City of Bridgeport v. 2284 Corp.
This text of 778 A.2d 222 (City of Bridgeport v. 2284 Corp.) 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.
Opinion
Opinion
This is a summary process action in which the defendant appeals from the judgment of possession against it. The dispositive issue is whether the defendant should have been a defendant in the tax lien foreclosure action by which the plaintiff, the city of Bridgeport (city), acquired title.1 We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
[626]*626The following relevant facts are taken from a stipulation of the parties. In 1993, the defendant entered into a written lease and took possession as a tenant of 2288 and 2294 Fairfield Avenue in Bridgeport. The lease was not witnessed, notarized or recorded. In 1994, the city foreclosed tax liens on the property in an action in which the defendant was not named as an encum-brancer. The court rendered a judgment of strict foreclosure, and title vested in the city on October 15,1998.
After obtaining title, the city commenced this summary process action against the defendant on the ground, inter alia, that the defendant had no right to possession of the property. By way of special defense, the defendant pleaded to the effect that the foreclosure judgment was not effective against it because it had not been made a party and, consequently, was not served with process in the foreclosure proceeding.2
The defendant argues that although its lease was not recorded on the land records, it was nevertheless entitled to be named as a defendant and given a law day. This argument ignores Practice Book § 10-69, which requires that “ [a]ll encumbrances of record” be set forth in the complaint.3 (Emphasis added.) We are not aware of any authority, nor has any been brought to our atten[627]*627tion, that mandates naming unrecorded encumbrances4 in a foreclosure complaint. While the city had the option of naming the defendant as a party in the foreclosure and then proceeding to obtain possession by way of ejectment, it was not required to follow that course. Instead, it could elect not to name the defendant, and then to proceed, as it did, to obtain possession by way of summary process. Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. v. Van Sickle, 52 Conn. App. 37, 42, 726 A.2d 600 (1999); D. Caron, Connecticut Foreclosures (3d Ed. 1997) pp. 244-45.
We decline to establish a rule that would require foreclosing plaintiffs to include all tenants as defendants in foreclosure actions. The ramifications of such a rule would be far reaching. For instance, it would impose a duty on foreclosing plaintiffs to conduct an investigation to learn who was occupying portions of the premises under unrecorded and perhaps unwritten leases. Because there is no privity between a foreclosing plaintiff and a defendant’s tenants, we dare not predict the extent of cooperation and the accuracy of the information that such an investigation would produce. We hold that if a tenant’s lease is not recorded, the tenant has no right to be part of the foreclosure action and, more specifically, is not entitled to a law day.
The defendant contends that General Statutes § 49-30 supports its position.5 We do not agree. Section 49-30 [628]*628establishes a procedure for foreclosing an encumbrance that is omitted in the original foreclosure. As used in § 49-30, the term encumbrance refers to recorded encumbrances. We are aware of no case law that suggests otherwise. Moreover, the tenor of § 49-30 makes it clear that it was intended to benefit the foreclosing party who, through mistake or oversight, omitted an encumbrance. It is not intended to be used as a sword by the omitted party.
The defendant’s reliance on Federal Deposit Ins. Corp. v. Bombero, 37 Conn. App. 764, 769, 657 A.2d 668 (1995) , appeal dismissed, 236 Conn. 744, 674 A.2d 1324 (1996) , is misplaced. In Bombero, we held that “[t]he purpose of § 49-30 is to provide for a cure in the event that a party is omitted from foreclosure proceedings. This purpose is unambiguously apparent from the statutory language and its delineation of the methods of curing the omission by deed or foreclosure or other legal proceedings.” (Emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted.) Id. The fallacy in the defendant’s reasoning is that it assumes that the defendant is a party that holds an encumbrance on the property. As we concluded earlier in this opinion, the defendant’s unrecorded lease does not constitute an encumbrance and, thus, there is no omission that needs curing.
On the basis of the foregoing, we conclude that the defendant was not required to be made a party in the foreclosure action, and the city’s foreclosure of its tax hens extinguished the defendant’s lease. See Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corp. v. Van Sickle, supra, 52 Conn. App. 41-42.
[629]*629II
Even if the defendant could persuade us that foreclosure procedure entitled it to a law day, it cannot survive General Statutes § 47-19, which provides that a lease for more than one year will be ineffectual against anyone other than the lessor and lessee “unless it is in writing, executed, attested, acknowledged and recorded in the same manner as a deed of land . . . .”6 The lease in the present case was not witnessed, acknowledged or recorded.
The defendant argues that because the city knew or should have known of its lease, § 47-19 does not apply and that under some circumstances an unrecorded lease has been held to bind a third party who had actual notice of the existence of the lease. See Drazen Properties Ltd. Partnership v. E. F. Mahon, Inc., 19 Conn. App. 471, 562 A.2d 1142 (1989). There are two fallacies to this argument as applied here. First, the cases on which the defendant relies concern bona fide purchasers for value. See id., 477. A bona fide purchaser is a buyer who pays full and fair price for property without notice that another person has an interest in that property. Id. A city that forecloses a tax lien does not meet that definition. Second, the defendant does not cite authority as to who, when dealing with a city, the public official is who would be charged with notice of the lease. Would it be the tax collector, the assessor, the city attorney, any individual councilman, the entire city council or some other municipal functionary?
[630]*630We conclude that the defendant’s unrecorded and defectively executed lease gave it no rights in the foreclosure.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
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778 A.2d 222, 63 Conn. App. 624, 2001 Conn. App. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-bridgeport-v-2284-corp-connappct-2001.