909 A.2d 43 (2006); Gurski v. Rosenblum & Filan, LLC, 276 Conn. 257, 266, 885 A.2d 163 (2005). Moreover, to the extent that this question implicates the construction of statutes relating to certificate of occupancy requirements and the right of a commercial tenant to withhold rent, we are guided by well settled principles of statutory construction. See General Statutes § 1-2z (precluding resort to extratextual sources if text of statute and relationship to other statutes yields plain and unambiguous meaning); Kinsey v. Pacific Employers Ins. Co., 277 Conn. 398, 405, 891 A.2d 959 (2006) (“[w]hen a statute is not plain and unambiguous, we also look for interpretive guidance to the legislative history and circumstances surrounding its enactment, to the legislative policy it was designed to implement, and to its relationship to existing legislation and common law principles governing the same general subject matter” [internal quotation marks omitted]).

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Bluebook (online)
923 A.2d 628, 282 Conn. 434, 2007 Conn. LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-m-towing-recovery-inc-v-guay-conn-2007.