Kimbrell v. Rossitto

507 A.2d 120, 6 Conn. App. 638, 1986 Conn. App. LEXIS 905
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedApril 1, 1986
Docket3205; 3268
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 507 A.2d 120 (Kimbrell v. Rossitto) 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
Kimbrell v. Rossitto, 507 A.2d 120, 6 Conn. App. 638, 1986 Conn. App. LEXIS 905 (Colo. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

Hull, J.

These two cases involve an ill-fated drug smuggling venture which rivals any current bestseller in its cast of colorful characters and its high seas intrigue. The actions were tried together and combined on appeal because the relationships and events giving rise to each case overlap substantially. In the first action, Kimbrell v. Rossitto, Kimbrell sued Rossitto to recover for the loss of a forty-two foot, 1975 Westsail cutter rig sailboat. Rossitto, in the second case, Rossitto v. Oslo Development Co., sought the return of certain real property located in Connecticut which he claimed Oslo obtained by use of duress. The court found for Rossitto in both actions. Kimbrell and Oslo now appeal from the judgments rendered in their respective cases. Kimbrell claims error in the court’s factual findings while Oslo challenges certain of the court’s evidentiary rulings. We conclude that the trial court’s actions were legally and logically correct and its factual determinations not clearly erroneous, and, accordingly, we find no error.

The trial court found the following facts: The plaintiff Kimbrell and a childhood friend purchased a forty-two foot sailboat intending to use it to start a charter business in Florida. Neither of the two men had any experience in chartering boats, and the venture was not successful. Kimbrell, who had no other job, lived on the boat, the Tamure, and spent his time there entertaining. During this period, Kimbrell met Rossitto and the two men became friendly. On one occasion, Rossitto showed Kimbrell a large supply of marihuana, and later he offered to help Kimbrell make some money. Kimbrell thereafter began working for Rossitto collecting debts [641]*641from drug dealers. By this time, Kimbrell’s friend wanted to sell his one-half interest in the Tamure, and Kimbrell, with Rossitto’s financial assistance, purchased that interest and also paid the arrearage on a note he had taken out to finance the boat originally. Kimbrell then executed a sales agreement transferring a one-half interest in the boat to Rossitto. Rossitto later equipped the Tamure with sophisticated machinery, and made other extensive improvements on the boat.

At the time he met Kimbrell, Rossitto was a wholesaler of illegal drugs. His supplier was a man named Bill Ellswick. Ellswick advanced Rossitto drugs for some time until Rossitto owed him over a million dollars. When Ellswick first began pressuring him for repayment, Rossitto replaced Kimbrell as his collector. He needed to raise as much money as he could, as fast as possible, and he felt that Kimbrell was not effective at eliciting payment. Kimbrell stopped working and returned to his home in Mississippi after agreeing with Rossitto that they would share the use of the Tamure equally during the year.

The change in collectors did not, as Rossitto had hoped, generate the money he needed, and the pressure from Ellswick was building. Two of Ellswick’s collectors beat Rossitto to reinforce the need for immediate repayment. Rossitto began to fear for his safety and anxiously searched for ways to raise the money. Finally, he decided to bypass Ellswick and obtain drugs directly from growers in Colombia with the hope that he would reap a large profit which he could then use to pay Ellswick.

Rossitto decided to use the Tamure to pick up the drugs in Colombia, and he made the necessary preparations for the trip. Just before the Tamure was ready to sail, however, the captain called Kimbrell in Mississippi and told him the boat was going to the islands. [642]*642Kimbrell immediately called Rossitto for an explanation. Rossitto told him not to worry, that the Tamure was “going south,” an expression used in the drug trade to mean making a drug run to South America, and that he would get his cut. Kimbrell said nothing further.

The Colombia venture was a disaster. Rossitto’s contacts could not deliver the marihuana. The crew members, including a man named Dana Stipes, were arrested and imprisoned in Colombia for approximately one year when they brought the boat from international waters into Colombian waters. The boat was impounded and sank sometime later. Rossitto was still in debt to Ellswick.

Approximately one year later, Ellswick sent Stipes, who was then working for him, to recover the money Rossitto owed. Stipes began to take Rossitto’s possessions: a Rolex watch, gold jewelry, a Maserati, and land in Aspen, Colorado. Rossitto did not resist until Stipes attempted to obtain Rossitto’s Connecticut property, the Deep River Plantation, a six and one-half acre estate on the Connecticut River in the town of Deep River. By that time, Kimbrell had already initiated his suit against Rossitto based on the loss of the Tamure, and he had obtained a $300,000 prejudgment attachment on the property. When the attachment was lifted for a brief time, Rossitto transferred the property to Lucille and Nuzio Coviello, his mother and stepfather, with the understanding that they would reconvey it to him at his request. Stipes then called Rossitto’s family and told them that if they did not sign the property over to him, their son’s life would be in danger. They agreed to convey the property and signed a warranty deed transferring it to Oslo Development Company, a Panamanian Corporation.

Rossitto had, during this period, remained involved in drug smuggling activity. Eventually, he was arrested [643]*643and convicted on drug related charges. He spent approximately one year in federal prison, and when he was released began to cooperate with drug enforcement officials. He entered the federal witness protection program, was relocated, and was given a new identity. At this point, Rossitto sought to recover Deep River Plantation from Oslo and instituted the other suit involved in this appeal.

I

Kimbrell v. Rossitto

In this action, Kimbrell sued Rossitto for the loss of the Tamure. He claimed four grounds for imposing liability on Rossitto: (1) breach of express contract based on Rossitto’s failure to return the boat and his failure to keep it in the territorial waters of the United States; (2) conversion; (3) negligence; and (4) breach of contract based on Rossitto’s failure to pay one-half of the mortgage on the boat.1 Rossitto counterclaimed in two counts, alleging that Kimbrell failed to pay his proportional share of the maintenance costs for the boat.2 The United States government, claiming an interest in the Deep River Plantation because Rossitto was delinquent in tax payment and because he allegedly purchased the land with money made from the illegal sale of drugs, moved to be made a third party defendant. That motion was granted by the court, Vasington, J., prior to trial.

The court found against Kimbrell on his complaint and against Rossitto on his counterclaim. In denying [644]*644Kimbrell recovery, the court relied on its findings that he had been aware of and acquiesced in Rossitto’s use of the Tamure to smuggle drugs. The court decided against Rossitto on his counterclaim, finding that he had neither expected Kimbrell to contribute to the Tamure’s maintenance, nor asked him to do so.

Kimbrell now appeals from the judgment rendered against him claiming, essentially, that the court’s factual findings are incorrect.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
507 A.2d 120, 6 Conn. App. 638, 1986 Conn. App. LEXIS 905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kimbrell-v-rossitto-connappct-1986.