Anzalone v. Smith, No. Cv95 035 70 38 S (Sep. 27, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 13145
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 2001
DocketNos. CV95 035 70 38 S, CV 95 032 16 89 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 13145 (Anzalone v. Smith, No. Cv95 035 70 38 S (Sep. 27, 2001)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anzalone v. Smith, No. Cv95 035 70 38 S (Sep. 27, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 13145 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
In this matter two cases have been consolidated for trial. The first, docket number CV95 0357038, is a fifteen page, seven count complaint sounding in breach of a written lease, holdover rent beyond the terms of the lease and other damages arising from the lease against the defendants John Smith and Jonalen Construction Corporation. The court will deal with this case first. The operative complaint is dated February 6, 1998, and to that complaint the defendants, on March 31, 1998, filed their Answer, six special defenses to Counts one through 5, four special defenses to counts six and seven and a five count counterclaim.

The original lease, bearing no date, between the plaintiff Alfredo Anzalone and Jonalen Construction Corporation, purported to lease to the defendant the premises located at 146 Jetland Street in Bridgeport, also known as 2909-2911 Fairfield Avenue, for a term of five years from March 1, 1989 through February 28, 1994. That lease was for a parcel of land comprising 5,554 square feet with a small garage-type building thereon. That parcel was directly next door to premises on which the Black Rock Castle Restaurant operated. The defendants in this case had an interest in that restaurant's operation which will be described hereafter. CT Page 13146

The first year's lease was for $1500 monthly and a rider to the lease provided that on each subsequent March 1 of the lease the rent would increase by five percent (5%) payable in equal payments over the next twelve months. The rental, therefore, for the first year was $1500 monthly; the second year $1575 monthly, the third year $1622.25 monthly, the fourth year $1703.36 monthly, and the fifth year $1789.88 monthly. The lease further provided as additional rent that the tenant shall pay all taxes and/or municipal assessments due to the city of Bridgeport, again payable in twelve equal installments during the term of the lease. That payment of taxes amounted to $70.70 monthly during the term of the lease. The defendant John P. Smith, the principal in Jonalen, guaranteed the payment of the lease obligations.

Apparently, all payments were on schedule for the first two years, but the plaintiff claims that on or about March 1, 1991, the defendant began paying only a total of $1,645.70 each month until the end of its tenancy and for a three month holdover subsequent to its tenancy. That sum was the total of the mothly rental for the second year of the lease in the amount of $1,575 plus the taxes of $70.70 monthly. The plaintiff was very vague as to exactly when the rental payments became shorted while Mrs. Lena Smith on behalf of the tenant said it was March 1, 1992. The plaintiff's total claim for rental due is $14,485.90 broken down as follows: $4,688.88 for the period March 1, 1991 through February 28, 1994; $1996.743 for the months of March, April and May of 1994; and $7,800.28 for the period June 1, 1994 through September 8, 1994, when the defendant vacated the premises. The court does not disagree with the arithmetic provided by the plaintiff.

Counts One and Two present the plaintiff's claim for the unpaid rent of $4,688.88 from March 1, 1991 through February 28, 1994. Counts Three and Four present the plaintiff's claim for unpaid rent for the months of March, April, and May, 1994, in the amount of $1,996.74 and count 5 for the period thereafter. The defendants stopped paying any rent after May 31, 1994. The plaintiff then served a notice to quit, commenced a summary process action, obtained judgment and the defendant vacated the premises on September 4, 1994. It is of interest to note that in the complaint dated July 8, 1994, attached to the summary process summons (defendant's exhibit B) and another motion for use and occupancy dated July 24, 1994 (defendant's exhibit C) filed by the plaintiff against the defendants he alleges the latest agreed upon rental was $1,500 monthly.

The defendants have interposed six special defenses to the claims for rent set forth in counts one through five. The first special defense is that the plaintiff waived his right to any rental increase by accepting the rental payment proffered. The second special defense is in estoppel CT Page 13147 presumably based on the same ground. The third special defense is that the plaintiff has received payment in full. That simply has not been proven and the court so finds. The fourth special defense is that the garage on the premises suffered from numerous conditions of disrepair which prevented the defendant Jonalen from using it for the purposes intended. It further claims that the plaintiff's refusal to make repairs greatly diminished the value of the property to the defendant Jonalen. The fifth special defense mirrored the fourth and claimed the lack of repairs constituted a constructive eviction. The sixth special defense, again adopting the factual allegations of the fourth and fifth special defenses, claims this action caused a breach of the implied covenant of quite enjoyment and relieved the defendants of the obligation to pay rent.

The court will first deal with the question of rent. Mr. Smith, the principal of Jonalen, testified that the purposes for leasing the plaintiff's property were threefold: (1) to provide a cabinet/woodworking facility for customers of his company; (2) to provide a storage area for equipment used in the adjoining restaurant; and, (3) to provide some additional parking space for the restaurant, all of which he communicated to the plaintiff. He further claims that the condition of the garage deteriorated over the leasehold making it impossible to make full use of the building. He claims that the building lacked a functioning heating system although there apparently was a gas heater on the premises that was not hooked up. His major complaint was a severely leaking roof which in the winter caused an inch or more of ice to form on the floor making it impossible to make use of the premises and which ice condition caused the toilet and sink on the premises to crack, break and to be unusable.

The defendant Smith further claims that the plaintiff, prior to signing the lease, orally agreed to install a three phase electrical panel so that he could run his carpentry equipment. The plaintiff denies having made any such promise and it obviously does not exist in the lease.

What becomes painfully clear from hearing the parties testify in this case is that at the beginning they got along reasonably well. There were, as there often is, problems with the leased premises and who should or should not repair or remedy the problems. Apparently the lease was silent as to repairs. The general rule is that structural repairs to the outside of the building are the responsibility of the landlord, and the court here finds that the leaking roof and the resultant water and ice within the building on the premises were the responsibility of the plaintiff. There were many discussions between the parties about this and some in writing concerning the condition of the premises. The court finds it more credible that the defendants advised the plaintiff that they were not going to pay the additional rent increase of five percent a year as CT Page 13148 long as the premises remained in their present state of disrepair. Apparently, the plaintiff did not complain more than once although he claims he never agreed to the lower payment.

What is clear is that the plaintiff did not refuse the payment of $1,645 monthly for the next three years and in fact cashed the checks; he did not get a lawyer; he did not threaten or initiate summary process; and more significantly, he did not do anything to remedy the problems with the premises.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 13145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anzalone-v-smith-no-cv95-035-70-38-s-sep-27-2001-connsuperct-2001.