Hackbarth v. Ross, No. Cv 96-7800 (Aug., 1997)

1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 9572
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 5, 1997
DocketNo. CV 96-7800
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 9572 (Hackbarth v. Ross, No. Cv 96-7800 (Aug., 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.

Bluebook
Hackbarth v. Ross, No. Cv 96-7800 (Aug., 1997), 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 9572 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiff Robert Hackbarth (plaintiff) and his wife Elizabeth have brought this action for damages for breach of a lease covenant to pay rent and for alleged property damage. The plaintiffs own a single family home in Madison adjacent to their own home. On April 27, 1995, they entered into a written agreement CT Page 9573 with the defendants Robert Ross and Joseph Bunovsky, Jr., to lease to the defendants the home for one year commencing June 2, 1995, at a monthly rental of $950.00. The defendants paid a security deposit equal to one month's rent. The plaintiff had built the home himself twenty years earlier and had continuously rented it to third persons.

Problems between the plaintiffs and the defendants began to develop in October, 1995, when the defendants repeatedly insisted that the plaintiff repair the stove and, especially, the bathroom fan, the failure of which was causing a substantial amount of mildew to grow on the bathroom ceiling. The generational gap between the parties was aggravated by an expectation gap between them. The court infers from the evidence that by late 1995 the plaintiff deduced that the defendants were discontented troublemakers. They were, however, persons to whom he owed certain duties as a matter of common law and statutory fiat; General Statutes § 47a-7; and who owed duties to him. General Statutes §47a-11. In December, the defendants inadvertently gave the plaintiffs an unsigned rent check; they promptly remedied the oversight. The defendants paid the January, 1996, rent. In February, the defendants refused to pay the rent because of the plaintiff's failure to remedy the problem causing the mildew build-up in the bathroom. On February 14, 1996, the plaintiffs caused the defendants to be served with a notice to quit and thereafter commenced a summary process action. The defendants vacated the premises on April 14, 1996.

I
Addressing the second count first, the plaintiffs allege that the "defendants during their occupancy of said leased premises, caused damage to the same as follows: Living room and master bedroom oak floors scratched and spotted; Fiberglass bathtub scratched; living room, dining room and master bedroom screens broken; Front door light protective glass missing, and door had to be cleaned, sanded, and painted; glass for one bathroom light missing back door repaired and painted [sic]; kitchen sink light broken off in socket; garage doors, walls, roof, floor, repaired; outside grounds required filling of holes, reseeding and removal of leaves."

The parties' lease provided, inter alia, that the "Tenant covenants with the said Landlord . . . to commit no waste, to repair all broken window glass, and to peaceably quit and surrender CT Page 9574 the premises at the end of the term . . . in as good condition as the same are or shall be put in by the Landlord during said term, reasonable wear and use thereof and damage by the elements excepted. . . ." The lease also provided that the defendant Ross could keep his dog on the premises, that "[t]he tenants are responsible for mowing the lawn and clearing the snow from the driveway," and that "[t]enants agree to purchase oil from Clintonville Oil Co."

The plaintiff had the burden of proving the disputed allegations of his complaint, specifically the nature and terms of the rental agreement and the defendant's breach of that agreement. See Jefferson Garden Associates v. Greene, 202 Conn. 128, 143,520 A.2d 173 (1987); Cook v. Teitelman, 102 Conn. 574, 577, 129 A. 546 (1925); Southland Corporation v. Vernon, 1 Conn. App. 439, 443,473 A.2d 318 (1984); S. H. V. C., Inc. v. Roy, 37 Conn. Sup. 579, 580,428 A.2d 806 (App. Sess. 1981).

"The landlord bears the burden of proof on all elements of a damage claim. This means that the landlord must prove that (a) the damage occurred, (b) it exceeded normal wear and tear, and (c) it was caused by the tenant, Kulenski v. Siclari, NH-539 (1990); Stutzv. Andren, SNBR-381 (1992); Lurie v. Baker, NH-499 (1990); Pilaginv. Michalski, H-603 (1985). Damage may be shown either by direct evidence or circumstantially. However, a tenant is not liable for damages that already existed when he moved into the apartment or for damage which occurred after he vacated, Wareck v. ConnecticutChair Car Co., NH-557, 6 CSCR 713 (1991); Slaughter v. McFarlane, NH-583 (1992). Similarly, he is not liable for damage caused by persons for whom he is not responsible.

"The tenant is also not liable for what is usually described as `normal' or `reasonable' wear and tear, Dell'Oro v. Kelly, SNBR-384 (1992); Grzewinski v. George, H-930 (1989); Opinion ofthe Attorney General, 6 CLT #38, p. 19 (1980). The determination of what is wear and tear, as distinct from what is property damage, is heavily dependent on the facts of the particular case; but in general it refers to deterioration of or damage to the property which can be expected to occur from normal usage. For example, the tenant is not liable for wear to a landlord-provided carpet which reflects normal usage of a rug. On the other hand, the tenant may be liable for the cost of cleaning a rug which has become urine-stained because of the tenant's dog, Toczydlowski v.Nicolaedis, NH-223 (1984). CT Page 9575

"Wear and tear also includes normal repainting and cleaning which occur at the end of a tenancy. The tenant is not [necessarily] liable for nail or pin holes in a plaster wall which would ordinarily be spackled as part of a routine repainting,Bronzi v. Barone, H-533 (1984); Pilagin v. Michalski, H-603 (1985). Each claim must be evaluated on its own merits, in light of the general principle that some wear and tear is inevitable in rental property." DiBiaso v. Gargiulo, Superior Court, judicial district of New Haven, Housing Session, No. C.V.N.H. 9009-3970 (July 9, 1993).

Informed by these teachings and applying the applicable burden of proof, the court finds that the plaintiffs have not proven their claims of property damage. The oak floors were over twenty years old and had never been sanded; the defendants did not damage them beyond normal wear and tear. The fiberglass bathtub was the original bathtub installed in the house. When the defendants commenced their tenancy, the bathtub already had holes plugged with putty and would not hold water. The defendants did not create any new holes in the tub. The front door light protective glass was not damaged by the defendants but simply fell off. The plaintiffs similarly have clearly failed to sustain their burden of proof as to all other claims, except that as to the claim that screens were broken. As to this claim the evidence is in equipoise. The defendants admit that Ross's dog damaged the screens, damage which even the plaintiff concedes was not substantial. The defendants claim that they repaired the screens before they vacated the house.

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Bluebook (online)
1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 9572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hackbarth-v-ross-no-cv-96-7800-aug-1997-connsuperct-1997.