Dorne v. Williams

17 Conn. Super. Ct. 389, 17 Conn. Supp. 389, 1952 Conn. Super. LEXIS 98
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1952
DocketFile 19260
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Conn. Super. Ct. 389 (Dorne v. Williams) 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
Dorne v. Williams, 17 Conn. Super. Ct. 389, 17 Conn. Supp. 389, 1952 Conn. Super. LEXIS 98 (Colo. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

ALCORN, J.

The amended complaint, stated in four counts, claims damages, the reformation of a written agreement or, in the alternative, a declaratory judgment, and such other relief as to justice and equity may appertain. The claim for a declaratory judgment has been abandoned.

The decedent was a woman seventy'frve or more years old. She owned land at Crescent Beach, so'called, in the town of East Lyme, on which stood a three'Story, duplex house known as the “Old Homestead” and a former garage two stories high which had been remodeled to contain two apartments. The whole property'is valued in her estate at $8600. The decedent used the front or southerly half of the “Old Homestead,” which will here' inafter be referred to as the main house, as a summer residence. The main house was about fifty years old, of so'called “open type” frame construction without interior sheathing or plaster' ing and with shingled roof and sides. The remodeled apartment building in the rear was of like construction with shingled roof and novelty siding. Both buildings were served by outside toilets and water from a well in the yard was manually pumped to kitchen- sinks in each building. There were leaks in the roof and around some of the windows of the main house and its trim needed painting. The decedent had been content with it for a summer home in this condition.

The plaintiff had known the decedent about eight years through renting summer vacation quarters from her. On Sep' tember 19, 1947, he leased the north half of the main house and the two garage apartments with the right to sublet and make alterations for ten years at a monthly rent of $30, agreeing “to take said premises as they now are,” and “that no damage shall be claimed 'of said Lessor for injury to the property of said Lessee in said premises caused by water or the elements, or dampness.” During that summer the decedent had become an' noyed by leaks in the south part of the main house. After a dis' cussion at the time of making the lease, the plaintiff undertook to make temporary repairs with .the understanding that he and •the decedent would get together the next summer on the cost of repairs and how to meet them.

*391 In the early summer of 1948 the decedent returned from her winter residence in Florida, and the parties undertook to obtain estimates for further work to be done. The plaintiff showed contractors through the property and indicated to them, in the decedent’s absence, the work he proposed. The lowest estimate obtained approximated $12,000. This was communicated to the decedent, who balked at such an expenditure and put off doing anything. Later in the summer she was again plagued by leaks and decided to put a new roof and siding on the main house. Discussion ensued about the plaintiff undertaking the work and the decedent paying one-half the cost. The plaintiff protested that such a proposal was not fair to him under his present lease. The plaintiff offered to undertake the project, however, if the decedent would give him a ten-year lease with a ten-year renewal privilege covering the north half of the main house and the apartments in the rear. The plaintiff’s objective was to obtain through rentals derived from subletting, reimbursement for his portion of the expense.

On September 18, 1948, the parties exchanged receipts, and • executed a written lease. This lease was identical in all material respects with the 1947 lease except that it included the right of renewal for a further period of ten years under the same terms' and conditions, and specified that it superseded and released the 1947 lease.

On the same date the parties signed a written agreement reciting, in part, that “WHEREAS the parties hereto have this day executed a lease pertaining to the northerly one-half of a house on Washington Avenue, Crescent Beach, in the Town of East Lyme, Connecticut, known as The Homestead, and

“WHEREAS the parties are desirous of entering into an Agreement regarding repairs to be made to said premises, and the cost of such repairs.....

“1. The said Dome shall make such repairs as are necessary to the premises, including new roof, siding, painting, new steps, new water system and such other repairs as are deemed necessary by the said Dome.

“2. The cost of repairs shall be shared equally by both parties. . . .

“4. The said Williams agrees to pay for her share of the repairs by allowing the said Dome to apply monthly rentals of Thirty (30) Dollars each month, as provided-in the lease, on' *392 account of such repairs. The said Dome is hereby authorised and directed not to pay such rentals to the said Williams during any month when there is a balance due from the said Williams on account of her share of the above mentioned costs of repairs, but he is authorised and directed to withhold payment of said rentals and to apply them on account of repairs as provided herein.”

The lease and the agreement were Jr awn by the plaintiff and witnessed by his wife and mother. The decedent examined them before signing, stated that they correctly represented the agreement reached, and executed them. She left within a few hours thereafter for her winter home in Florida. On the way to the railroad station she voiced an intention of selling a piece of property in Florida in order to use the proceeds to pay her share of the expense under the agreement. This conversation is relied upon by the plaintiff as the basis for a recovery under the second, third and fourth counts of the complaint. The evi' dence of that conversation, however, does not establish an oral agreement such as that alleged. On the contrary, it goes no farther than to indicate a method the decedent had in mind for meeting her share of the expense and terminating the with' holding of the rents by the plaintiff.

There remains to consider, therefore, whether the plaintiff is entitled to recover under the first count for expenditures pur' suant to the written contract. The decedent never returned to the property, but died in Florida on June 5, 1949. On Novem' ber 28, 1949, and within the time limited by the Probate Court, the plaintiff filed a claim for $6570.50, with interest, based upon “Services rendered to Harriett C. Williams at her request and for her benefit between the years 1949 and 1950 as per lease and agreement,” the lease and agreement referred to being those of September 18, 1948. The claim was disallowed in full.

In construing the written agreement the intent which the par' ties expressed therein is the controlling element. Roessler v. Burwell, 119 Conn. 289, 295. The aim is to ascertain what the scrivener of the agreement intended by what he said rather than to put words into his mouth or to give effect to that which it may be thought he intended to say or would have wished to say but did not. Boucher v. Godfrey, 119 Conn. 622, 629; Trumbull Electric Mfg. Co. v. John Cooke Co., 130 Conn. 12, 15; Hansel v. Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co., 133 Conn. 181, 194. The intention of the parties is to be determined from the *393

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Bluebook (online)
17 Conn. Super. Ct. 389, 17 Conn. Supp. 389, 1952 Conn. Super. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dorne-v-williams-connsuperct-1952.