Bowen v. Daley, No. Cv 90 0381268 (May 9, 1994)

1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 5065
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 9, 1994
DocketNo. CV 90 0381268
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 5065 (Bowen v. Daley, No. Cv 90 0381268 (May 9, 1994)) 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
Bowen v. Daley, No. Cv 90 0381268 (May 9, 1994), 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 5065 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION FACTS

In December, 1988 Ten Granby Town Center Corp. ("TGTCC") was a corporation whose principals were Kevin Daley ("Daley") and M. Michael Humphrey ("Humphrey"). Humphrey was the wife of John J. Daley, III ("Jack"), Daley's brother. Humphrey always went by the name of Mary Daley unless her husband instructed her to use the CT Page 5066 name M. Michael Humphrey, which was her maiden name. Jack was the president of a construction company known as Daley Development Corporation.

In December 1988, TGTCC purchased a strip shopping center (the "Shopping Center") in Granby, Connecticut for $2,100,000. The purchase price was paid with $100,000 in cash and a promissory note for $2,000,000 secured by a purchase money mortgage to the sellers.

In March of 1989 the plaintiffs, Timothy Brignole ("Brignole") and Kevin Bowen ("Bowen"), were attorneys who practiced together in Hartford and Granby. Brignole became aware of Daley's plan to renovate the Shopping Center and approached Daley about the possibility of leasing space in the Center. Brignole then expressed an interest in investing in the Shopping Center. During the course of several meetings Daley showed Brignole a number of documents concerning the Shopping Center. Among those documents was an MAI appraisal which indicated that the Shopping Center would have a fair market value of $4,400,000 after the proposed renovations. Daley also provided Brignole with a pro forma projection of future rentals. Both the pro forma and the appraisal were based in part on what Daley represented as being existing leases of various space in the Shopping Center. Daley represented to Brignole that he had entered into leases for 80% of the space available in the Shopping Center. He further represented the yearly rental amount and term of those leases, including a representation that he had entered into a 10 year lease with Subway for 1200 square feet at a rental of $17 per square foot, a lease with Shopping Plaza Package Store for 2150 square feet at $11 per square foot, and a lease with Dr. Kenneth Endres for 870 square feet at $15 per square foot.

The representations concerning the leases were untrue. Kevin had never entered into a lease with Subway. Dr. Kenneth Endres was a tenant who had moved out of the Shopping Center. The amounts of the yearly rentals from all other tenants were substantially overstated, in several cases by more than twice the actual rental amount. One tenant, Shopping Plaza Package Store, had a lease which called for a yearly rental which was approximately one third of the amount Daley represented as the yearly rental and prevented any increases of the rental amount.

Daley also represented to Brignole that TGTCC was going to finance the renovations by means of a loan in the amount of $2,300,000 from Springfield Institute for Savings ("SIS"), and that CT Page 5067 those loan proceeds would be used as follows: $1,000,000 to reduce the purchase money note to the original sellers, $100,000 to reimburse Daley for the cash portion of the purchase price of the Shopping Center and the remaining $1,200,000 for renovations and construction of the Shopping Center.

Within a short time after Brignole and Daley began their discussions, Bowen expressed an interest in investing in the Shopping Center. He also met with Daley, who made the same representations to him that he had made to Brignole concerning the leases, the appraisal and the use of the SIS loan proceeds.

In the course of the discussions between Brignole, Bowen and Daley, Daley represented that his brother, Jack and his wife, Mary, had substantial assets and that they would guarantee payment of amounts due to Brignole and Bowen if they invested in the Shopping Center. Daley provided Brignole and Bowen with a financial statement for John and Mary Daley dated May 1, 1988, which indicated that they had assets in the amount of $10,286,000 and liabilities in the amount of $4,069,000. The single largest asset listed on that financial statement was the Raybestos Memorial Ballfield in Stratford, Connecticut, with a stated value of $4,200,000. At the trial Jack represented that as of the date of the financial statement and the daze on which that statement was given to Brignole and Bowen, the Raybestos property was not owned by him and his wife, but rather, was owned by Daley Development Corporation. He also testified that that property contained toxic waste which would require $8,000,000 in cleanup costs and that he was aware of the toxic waste in May, 1988, but did not believe that disclosure of that problem was necessary on the financial statement because "toxic waste was not a problem in 1988."

Brignole, Bowen and Daley ultimately agreed that the investment of Brignole and Bowen in the Shopping Center would take the form of a purchase of stock in TGTCC. In April, 1989 Brignole, Bowen, Daley, Humphrey, and Jack entered into a Stock Purchase and Sale Agreement (the "Agreement") under the terms of which Brignole agreed to purchase 33% of the stock in TGTCC for $300,000 and Bowen agreed to purchase 11% for $100,000. The purchase price for the stock was to be paid in two installments, one due upon the signing of the Agreement and the other upon the sooner of six months from the signing, or the date TGTCC obtained temporary certificates of occupancy on all leasable space in the Shopping Center.

The Agreement also contained the following pertinent CT Page 5068 provisions: the $2,300,000 loan from SIS would be used as the capital of the corporation; Daley was President and Treasurer of TGTCC and Humphrey was Vice President and Secretary; Daley and Humphrey each owned 28% of the stock in TGTCC; Daley and Humphrey were not entitled to compensation, but were entitled to 3% of the gross rental received from the Shopping Center. The Agreement further provided that Brignole and Bowen were to receive 15% per annum as a return on their investment, and that at the end of three years and six months from the signing of the Agreement, Brignole and Bowen were to receive $550,000 and $163,000, respectively, for their shares in TGTCC. Both the annual return and the price of their shares were guaranteed by Daley and Humphrey.

Upon the signing of the Agreement in April, 1989 Brignole and Bowen paid their first installments of $150,000 and $75,000, respectively, to Daley and Humphrey. Shortly after the Agreement was signed TGTCC entered into the loan transaction with Springfield institute for Savings. As a result of that transaction, Daley received $100,000 as reimbursement for his entire investment in the Shopping Center and TGTCC had $1,200,000 available for renovations and construction.

Under the terms of the Agreement the guaranteed monthly payments to Brignole and Bowen "shall in the first year be escrowed from Springfield Institute for Savings closing funds or such other funds Kevin Daley and M. Michael Humphrey may deem appropriate, so long as one (1) full year of payments is maintained in a separate escrow account designated for said payments." Agreement ¶ 10. TGTCC made monthly interest payments to Brignole and Bowen in accordance with the terms of the Agreement until November, 1989.

Daley's attorney advised him, Humphrey and Jack not to enter into the Agreement because the Agreement was favorable to Brignole and Bowen. However, Daley elected to execute the Agreement, notwithstanding his attorney's unfavorable opinion of the Agreement because he needed money fast in order to support other real estate projects in which he was involved. Of the $150,000 which Daley initially received from Brignole, $130,000 went directly to "The Oaks," another development project in which Daley was involved.

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Bluebook (online)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 5065, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-daley-no-cv-90-0381268-may-9-1994-connsuperct-1994.