Associated East Mortgage Co. v. Highland Park, Inc.

374 A.2d 1070, 172 Conn. 395, 1977 Conn. LEXIS 907
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 15, 1977
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 374 A.2d 1070 (Associated East Mortgage Co. v. Highland Park, Inc.) 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
Associated East Mortgage Co. v. Highland Park, Inc., 374 A.2d 1070, 172 Conn. 395, 1977 Conn. LEXIS 907 (Colo. 1977).

Opinion

House, C. J.

This is an appeal from the judgment rendered by the Superior Court in an action brought to foreclose a mortgage on a parcel of land located in the town of Cheshire. The court found that the allegations in the complaint were true, and that the sum of $1,900,456 in principal, plus interest of $383,760.21 to February 28,1975, plus interest at the rate of $18,212.70 per month and $598.77 per diem thereafter to date of payment or redemption, plus itemized costs of collection, was due the plaintiff by the named defendant and the defendant guarantors on the debt, and it fixed the law day for the named defendant as November 18, 1975.

The defendants Highland Park, Inc., the mortgagor, and Leonard Intelisano, Jr., and Clare Intelisano, guarantors of the mortgage debt, appealed *397 from the judgment, assigning numerous claims of error. Some of these have not been briefed and are considered abandoned. Gebrian v. Bristol Redevelopment Agency, 171 Conn. 565, 570, 370 A.2d 1055. The assignments of error which have been briefed raise four issues: (1) Did the court err in concluding that the plaintiff had no obligation to forbear from foreclosing on the date this action was commenced? (2) Can a domestic, commercial corporation borrow $2,000,000, secure the loan with a mortgage on real estate with interest at a rate never exceeding 15 percent per year and still raise the defense of usury? (3) If the corporate borrower cannot raise the defense of usury, can the guarantors on the note independently raise that defense? (4) Is a variable interest rate based on the prime rate vague or definite ?

Before we attempt to summarize the relevant facts, it is pertinent to refer to the assignments of error related to the court’s finding. The defendants assigned as error the court’s refusal to find 122 paragraphs of their draft finding, asserting that the facts stated in those paragraphs were admitted or undisputed. They also attacked 31 paragraphs of the court’s finding as having been made without evidence. We consider these wholesale attacks on the finding to have been abandoned since the defendants’ brief contains nothing in support of the claims and although the appendix to their brief contains in narrative form a summary of the testimony of individual witnesses none of it is keyed to the attack on the finding. It serves no useful purpose to support a claim that a fact is admitted or undisputed merely by including in an appendix testimony wfiich would support a finding differing from that filed by the trial court. A fact is not admitted or undisputed *398 merely because it has not been contradicted. Since the question of credibility is for the trier, “[t]o secure an addition to the finding, an appellant must point to some part of the appendix, the pleadings, or an exhibit properly before us which discloses that the appellee admitted that the fact in question was true or that its truth was conceded to be undisputed. Practice Book § 628 (a); Martin v. Kavanewsky, 157 Conn. 514, 515, 255 A.2d 619; Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc. § 158.” Malarney v. Peterson, 159 Conn. 342, 344, 269 A.2d 274; William G. Major Construction Co. v. DeMichely, 166 Conn. 368, 370, 349 A.2d 827. As to the claims that the court found certain facts without evidence, the brief of the plaintiff, in the manner suggested by Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc. § 328, contains keyed reference to evidence, pleadings, and exhibits which support each of the findings claimed by the defendants to have been made without supporting evidence.

In these circumstances the efforts of the defendants to alter the court’s finding of facts cannot succeed. In testing the court’s conclusions we test them by that finding, not by the evidence, and those conclusions must stand unless they are legally or logically inconsistent with the facts found or unless they involve the application of some erroneous rule of law materia] to the case. Roby v. Connecticut General Life Ins. Co., 166 Conn. 395, 397, 349 A.2d 838; Connecticut Bank & Trust Co. v. Bovey, 162 Conn. 201, 205-206, 292 A.2d 899.

The court found the following significant facts which, while lengthy in recital, we deem essential to an understanding of our decision on the merits of this appeal: On September 14, 1972, the defendant, Highland Park, Inc., by its president, Leonard *399 Intelisano, Jr., executed a promissory note, payable to the order of the plaintiff, Associated East Mortgage Co., in the sum of $2,000,000. Interest on the principal sum was to be paid at the rate of either 8% percent per year or 3 percent per year above the “prime rate” as determined by the Chase Manhattan Bank, New York, New York, whichever was greater. The note also provided that interest rate changes would become effective on the first day of the month following any change in the “prime rate” as reported by the Chase Manhattan Bank and that the last rate established by that bank during the preceding month would be the “prime rate” upon which the interest rate would be based.

The note was secured by a mortgage on land located on Jarvis Street and Peck Lane in the town of Cheshire. In the mortgage deed, Highland Park, Inc., agreed to develop and improve the land and not to cease substantially the work of developing and improving it for any period of thirty consecutive days. Highland Park also agreed to construct, or cause to be constructed, streets, facilities for the distribution of electricity and water, facilities for telephone service, and storm sewers. It further agreed that, in the event of a default in the payment of the indebtedness when due, the plaintiff would be entitled to receive interest on the entire unpaid principal balance at the rate of either 11% percent or the highest rate of interest set forth in the note, whichever was greater. Interest was to be computed from the due date until the actual receipt and collection of the entire indebtedness. The effect of the default clause was that, for any month after default during which the prime rate was 8% percent or more, the interest would be the same as before default. In those situations where the prime rate dropped to *400 below 8y2 percent, the after-default interest rate would be greater than the before-default interest rate.

The court further found that the term “prime rate,” as used in the note and the deed, has the same meaning as that given to it by the country’s financial community. It is, in general, the rate at which the best borrowers can borrow. Borrowers of lesser quality, with loans of greater risk, receive loans with interest rates greater than prime rate.

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Bluebook (online)
374 A.2d 1070, 172 Conn. 395, 1977 Conn. LEXIS 907, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/associated-east-mortgage-co-v-highland-park-inc-conn-1977.