Calabrese Development Corp. v. Carpinella, No. 90341 (Jun. 16, 1992)

1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 5449, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 891
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 16, 1992
DocketNo. 90341
StatusUnpublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 5449 (Calabrese Development Corp. v. Carpinella, No. 90341 (Jun. 16, 1992)) 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
Calabrese Development Corp. v. Carpinella, No. 90341 (Jun. 16, 1992), 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 5449, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 891 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

This is a complicated foreclosure action that turns out to hinge upon two questions concerning a mechanic's lien. The action was originally brought by Calabrese Development Corporation ("Calabrese") against four defendants: Ralph Carpinella, d/b/a R. R. P. Realty ("Carpinella"); Rostra Engineered Components ("Rostra"); People's Bank (the "Bank"); Janazzo Heating Air Conditioning, Inc. ("Janazzo"); and Central Connecticut Acoustics, Inc. Calabrese is no longer a party to the lawsuit, and the action has come before the court on an Amended Cross-Claim (166) filed by Janazzo against the other defendants. For practical purposes, this has boiled down to a dispute among Janazzo, Carpinella, and the Bank. A lengthy evidentiary hearing was held before the court, participated in by the three parties just mentioned. This hearing focused on two questions: whether a contract (Ex. 15) (described in detail below) validly waived Janazzo's rights to place a mechanic's lien on Carpinella's property and to bring a lawsuit against Carpinella; and whether, assuming that Janazzo's lien is valid, that lien should have priority over a mortgage held by the Bank.

Janazzo is a mechanical contractor that designs and builds heating, ventilation, and air-conditioning systems for larger industrial buildings. In the trade, this is known as HVAC work. Janazzo's president is one Paul Holland ("Holland"). Ralph Carpinella owns a business called R. R. P. Realty. In the spring of 1988, Carpinella retained Calabrese to be the project manager on a job to build a large industrial building for Rostra. Although Carpinella and Holland apparently did not know each other, Calabrese had done a substantial amount of business with Holland and Janazzo in the past. Calabrese approached Janazzo about doing the HVAC work on the Rostra project, and eventually, in late May 1988, an oral agreement was made between Calabrese and Janazzo that Janazzo would get the job for $165,000. The person making this agreement for Janazzo was one David Macher ("Macher"). CT Page 5450

Macher was a project manager for Janazzo and was the project manager for the Rostra project. He had dealt with Calabrese on three or four previous projects that were similar to this one. Holland testified that it was probably Macher who had made the oral agreement with Calabrese in May 1988 to do the HVAC work on the Rostra job for $165,000. There are other indications in the record that Macher had a great deal of authority to act for Janazzo on the Rostra project. On August 29, 1988, he submitted a written proposal to "R. R. P. Realty c/o Calabrese Development Corp." to do the Rostra Project for $165,000. (Ex. 1.) On October 6, 1988, he submitted two proposals to Calabrese concerning additional proposed work on the process piping and sprinkler piping for the Rostra project. (Ex. 2 3.) By his own testimony he had many dealings with Calabrese and its employees concerning this project. And on October 11, 1988 he signed the contract in evidence as Ex. 15.

Janazzo prepared its HVAC plans for the Rostra project and ordered some rooftop units for the project in June 1988 (Ex. C, D E.) It did no work at the site, however, until after the rooftop units arrived in October 1988. At about this time someone on Calabrese's staff prepared the contract in evidence as Ex. 15 to be signed by Carpinella and Janazzo. The contract covers work on the HVAC, fire protection (sprinkler system), and process piping on the project. (Art. 1.) The work is to be commenced on October 17 and completed by December 15, 1988. (Art. 2.) The contract sum is $320,788, consisting of $165,000 for the HVAC, $77,400 for the fire protection, and $78,300 for the process piping. (Art. 3.) The total sum "thirty-five thousand dollars ($320,788.00)" is printed in art. 3.1, but the "thirty-five thousand" figure is obviously a clerical error in view of the individual numbers which add up to $320,788.

Art. 15.1.3 of the contract expressly provides that "Contractor [i.e. Janazzo] waives all rights to Mechanic's Lien on the real property on which the work is being performed." Art. 13.2 provides that "All claims or disputes between the contractor and the owner [R. R. P. Realty] arising out of, or relating to the Contract Documents or the breach thereof shall be decided by arbitration in accordance with the Construction Industry Arbitration Rules of The American Arbitration Association then obtaining unless the parties mutually agree otherwise."

The contract is made "as of" March 11, 1988, and contains two signatures: that of Ralph Carpinella, dated "10/17/88"; and that of David Macher, dated "10/11/88." It consists of thirteen pages which have obviously been stapled and unstapled on a number of occasions. The signature page, which is plainly intended to be the last page, is, in fact, the second page in the actual exhibit. By CT Page 5451 carefully examining the first and third pages in the exhibit, one can clearly see the physical impression of Macher's signature. The court finds that Macher signed the signature page while it was either detached or folded over from the back and placed on top of the rest of the contract.

The evidentiary hearing focused to a considerable extent on the signature page of Ex. 15. To explain this, and to fully explain the court's findings, some background is necessary. Fred Gohringer, the Controller of Janazzo since December 8, 1988, testified that in February or March 1989, while he was preparing and filing lien papers, he came across a photocopy of the contract in one of Janazzo's Rostra files. That photocopy was introduced into evidence, over Janazzo's objection as Ex. 7 after Holland identified Macher's signature on the signature page.

Macher testified in court after Ex. 7 had been introduced but before Ex. 15 had come to light. Macher impressed the court as a scared and evasive witness. He testified on direct examination that he did not sign a contract for Janazzo on this project. (3/12/92 T. 15.) On cross-examination, he testified that "It appears that it's my signature," but that "I would never sign a document in this form. I don't have authorization to do it at the time, so, I would not have done it." (Id. 26). He also testified that he did not remember signing the document. (Id. 27.)

Under questioning by the court, however, Macher reaffirmed that the signature looked like his and disavowed any claim that the signature was a forgery. (Id. 60, 62). He then essentially admitted that he had, in fact, signed it. (Id. 63). The focus of the questioning then turned to the circumstances under which he had signed it. Macher testified that it was not conceivable under any circumstances that he would have signed the signature page without looking at the rest of the contract. (Id. 66, 68).

After Macher had finished his testimony, Joseph Calabrese testified and produced the signature copy of the contract (Ex. 15) of which Ex. 7 is an accurate photocopy. From this physical and testimonial evidence, the court finds that Macher signed Ex. 15 on October 11, 1988, after at least looking at the rest of the contract. The court further finds that this event occurred at a time when Janazzo's physical work on the Rostra site was about to commence, when Macher was the project manager for Janazzo, and just after October 6, 1988, when Macher had, in his capacity as project manager, submitted proposals to Calabrese concerning the process and sprinkler piping systems. (Ex. 2 3.)

At least as far as actual authority is concerned, however, the authority to submit proposals like Ex. 2 3 is one thing, and the authority to sign contracts like Ex. 15 is another. Both Holland CT Page 5452 and Macher testified that Macher did not have actual authority to sign contracts. According to their testimony, contracts such as this could only be signed by Holland himself.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 5449, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 891, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/calabrese-development-corp-v-carpinella-no-90341-jun-16-1992-connsuperct-1992.