Fahz, Inc. v. Alhomsi, No. Sphn 8904-21452 (Aug. 16, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6742
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 16, 1991
DocketNo. SPHN 8904-21452
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6742 (Fahz, Inc. v. Alhomsi, No. Sphn 8904-21452 (Aug. 16, 1991)) 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
Fahz, Inc. v. Alhomsi, No. Sphn 8904-21452 (Aug. 16, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6742 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiff is the record owner of a single family dwelling known as 35 Foote Hill Road, located in Northford (the "premises"). The defendants are currently in possession of the premises. The plaintiff brings this summary process action claiming that any right which the defendants had to occupy the premises has terminated and the plaintiff is entitled to possession.

The defendant Falak Chater claims to have an ownership interest in the premises which precludes her eviction. She asserted this claim in a special defense and also filed a counterclaim seeking judgment that she has an ownership interest in the premises. Mrs. Chater alleges that her former husband, Azzat Chater, acquired title to the premises in the name of the plaintiff corporation in order to defraud her of any interest in the premises. She further alleges that at the time the plaintiff corporation acquired title to the premises, she and her then husband "were the true owners of the stock and/or assets of the Plaintiff." Her final allegation is that she and her husband provided the funds which were used to purchase the premises.

The court finds the following facts based on the evidence presented. Falak Chater and Azzat Chater were married in Syria in 1964. Mr. Chater came to the United States first and Mrs. Chater came to this country in 1979. During the course of their marriage they had eight children. (Several of the children are defendants in this action). The Chaters first settled in New York City where they lived in an apartment in a building owned by Mr. Chater's CT Page 6743 brother, Mamoun. Mr. Chater worked for Mamoun Chater in one of Mamoun Chater's restaurants in New York.

In 1983, Mr. and Mrs. Chater moved to the premises with their family after Mr. Chater had entered into a one-year lease for the premises. The lease was dated September 26, 1983, and included an option to purchase. The terms of the lease and option were unusual. Mr. Chater agreed to pay the owner $41,040.32 in rent for one year of occupancy. This rent was to be paid at the rate of $650.00 per week, together with a monthly payment of $603.36. The lease provided that Mr. Chater would be credited with the weekly rental payments against the purchase price if he exercised his option to purchase the premises. In addition, $25,000.00 was paid to the owner for the option to purchase the premises.

By 1983, Azzat Chater was in poor health. Prior to 1983, he worked irregularly at best, but in 1983, Mr. Chater stopped working and slept a lot. Except for a brief period around 1986 when he opened a restaurant, Azzat Chater never worked again.

The plaintiff FAHZ, Inc. was incorporated in March, 1985 at the behest of Mamoun Chater, Azzat Chater's brother. (Originally incorporated as "FHAZ, Inc.," the name of the corporation was later corrected to "FAHZ"). The sole stockholder of the corporation was Mamoun Chater. Because Mamoun Chater lived in New Jersey, the attorney who prepared the incorporation papers recommended that Azzat Chater serve as president and director of the corporation and Falak Chater serve as secretary and director because they were here in Connecticut. Mamoun Chater agreed. He has always considered FAHZ to be his corporation because he owns all the stock, as he does with all his corporations.

On March 28, 1985, FAHZ, Inc. acquired title to the premises by virtue of a warranty deed for the consideration of $122,000.00. The closing statement, which shows the buyer as "Mamoun Chater-FHAZ, Inc.," indicates that the purchaser was given a credit for weekly payments from September 26, 1983, the date of the lease, through March 20, 1985, approximately a week before the closing. The total credit for these payments was $50,700.00. Various other credits were also given against the purchase price with the result that $31,751.00 had to be provided at closing to consummate the purchase. These funds were provided and the deed to FAHZ was delivered and later recorded in the North Branford Land Records. Immediately prior to the recording of the deed, a release of the lease with option to purchase, signed by Azzat Chater, was put of record. This release operated to clear the title to the premises for FAHZ because Azzat Chater and the owner of the premises had recorded a notice of the lease and option in September, 1983, after the lease was executed. CT Page 6744

After FAHZ acquired the premises, Azzat and Falak Chater were permitted to continue to live there. Mamoun Chater testified that it is part of the Arabic tradition for him to take care of his brother and he always assisted Azzat financially, particularly after Azzat's health declined. After the closing Mamoun paid the real estate taxes for the premises and paid many, of not most, of the expenses of operating the house, such as the electric bills and bills for fuel oil. He paid for new carpeting for the house and for plumbing repairs.

In October, 1988, Falak and Azzat Chater separated and in December, 1988, Mrs. Chater brought an action for dissolution of their marriage. Mrs. Chater and the children remained in possession of the premises. After the separation, the plaintiff gave notice to the defendants that their right or privilege to occupy the premises had terminated. Notices to quit were served on March 1, 1989 and August 8, 1989.

The principal factual dispute between the parties is who provided the funds to purchase the premises. The defendant Falak Chater, who alleges in the special defense and counterclaim that she has an ownership interest in the premises because she and Azzat provided the funds to purchase the house, bears the burden of proof on this issue. Gager v. Carlson, 146 Conn. 288, 290 (1959). Mrs. Chater acknowledged in her testimony that the money to purchase the premises, including the $650.00 weekly payments, came from Mamoun Chater. However, she contended that her husband told her that he bought the house with the proceeds of the sale of their home in Syria. In 1984, she went to Syria to clean their home there because her husband wanted to sell it. (Azzat Chater could not return to Syria because he was wanted by Syrian authorities for forgery and drug offenses.) She returned to the United States after the sale accompanied by Mohammed Chater, another brother of Azzat Chater's. She testified that while they were on the airplane, Mohammed Chater showed her the checks from the sale. After they returned home, her husband told Falak Chater that the house was now theirs because they sold the house in Syria. He repeated this to her several times.

Mrs. Chater offered no explanation as to where the checks from Syria were deposited or how the funds were used in the purchase of the house. She does not know how much money was realized from the sale of the house in Syria. She further claimed, in a contention apparently contradictory to her first claim, that although Mamoun Chater made the $650.00 weekly payments under the lease, he did so with funds which Azzat Chater had sent to Mamoun Chater years earlier while Azzat Chater was living in Saudi Arabia and Mamoun Chater was already in the United States. No substantiation of any of these generalized financial claims was offered. CT Page 6745

Mamoun Chater, on the other hand, testified that he has been in the restaurant business for many years and has owned four restaurants. He currently owns two restaurants. When Azzat Chater arrived in this country, according to Mamoun Chater, he had no assets. Mamoun Chater has employed him and assisted him financially since he came to the United States. He did this because Azzat Chater was ill and because of Arabic tradition.

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Related

Gager v. Carlson
150 A.2d 302 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1959)
Puro v. Henry
449 A.2d 176 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1982)
Secondino v. New Haven Gas Co.
165 A.2d 598 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1960)
Latimer Point Management Corp. v. Anderson
471 A.2d 670 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6742, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fahz-inc-v-alhomsi-no-sphn-8904-21452-aug-16-1991-connsuperct-1991.