Dzen v. Dzen, No. Cv 96-0061312s (Feb. 26, 1999)

1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 2630
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 26, 1999
DocketNo. CV 96-0061312S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 2630 (Dzen v. Dzen, No. Cv 96-0061312s (Feb. 26, 1999)) 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
Dzen v. Dzen, No. Cv 96-0061312s (Feb. 26, 1999), 1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 2630 (Colo. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON THE FIRST, SECOND AND THIRD COUNTS OF THE PLAINTIFF'S COMPLAINT
The fourth and fifth counts of the plaintiff's complaint in this action, and the responsive pleadings thereto filed by the named defendant, as well as his counterclaims, assert that they are brothers and co-owners of five parcels of real estate in the towns of South Windsor and Ellington, that they are also equal shareholders as well as sole officers and directors of a corporation, Dzen Farms, Inc., under which they do business, and that they seek a dissolution of the corporation, the dissolution, winding up and liquidation of their partnership, and a partition of the farms which they presently own as tenants in common. The first and second counts of the complaint allege that the purchase by the defendants, John Dzen and his wife, Virginia Dzen, of a parcel of land from Kenneth Miller on April 4, 1996, which had been leased by the corporation for the production and sale of strawberries, while the parties were engaged in mediating the dissolution of the corporation and the winding down of the partnership, constituted the usurpation of a business opportunity and a breach of the defendant's fiduciary obligation to the CT Page 2631 corporation. The third count seeks to impose a constructive trust upon a parcel of land in East Windsor known as "Blueberry Hill" which has been solely owned by the defendant, John Dzen, but which the plaintiff alleges has been "devoted continuously and exclusively for agricultural use for the benefit of the Dzen family farm business. . .".

The plaintiff has filed and briefed a motion in opposition to the defendants' motion to bifurcate the issues of whether the Miller property or the Blueberry Hill property may properly be considered to be constructively owned by either the corporation or the partnership or both, as claimed by the plaintiff in the first three counts of his complaint, and therefore subject to partition in kind. On the other hand, the defendants argue that the court should exercise its discretion under General Statutes § 52-205 and Practice Book § 15-1 to bifurcate these issues and as stated in the first count of the counterclaim, to "partition the Miller and Blueberry Hill properties if [the court] issues declaratory judgments in favor of [the] plaintiff regarding the ownership thereof."

Bifurcation of trial proceedings lies solely in the discretion of the trial court and it may order that one or more issues that are joined may be tried before the others, where it determines that it serves the interests of "convenience, negation of prejudice and judicial efficiency" to do so. ReichholdChemicals, Inc. v. Hartford Accident Indemnity Co.,243 Conn. 401, 423 (1997). The court concludes that the convenience of all concerned, and more importantly, judicial efficiency, will best be served by the resolution of these issues at this time, that the plaintiff has made no showing that he will be prejudiced thereby, and that this is a case where bifurcation is appropriate because it will obviate the unnecessary litigation of these critical questions of law at some later stage of these proceedings. Id.

I.
The issues raised by the pleadings in the first two counts of the complaint, as amended, are first, whether the acquisition of the Miller property, which had previously been leased by the corporation for the production and sale of strawberries, constituted the usurpation by John Dzen of a business opportunity that rightfully belonged to the partnership or to the corporation, as well as a breach of the fiduciary duty that he CT Page 2632 owed to his partner, Donald Dzen, and second, whether it was a breach of his fiduciary duty to the corporation as an officer and director of Dzen Farms, Inc. for him to have failed to disclose the proposed transaction prior to the purchase in view of the fact that the parties were actively engaged at that time in mediation discussions with an attorney, John Woodcock, in order to facilitate the contemplated dissolution, of the corporation by negotiating the division of the partnership and corporate assets. The underlying facts are substantially undisputed, and based on the admissions made in the defendants' answer and the joint stipulation filed by the parties at the trial, they may be fairly summarized as follows.

John Dzen and Donald Dzen have operated a real estate partnership since January 19, 1968 without any written partnership agreement, and since 1969, John Dzen has served as President, Treasurer and Director of Dzen Farms, Inc., and Donald Dzen as Secretary and Director, although the corporation has not held any meetings, and conventional corporate formalities have not been observed. Since the formation of the corporation and the real estate partnership, the parties have cultivated, maintained and operated a wholesale and retail fruit farm whose primary crops have been raspberries, blueberries and strawberries, and since the 1980s their farming operations have been extended to the growing and raising of Christmas trees for wholesale and retail sale.

John Dzen, as president of the corporation, has determined which crops should be grown on properties utilized by the corporation, and what improvements to make on those properties, and he has also acted as the managing partner of the partnership in that he has initiated and negotiated all of the transactions that involved the purchase and sale of properties owned by the partnership. The following members of the Dzen family are employed by the corporation and are actively involved in its farming and sales operations, namely, Donald's wife, Linda Dzen, and their sons, Joseph and Donald Jr., as well as John's wife Virginia, and their son, John Jr., but none of them have any ownership interest either in the corporate stock or in the partnership real estate as tenants in common.

On November 7, 1995, the plaintiff was formally advised by his brother, John, that he wished to dissolve the partnership and the corporation, and on November 9, 1995, the parties engaged Attorney John Woodcock to act as a mediator in order to CT Page 2633 facilitate the dissolution of the corporation and the real estate partnership. In a letter written on that date to both parties, Woodcock stated that "[t]he parties have agreed to operate the business as usual, with no changes being made in the conduct of their business [and that all] profits will be divided on a 50/50 basis as they have done in the past and [any] issues that arise with respect to the operation of the business shall be submitted to me for my input."

In March, 1996, while Woodcock was still acting as the mediator for the proposed dissolution as agreed by the parties, John Dzen asked him to represent his wife, Virginia, and himself, for the purpose of purchasing the Miller property. The transfer of title took place on April 4, 1996, while the mediation and negotiations through Woodcock were still pending, and before any formal offer or proposal regarding the dissolution had been made by either party to the other.

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Bluebook (online)
1999 Conn. Super. Ct. 2630, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dzen-v-dzen-no-cv-96-0061312s-feb-26-1999-connsuperct-1999.