Haas v. Haas

48 A.3d 713, 137 Conn. App. 424, 2012 WL 3101763, 2012 Conn. App. LEXIS 373
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedAugust 7, 2012
DocketAC 33569
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 48 A.3d 713 (Haas v. Haas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haas v. Haas, 48 A.3d 713, 137 Conn. App. 424, 2012 WL 3101763, 2012 Conn. App. LEXIS 373 (Colo. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

[426]*426 Opinion

PETERS, J.

In the proper circumstances, a statute of limitations may be tolled under the continuous course of conduct doctrine to reflect the policy that, “during an ongoing relationship, lawsuits are premature because specific tortious acts or omissions may be difficult to identify and may yet be remedied.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Watts v. Chittenden, 301 Conn. 575, 583-84, 22 A.3d 1214 (2011). The dispositive issue in this appeal is whether the trial court properly applied the doctrine to toll the statute of limitations on an elderly mother’s claims against her son for mismanagement of her funds and concealment of his wrongdoing. We affirm the judgment of the court.

On February 17, 2011, the plaintiff, Florence Haas, filed a revised third amended complaint against the defendant, Arthur J. Haas, alleging claims for an accounting, fraud, constructive fraud and punitive damages.1 The defendant denied his liability and asserted a number of special defenses, alleging, inter alia, that the plaintiffs claims were barred by the applicable statute of limitations, General Statutes § 52-577.2 Following a court trial and a forensic accounting, the court, S. Freedman, J., rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff on her claims for constructive fraud and punitive [427]*427damages3 and on the defendant’s special defenses, finding that the statute of limitations was tolled by the continuing course of conduct doctrine. The defendant’s appeal challenges the propriety of the judgment rendered on the plaintiff’s claim for constructive fraud and the amount of damages awarded to the plaintiff.

I

FACTUAL FINDINGS OF THE TRIAL COURT

In its May 23, 2011 memorandum of decision, the court made extensive findings of fact that the defendant does not contest on appeal. At the time of the judgment, the plaintiff was an eighty-eight year old widow. The defendant is her son. Before she became widowed, the plaintiff had relied on her husband to manage her finances and investments. Following the death of the plaintiffs husband in 1986, the defendant assumed his father’s role in managing the plaintiffs financial affairs. The defendant, who was a certified public accountant,4 agreed to serve the plaintiff in a fiduciary capacity. The defendant’s duties included, inter alia, managing the plaintiffs investments and filing her tax returns. The defendant placed his own name on the plaintiffs brokerage accounts and, from 1986 to 2000, all account statements were sent directly to the defendant.

For five consecutive years, from 1991 to 1995, the defendant failed to prepare or file tax returns on behalf of the plaintiff.5 The defendant did not inform the plaintiff that he had failed to file her tax returns and falsely [428]*428informed her that she was on extension for unfiled tax returns. During all of these years, the defendant failed to provide the plaintiff with an accounting of his dealings with her accounts, bills and taxes.

As a result of the defendant’s failure to file the plaintiffs tax returns, income from stock sales and dividends was attributed to the plaintiff, and she accumulated significant tax liabilities that went uncontested and unpaid. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) began to levy on the plaintiffs assets. In 2000, the IRS seized approximately $70,400 from the plaintiffs brokerage account. Although the defendant, as the named account holder, was informed of the seizure, he took no action to reclaim the seized funds. Moreover, he failed to inform the plaintiff of the seizure and allowed the two year window for contesting the IRS takings to pass without informing the plaintiff or her attorney. In 2001, the IRS seized $49,118.98 from the plaintiffs retirement account and $8156.17 from the plaintiffs personal bank account. The IRS also issued garnishments against the plaintiffs social security retirement income and her wages from her part-time employment income and placed a tax hen on the plaintiffs home.

The plaintiff did not discover the defendant’s failure to file her tax returns until 2001, after she had retained an attorney, Samuel Starks, to help her with estate planning and to ascertain why she had stopped receiving her social security checks and why the IRS had placed a tax hen on her house. The defendant failed to respond to Starks’ numerous requests for information relating to the plaintiffs taxes and to identify assets belonging to the plaintiff that remained under the defendant’s control.

In April, 2002, Starks received a letter from the IRS asking for the plaintiffs year 2000 tax return and reflecting alleged stock sale income of $120,080 and [429]*429dividend income of $5001. Starks was unable to file the plaintiffs 2000 tax return because the documentation needed to account for the stock sales and dividends was in the defendant’s possession, and the defendant refused to provide it. Starks filed the plaintiffs tax returns for 2001 through 2003, reporting the income actually received by the plaintiff during those years.

In 2004, the plaintiff retained a certified public accountant, Keith H. Dommreis, to prepare her tax returns. Dommreis prepared the plaintiffs delinquent tax returns starting with tax year 1996. Because the plaintiff had not received the income generated by stock sales reported to the IRS for years 1996 to 2000, Domm-reis attributed all income from sale of the plaintiffs stocks during those years to the defendant. According to Dommreis, the records disclosing the basis of the stock sales, which were needed to file proper tax returns, were in the defendant’s possession.6 All the refunds due to the plaintiff on income tax returns prepared by Starks and Dommreis were applied to her outstanding tax liabilities.

From 2001 to 2008, the plaintiff and her attorney made numerous requests of the defendant to identify assets belonging to the plaintiff that remained under his control and to release the plaintiffs financial and tax records. The defendant never responded to any of these requests and continued to withhold documents and information in his possession. At trial, the defendant attributed his failure to provide the requested information to his fear that he would be sued. He also claimed that relevant records had been lost as a result of a fire in his home in December, 2004. The court [430]*430expressly found that the alleged fire was “not helpful to the defendant’s case.”7

Even after the plaintiff filed the present action, in October, 2005, the defendant continued this pattern of withholding information by contesting the plaintiffs attempts to obtain pretrial discovery. The defendant did not produce the documents that established the basis for the sale of the plaintiffs stocks until 2008. The plaintiff did not learn the location and the amount of the plaintiffs brokerage accounts controlled by the defendant until June, 2008. The defendant did not disclose the IRS seizure of funds from the plaintiffs brokerage account to the plaintiff or her attorney until the first day of trial, August 19, 2008. The defendant repeatedly failed to produce personal financial records that were requested by the corut-appointed forensic accountant and delayed the production of other evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 A.3d 713, 137 Conn. App. 424, 2012 WL 3101763, 2012 Conn. App. LEXIS 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haas-v-haas-connappct-2012.