Herring v. Daniels, No. Cv 98-0582982 S (Oct. 20, 2000)

2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 12909
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 20, 2000
DocketNo. CV 98-0582982 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 12909 (Herring v. Daniels, No. Cv 98-0582982 S (Oct. 20, 2000)) 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
Herring v. Daniels, No. Cv 98-0582982 S (Oct. 20, 2000), 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 12909 (Colo. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The plaintiff, Jerry Herring, brings this action in three counts against the defendant, Yvonne L. Daniels in a lengthy and detailed second amended complaint.

The plaintiff, in his first count, maintains that he and defendant are co-owners of a piece of real estate located in Hartford, Connecticut, and known as 81 Canterbury Street as to which defendant has legal title. He claims that he is the owner of an equitable interest in said property by virtue of having resided continuously in the property from 1987 to July 1998 where they lived together as though they were husband and wife and treated said property as a commonly owned family residence. He also maintains that he resided with the defendant as a co-owner under a verbal, express, and implied understanding that they would live together in said property as though they were husband and wife and share the ownership, upkeep, maintenance and expense of said property.

In support of this claim he states that he paid the monthly mortgage payments on a first mortgage with Northeast Savings; where defendant was the borrower and mortgagor; that he obtained a second mortgage with the Hartford Firefighters Federal Credit Union (HFFCU) in the principal amount of $60,000 where he was the borrower and the defendant was the co-maker and the mortgagor which mortgage was later paid off with the CT Page 12910 proceeds of a first mortgage refinance loan with the HFFCU in the principal amount of $100,000 where he was the borrower and the defendant was the co-maker of said loan and the mortgagor. He further alleges that he paid off with his own funds the defendant co-owner's unsecured loan to Conn Conn in the amount of $11,610.73 thereby keeping said real property free and clear of an encumbrance by said creditor. He further claims to have paid off with his own funds in 1987 an attachment and lien on said property arising from a debt of the defendant/co-owner to the State of Connecticut in the amount of $2,353.59. Plaintiff also claims that he paid the monthly mortgage payments on the first mortgage refinance loan of 1993 with HFFCU as well as by payment of the monthly mortgage payments on the second mortgage with HFFCU from February 1987 to May 17, 1993, when said mortgage was paid off in full. In support of his claim he alleges that he did the general maintenance and repairs on said property from 1987 to August of 1998, and he paid off a loan on May 17, 1993 with his share of joint funds of the parties in the amount of $2,388.02. Plaintiff further claims that up until August 1998 he and the defendant verbally agreed on numerous occasions expressly to share forever the expenses of and benefits of said real property as if they both owned it equally and to share in the earnings and property accumulated by them during their relationship. He further states that up until August 1998 the parties agreed implicitly by their conduct and/or words to share forever the expenses and benefits of said property as if they both owned it equally and to share in the earnings and property accumulated by them during their relationship.

In a separate paragraph of the complaint the plaintiff alleges that since January 1999 there were additional reasons why the plaintiff is the owner of an equitable interest in said property; namely, that commencing in January 1999 he and the defendant agreed that he could again reside in said property and that he continues to reside therein and in January 1999 or several months thereafter they agreed that they would get married and go to marriage counseling and that they agreed that the defendant would pay all the mortgage loan payments until they were married and while the plaintiff resided there; that the plaintiff would pay one-half of the mortgage loan payments after they were married and, further, that the plaintiff would receive a certain sum of money from their planned second mortgage loan proceeds, $1,000, which sum was paid and although in January 1999 the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff $3,000 immediately and another $4,000 before January 2000, neither payment was made; that in April 1999 after some planning, the plaintiff assisted the defendant in raising cash to help the defendant's son by releasing his Lis Pendens and thus help the defendant obtain a second mortgage on her property and again in August 1999 he assisted the defendant in raising cash to help her son by releasing his Lis Pendens and that the defendant also agreed that the plaintiff would receive a certain sum of money from said CT Page 12911 mortgage loan, namely $1,500, which sum was paid to him.

In the seventh paragraph of his complaint he states that Household Finance has a first mortgage on the Canterbury real property in the original amount of $90,000 dated August 1999 and that Atlantic Mortgage has a second mortgage in the original amount of $15,000 dated August 1999.

In the eighth paragraph the plaintiff claims that payments made towards the maintenance, upkeep and mortgages on said real property made after July 1, 1998 until such time as he resumed residing in said premises in January 1999 were made with the intention that the same would be for his sole benefit in a future accounting or contribution.

In paragraph nine he claims that payments by him toward maintenance, upkeep and mortgages on said real property made during the time the plaintiff resided in said premises up through September 1998 were made with the verbal, express and implied agreement to share forever the expenses of and benefits of said real property as if they both owned it equally and to share in the earnings and property accumulated by them during their relationship.

In the tenth paragraph of the first count the plaintiff claims that payments made toward mortgages on said real property subsequent to January of 1999 and in particular in June of 1999 where made with a verbal, express, and implied agreement to share forever the expenses of, and benefits of, said real property as if they both owned it equally and to share in the earnings and property accumulated by them during their relationship.

In paragraph eleven the plaintiff claims that despite demand made to the defendant she has not continued to share with the plaintiff her interest in said real property and has breached said agreements to share in the property and to marry the plaintiff all to the plaintiff's damage.

In the second count the plaintiff alleges a contractual right to share accumulated assets. He repeats paragraph one through ten of this first count and claims in addition, that the payments made by the plaintiff as aforementioned were made by the plaintiff for the benefit of the defendant co-owner with the intention of the plaintiff and the understanding between himself and the defendant that said payments would be applied to the interest of the plaintiff in said property or paid back to the plaintiff within a reasonable time and that despite demand made the defendant has not continued to share with the plaintiff her interest in said property nor has she paid said amounts to the plaintiff and she CT Page 12912 has breached said agreements to share her interest in said property and to marry the plaintiff, all to his damage.

In a third count the plaintiff claims restitution based on quantum meruit.

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Related

Dunham v. Dunham
528 A.2d 1123 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1987)
Mallory v. Mallory
539 A.2d 995 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1988)
State v. Davis
641 A.2d 370 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1994)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 12909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herring-v-daniels-no-cv-98-0582982-s-oct-20-2000-connsuperct-2000.