Dinkeloo v. City of New Haven

535 A.2d 1287, 205 Conn. 741, 1988 Conn. LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 12, 1988
Docket12816
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 535 A.2d 1287 (Dinkeloo v. City of New Haven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dinkeloo v. City of New Haven, 535 A.2d 1287, 205 Conn. 741, 1988 Conn. LEXIS 1 (Colo. 1988).

Opinion

Glass, J.

The defendant New Haven Coliseum Authority (hereinafter the Authority or the defendant) appeals from a judgment for the plaintiff architectural firm of Kevin Roche-John Dinkeloo and Associates (hereinafter Roche-Dinkeloo) after a jury trial. The defendant claims on appeal that the trial court erred in: (1) charging the jury with respect to the expert witnesses who testified at trial; (2) allowing the witness Carl Walker to testify; (3) directing a verdict for Roche-Dinkeloo on the breach of contract count in the Authority’s counterclaim; (4) instructing the jury on the elements of fraudulent concealment; (5) failing to instruct the jury on equitable estoppel; and (6) refusing to rule that the statutes of repose set forth in General Statutes §§ 52-584 and 52-584a are unconstitutional. We find no error.

The jury could reasonably have found the following facts: In 1967, the Authority engaged Roche-Dinkeloo to design an arena, exhibition hall and parking garage in New Haven (the Coliseum). On October 26, 1967, [743]*743Roche-Dinkeloo retained LeMessurier and Associates of Cambridge, Massachusetts, as its structural engineering consultant. Roche-Dinkeloo’s design called for a rectangular, four level, 2400-space parking garage to be built over the arena, with the first or lowest level of the garage serving as the roof of the arena. Each floor of the garage was a composite deck composed of a three layer application of steel, reinforcing steel bars and concrete. The main structure was situated on rocker bearings, and control joints were placed at the intersections of individual concrete slabs to accommodate expansion. The garage was open to the elements on the top and sides. Except for the ramps, the garage floors were designed to be level.

The facility was substantially completed on September 26, 1972, and on approximately that date the Authority commenced the use and occupancy of the garage. Between 1972 and 1978, the Authority discovered water pooling on the decks of the garage and cracks in portions of the concrete floors. In 1978 the Authority commissioned an independent study to review problems with the garage. That study revealed that the existing drains were clogged, and recommended that more drains be installed and a waterproof coating be applied to the parking decks. Another study was commissioned by the Authority in 1980, which recommended that the Authority close off certain areas of the garage, which had become unsafe due to corrosion.

On May 11,1979, Roche-Dinkeloo brought an action against the city of New Haven to recover fees due under the contract, and on February 5,1980, its motion to cite in the Authority as a defendant was granted. The city subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment and that motion was granted by the trial court. On September 12,1980, the Authority filed an answer, special defense, and counterclaim in two counts, alleg[744]*744ing breach of contract and negligence. Roche-Dinkeloo filed an amended answer to the counterclaim, asserting the statute of limitation as a special defense. The Authority filed a reply to the special defense, denying that the statute of limitation precluded the Authority’s claims and pleading several matters in avoidance, including fraudulent concealment, equitable estoppel and breach of the continuing duty to warn. The Authority also asserted that General Statutes §§ 52-584 and 52-584a are unconstitutional. After a lengthy trial, the jury returned a general verdict for Roche-Dinkeloo on the second count of the Authority’s counterclaim. The Authority moved to set aside the verdict, and the court denied the motion. The Authority appealed to the Appellate Court and this court transferred the appeal to itself.

I

The defendant’s first claim is that the trial court erred in its instruction to the jury with respect to the expert witnesses who testified at trial. Specifically, the defendant claims that the trial court purported to summarize the evidence presented by the expert witnesses, but in doing so unfairly emphasized the testimony of the witnesses called by Roche-Dinkeloo, and improperly summarized some of the evidence favoring Roche-Dinkeloo. We disagree.

During trial, the Authority called three expert witnesses to testify: (1) Roger LeRoy; (2) Charles Thornton; and (3) Donald W. Pfeifer. Roche-Dinkeloo called at least eight witnesses to testify, including six expert witnesses: (1) Robert Victor; (2) Carl Walker; (3) George Torello; (4) William LeMessurier; (5) Prank Heger; and (6) Alan Deher. The expert testimony offered by these witnesses was complicated and highly technical, consuming more than one month of trial time.

In the charge, the trial court, Zoarski, J., attempted to summarize the testimony of these witnesses. In so [745]*745doing, however, the trial court did not mention all of the witnesses at the trial. In particular, reference to the testimony of Pfeifer and LeRoy, two of the three experts called by the Authority, was omitted. The trial court summarized the testimony of six of Roche-Dinkeloo’s expert witnesses.

Prior to summarizing the testimony, the trial court instructed the jury that “the weight to be accorded to the testimony of an expert witness depends upon your conclusion as to ... the completeness of the facts considered by them” and whether there was a “sound basis upon which they could render the opinions that they stated.” At the conclusion of the summary, the trial court stated that “each of these expert witnesses were cross-examined, and in many respects the opinions they rendered were questioned or challenged by the . . . Authority. Although the opinions were rendered, the question is ultimately the weight to be given to those opinions; whether you accept them and whether, in your opinion as jurors, you agree with those opinions that were rendered.” The jury was also instructed to consider an expert’s interest, bias, prejudice, frankness and candor in weighing his testimony. Finally, the trial court told the jurors to consider “what opportunity [the experts had] to analyze and study the garage, its design and its condition . . . [and whether this opportunity was] sufficient to reach the opinions or conclusions that they reached.”

In attacking the court’s comments on the evidence, the defendant claims that the instruction unfairly emphasized the testimony of Roche-Dinkeloo’s expert witnesses and that the summation of the testimony of one witness, Walker, was misleading. We have held that “[t]he court’s review of the evidence in its charge to the jury is subject to the overriding consideration that its comments be fair and that they not mislead the jury, so that injustice is not done to either party. [746]*746Enlund v. Buske, 160 Conn. 327, 331, 278 A.2d 815 [1971]; Szlinsky v. Denhup, 156 Conn. 159, 163, 239 A.2d 505 [1968]; Ladd v. Burdge, 132 Conn. 296, 298, 43 A.2d 752 [1945]. We have indicated that the nature and extent of the trial court’s comments on the evidence, within constitutional limitations concerning trial by jury, must largely depend on the facts involved in a particular case and the manner in which it has been tried; and the matter of commenting on evidence rests in the trial court’s sound discretion. Heslin v. Malone, 116 Conn. 471, 477, 165 A. 594 [1933].” Anderson & McPadden, Inc. v.

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Bluebook (online)
535 A.2d 1287, 205 Conn. 741, 1988 Conn. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dinkeloo-v-city-of-new-haven-conn-1988.