Berardino v. Semrau, No. Cv97 259624 S (Oct. 19, 1998)

1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 11836
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1998
DocketNo. CV97 259624 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 11836 (Berardino v. Semrau, No. Cv97 259624 S (Oct. 19, 1998)) 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
Berardino v. Semrau, No. Cv97 259624 S (Oct. 19, 1998), 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 11836 (Colo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The plaintiff Jon Berardino and the defendant Lori Semrau lived with each other from approximately September, 1995, through July, 1997, and were engaged to be married for a substantial portion of that time. Both were in their early twenties. The plaintiff's principal business was buying, rehabilitating and selling properties; the defendant was principally a law student, though she was employed briefly during relevant periods. In July, 1997, the ill-starred relationship unraveled, as will shortly be developed; much of the difficulty arises from the application of contract notions to domestic situations.

In April, 1996, the plaintiff arranged for the purchase of a deteriorated property at 39 Hollis Avenue in Meriden. Financing was found in a greater amount than the assessed value, and the parties arranged for title to be placed in the defendant Semrau's name, apparently for tax purposes. As both were single in the eyes of the Internal Revenue Service, it apparently made sense to the parties at the time to spread any taxable income between the two.1 The parties shared a joint checking account from which most expenses apparently were paid; most, but not all, of the deposits into the account were made by the plaintiff Berardino. The plaintiff conducted all of the business surrounding the transaction, and the plaintiff's money paid for most, if not all, of the work done on the property.

During much of the following year improvements were made in the property, but it was not yet ready for resale when the balloon of the first note became due, and, if the parties were to keep the property, some sort of refinancing had to be found. The plaintiff testified that because the defendant had little or no income and her credit history was not perfect, lenders insisted that the property be removed from her name. The plaintiff, therefore, accomplished refinancing by buying the property from her and arranging for a loan in a significantly greater amount than the original mortgage. At the closing, the defendant received a check for the difference, which was $28,337.12. The plaintiff testified that he thought the defendant would deposit the check in their mutual account, and the proceeds would be used for wedding plans, a trip to St. Maarten, and further improvements to the property in order for the property to be sold. CT Page 11838

The defendant's testimony was remarkable by comparison in the sense that the same largely undisputed contractual events were part of an entirely different overall scenario. When the defendant received title to the property in 1996, she thought that she truly owned the property, although she agreed that she participated in few, if any, of the transactions other than the closing. She maintained that several of her many brothers and sisters did some work on the premises during the ensuing year. Most critically, she testified that she ended the engagement in May, 1997, as she thought the relationship was abusive and destructive. She said that she had wanted simply to sell the property, but that the plaintiff insisted that he buy it from her. Even though the engagement was over, according to the defendant, she and her putative mother-in-law bought a wedding dress in June, invitations were ordered and the plaintiff and the defendant still went to St. Maarten together a day or two after the closing of July 3, 1997.

As noted above, Berardino testified that he thought Semrau would deposit the check from the closing in a joint checking account.2 Semrau testified that she never intended to do anything other than to keep the proceeds herself, as she reckoned that this was a way to distribute the assets of the failed relationship. In a business transaction which is itself somewhat murky, she and apparently one of her sisters opened a checking account at another bank on the same day as the closing and deposited the net proceeds from the closing in the new account. In any event, as the parties left for St. Maarten, the plaintiff apparently believed that the proceeds were safe in the joint checking account, while the defendant knew that the funds were in an account controlled by her and apparently her sister.3

When they returned from St. Maarten, the parties and their Bernese Mountain dogs, Moonshine and Stogie Bear, went to Pennsylvania and visited Semrau's parents. They left the dogs with the elder Semraus, and returned with a puppy for Berardino. Berardino testified that it was in Pennsylvania that Semrau told him it was over. When they returned, Berardino testified that he discovered that the house in which they lived, 161 Preston Avenue, had been significantly emptied of its contents. Semrau testified that she had started to move things out long before. It was in this time frame that Berardino found out that the proceeds from the closing had not been deposited in the joint account; he testified that he still thought that money could actually be used CT Page 11839 for the purposes he had anticipated, even if it was in a different account. He soon found out, however, that the money was, from his point of view, gone.

Berardino's second amended complaint is in fifteen counts. Each one need not be recited here. Count one alleges many of the underlying facts and claims conversion of the proceeds of the July 3, 1997, closing; count two alleges unjust enrichment, based on the same allegations; count three, a constructive trust; count four, damages for failure to release a second mortgage on the 39 Hollis Avenue premises4; count five, unjust enrichment as to the second mortgage; count six, specific performance of the agreement to release the second mortgage; count seven, a declaration that the second mortgage be declared null and void; count eight, theft of property from the 161 Preston Avenue premises; count nine, conversion of the same; count ten, unjust enrichment based on the removal of the items; count eleven, unjust enrichment because of payments the plaintiff allegedly made toward the defendant's pickup truck; count twelve, unjust enrichment regarding the balance of the joint checking account; count thirteen, unjust enrichment regarding charges on a credit card; count fourteen, unjust enrichment for the payment of back taxes paid by the plaintiff for the plaintiff's family's house; and count fifteen, fraudulent misrepresentation regarding the proceeds of the closing.

For reasons not germane to this opinion, the defendant was defaulted during the pendency of this action. The defendant later filed a notice of defenses, which indicated that various matters would be contested. See § 17-34 of the Practice Book. Although ordinarily the entry of a default constitutes an admission of the truth of the facts alleged in the complaint, a defendant may, if a timely notice of defenses is filed, offer evidence contradicting one or more allegations of the complaint. In this situation, the defendant then has the burden of proof to disprove those allegations which she contests. DeBlasio v. AetnaLife Casualty Co., 186 Conn. 398, 400-01 (1982).5

The issues, then, are whether the defendant has disproved, by a preponderance of the evidence, the various counts of the complaint.6 Although the court has considered at length the testimony, exhibits and arguments, the discussion of each count will be somewhat succinct.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 11836, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/berardino-v-semrau-no-cv97-259624-s-oct-19-1998-connsuperct-1998.