Atlantic St. Heritage Associates, LLC v. Atlantic Realty Co.

216 Conn. App. 530
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedNovember 22, 2022
DocketAC43857
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 216 Conn. App. 530 (Atlantic St. Heritage Associates, LLC v. Atlantic Realty Co.) 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
Atlantic St. Heritage Associates, LLC v. Atlantic Realty Co., 216 Conn. App. 530 (Colo. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

*********************************************** The “officially released” date that appears near the be- ginning of each opinion is the date the opinion will be pub- lished in the Connecticut Law Journal or the date it was released as a slip opinion. The operative date for the be- ginning of all time periods for filing postopinion motions and petitions for certification is the “officially released” date appearing in the opinion.

All opinions are subject to modification and technical correction prior to official publication in the Connecticut Reports and Connecticut Appellate Reports. In the event of discrepancies between the advance release version of an opinion and the latest version appearing in the Connecticut Law Journal and subsequently in the Connecticut Reports or Connecticut Appellate Reports, the latest version is to be considered authoritative.

The syllabus and procedural history accompanying the opinion as it appears in the Connecticut Law Journal and bound volumes of official reports are copyrighted by the Secretary of the State, State of Connecticut, and may not be reproduced and distributed without the express written permission of the Commission on Official Legal Publica- tions, Judicial Branch, State of Connecticut. *********************************************** ATLANTIC ST. HERITAGE ASSOCIATES, LLC v. ATLANTIC REALTY COMPANY ET AL. (AC 43857) Elgo, Moll and Pellegrino, Js.

Syllabus

The plaintiff, an entity that owned commercial real property, sought, inter alia, injunctive relief enjoining the defendants, various entities that owned or leased commercial property located to the south of the plain- tiff’s property within the same city block, from interfering with the plaintiff’s right to use a claimed easement area. The plaintiff acquired its real property in 1982, and the defendants, which were all owned or controlled by members of the same family, purchased their respective real properties between 1988 and 2014. Since the acquisition of its property, the plaintiff’s members, employees, tenants, and invitees have used a twelve foot wide alleyway located between two of the properties owned by certain of the defendants and a portion of the paved area behind the defendants’ properties to access its own gated parking lot. In 2015, the defendants erected a gate at the end of the alleyway that connected to the street and installed a chain barrier across the end of the alleyway that abutted the paved area. During the hours when the retail business that operated out of the defendants’ properties was closed, the defendants locked the gate and put the chain barrier in place. After the defendants refused to provide the plaintiff with a key to the gate, the plaintiff commenced the present action, alleging, in its operative complaint, that it had a prescriptive easement over the alleyway and a portion of the paved area. The defendants asserted five special defenses to the plaintiff’s complaint prior to its filing of the operative complaint. Thereafter, the plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment, and the defendants filed a cross motion for summary judgment. The trial court heard oral argument on the parties’ cross motions. Thereafter, without seeking leave of the court, the defendants filed an answer to the plaintiff’s operative complaint and filed amended special defenses, which reas- serted the five original special defenses and also asserted five new special defenses. The trial court granted the plaintiff’s motion for sum- mary judgment and denied the defendants’ cross motion for summary judgment. On the defendants’ appeal to this court, held: 1. The trial court improperly granted the plaintiff’s motion for summary judg- ment: a. To invoke the trial court’s authority to grant the plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment, the plaintiff was obligated to address any special defenses to its operative complaint that the defendants had properly asserted in accordance with the rules of practice and, in moving for summary judgment, the plaintiff addressed only one of the defendants’ five original special defenses: the trial court improperly adjudicated, sua sponte, the defendants’ other four original special defenses that asserted waiver, estoppel, unclean hands, and laches; moreover, the plaintiff was not obligated to address the defendants’ new special defenses and the trial court did not err in rejecting the same on procedural grounds because those defenses were not properly before the court, as the defen- dants did not file them until approximately three weeks after the date of oral argument on the parties’ motions for summary judgment, which was beyond the filing period prescribed by the applicable rule of practice (§ 10-61), and they did so without obtaining the trial court’s permission. b. The defendants’ claim that the trial court improperly determined that there were no genuine issues of material fact as to the plaintiff’s prescrip- tive easement claim was unavailing: the trial court properly rejected the relevant portion of the affidavit submitted in connection with the defendants’ cross motion for summary judgment by M, one of the family members who controlled the defendants, because it did not constitute competent evidence pursuant to the applicable rule of practice (§ 17- 46), as M’s averments regarding the frequency with which the plaintiff used the alleyway were conclusory rather than factual, in that they lacked any indication of the regularity and frequency of M’s observations of the vehicular traffic in the alleyway and over the paved area and evidenced his limited familiarity with the plaintiff and his inability to recognize vehicles driven by any of the plaintiff’s owners, employees, clients or tenants, other than two individuals; moreover, the trial court did not err in concluding that there were no genuine issues of material fact that the plaintiff’s use of the alleyway was under a claim of right because the plaintiff’s failure to respond to occasional closures of the alleyway during the prescriptive period did not, on its own, imply that the plaintiff recog- nized a superior right of the defendants to the alleyway and the defen- dants’ evidence that the parties were friendly with one another and shared parking spaces under certain circumstances was too speculative to infer implied permission on behalf of the defendants, as those facts were disconnected from the plaintiff’s use of the alleyway; furthermore, the trial court did not err in concluding that there were no genuine issues of material fact as to whether the plaintiff’s use of the claimed easement area was distinguishable from the public’s use of that area, and, by comparing the use of both the alleyway and the paved area, the court conducted the correct analysis in making that determination because the plaintiff alleged in its operative complaint that it had acquired a prescriptive easement over both the alleyway and a portion of the paved area, and the defendants’ special defense that asserted that the trial court should have considered only the use of the alleyway was procedurally improper because it was raised in the pleading that was filed in violation of Practice Book § 10-61. 2.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ashe v. Yale University
Connecticut Appellate Court, 2025
Finkelstein v. 45 Lake Drive, LLC
235 Conn. App. 740 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2025)
Unifoods, S.A. de C.V. v. Magallanes
Connecticut Appellate Court, 2024
United Cleaning & Restoration, LLC v. Bank of America, N.A.
225 Conn. App. 702 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2024)
Tran v. Woodworth
Connecticut Appellate Court, 2024
Kuselias v. Zingaro & Cretella, LLC
224 Conn. App. 192 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2024)
Booth v. Park Terrace II Mutual Housing Ltd. Partnership
217 Conn. App. 398 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2023)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 Conn. App. 530, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-st-heritage-associates-llc-v-atlantic-realty-co-connappct-2022.