Golinsky v. Advest Bank, No. Cv-96-0560739-S (Oct. 1, 1997)
This text of 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 9988 (Golinsky v. Advest Bank, No. Cv-96-0560739-S (Oct. 1, 1997)) 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.
Opinion
The dispute pertains to the alleged failure of the defendant to make said loan to the plaintiff in the amount of $3,800,000. The plaintiff claims that the agreement was set forth in a preliminary approval letter to the plaintiff by one Michael W. Herlihy, dated October 7, 1993, referred to as Exhibit H appended to this motion for summary judgment.
The motion claims that the plaintiff failed to present any evidence that the defendant committed to refinance his loan. (There was an existing loan between the parties). Defendant further claims that the allegations of a commitment do not satisfy the statute of Frauds, Connecticut General Statutes §
The plaintiff claims that the letter of Mr. Herlihy, said Exhibit H dated October 7, 1993 is adequate to satisfy the provision of Connecticut General Statutes §
"The party to be charged" is the defendant Bank. Mr. Herlihy is identified in the letter as "Vice President." No claim is made that Mr. Herlihy is not an agent of the defendant. No formal contract was signed by the plaintiff and defendant together. Hence, for the purposes of the statute of frauds the initial question is whether the writing signed by Mr. Herlihy constitutes a "memorandum of an agreement."
The defendant, for the purposes of this motion, appears to treat the loan request as an application for refinancing of the entire shopping center. The plaintiff, by affidavit, treats the matter as an original application to finance the renovation of a gas station, which would have cost approximately $400,000. Rather than to finance the renovation of the gas station as a separate loan the bank determined to discuss the prospect of a larger more comprehensive financing or re-financing in the proposed amount of $3,800,000.
The defendant claims that the Herlihy memorandum does not contain the essential terms of a contract "with such certainty that its essentials can be known from the memorandum itself without the aid of parole proof." Breen v. Phelps,
The defendant contends that the monthly amount or when the mortgage payments would start was "ambiguous, indefinite and uncertain." However, the letter sets forth an interest rate — "8.25% fixed for the term of the loan." A term — "seven years." And "amortization schedule: fifteen years." As to whether this information is adequate and sufficient to appraise each of the parties as to the method, interim, and amount of payments is a question of fact which cannot be resolved by this motion.
The defendant further contends that, as the letter states CT Page 9990 "final terms and conditions are subject to approval by Advest Bank's Board of Directors," therefore, since no such approval was forthcoming, this condition of the letter was not satisfied.
Though it is clear that the performance of a condition precedent must take place before there is a right to performance, yet where that performance is solely to be accomplished by the person seeking to avoid an agreement, careful scrutiny of that failure may be appropriate. It is here contended that the defendant never placed the loan before the Board of Directors for approval. Whether this provision is a condition precedent is a question of fact, which cannot be determined by a motion for summary judgment. See Christopherson v. Blount,
As to the failure to list time of performance, "what is a reasonable length of time is ordinarily a question of fact for the trier." Christopherson, supra, p. 513.
Whether the letter of October 7, 1993 is a sufficient memorandum of an agreement for the purposes of the statute of frauds is a question of fact.
The plaintiff contends that even if there was an oral agreement which would otherwise be barred by the Statute of Frauds, part performance by him would remove the agreement from the constraints of the statute. See Putnam, Coffin Burr, Inc.v. Halpern,
The defendant claims that the concept of breach of covenant of good faith and fair dealing is not applicable to the plaintiff's claims. As acknowledged in the defendant's brief the Supreme Court has recognized that an implied duty of good faith and fair dealing exists as concerns every contract without limitation. Mangan v. Anaconda Industries, Inc.,
Similarly the relationship between the parties, bearing in mind the prospect of re-writing an existing loan and the claimed assurances given by the defendants, together with the plaintiff's claim of detrimental reliance appear to extend beyond the concept of a single claim of breach of contract. These issues are fact bound and cannot be determined in the midst of conflicting evidence.
For the reasons set forth herein the motion for summary judgment is denied.
L. Paul Sullivan, J.
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