Lawler v. Blazawski, No. Cv 94 0056909 S (Feb. 11, 1998)

1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 1651, 21 Conn. L. Rptr. 383
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1998
DocketNo. CV 94 0056909 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 1651 (Lawler v. Blazawski, No. Cv 94 0056909 S (Feb. 11, 1998)) 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
Lawler v. Blazawski, No. Cv 94 0056909 S (Feb. 11, 1998), 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 1651, 21 Conn. L. Rptr. 383 (Colo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiff, William R. Lawler, a licensed real estate salesman, who became associated in 1993 with the franchised real estate agency owned by the defendant, Philip M. Blazawski, a licensed real estate broker, has brought this action to recover commissions that he claims are due and payable under a written settlement agreement that he alleges was made between the parties on September 30, 1994, the date that he received written notice from the defendant of his termination. The defendant alleges that the document relied upon by the plaintiff was obtained from him while he was under duress and that it did not therefore supersede the provisions concerning the payment of the plaintiff's share of the defendant broker's commissions under the original so-called "Broker and Salesperson Agreement" (Agreement) which was signed by the parties on January 25, 1994, and was stipulated by counsel to be the contractual document that governed the relationship between the parties in terms of their respective rights and obligations.

The theory of liability relied upon by the plaintiff in the first count of his complaint is that the defendant breached the "settlement agreement" which Blazawski claims to have signed under duress, and he seeks to recover under the second count on the alternative theory of unjust enrichment. In the last count of his complaint, as amended, he asserts a claim for punitive damages and attorney's fees on the ground that the actions and conduct of the defendant, prior to his termination and thereafter, constituted a violation of CUTPA, and he alleges in support of his claimed cause of action under that statute, that Blazawski "engaged in trade or commerce by contracting with the plaintiff to provide services to him, and/or by listing and selling property to the general public . . .", and although Blazawski admits in his answer that he "engages in trade or commerce as to the general public [he denies that] the defendant engaged in trade or commerce with the plaintiff within the CT Page 1652 meaning of [CUTPA]."

The defendant's special defenses relate to Lawler's actions and conduct during the two day period before September 30, 1994, the date of his formal termination by means of a written notice given to him as required by the Agreement, and includes the claim stated in the first special defense, which is not disputed, that on the evening of September 28, 1994, after a heated argument that morning between the parties, Lawler discovered when he returned to his office that all of his files had been removed from his desk, and then proceeded to remove about half of the agency's "records of active real estate listings, pending transactions and sales." The second special defense alleges that during that same period, the plaintiff, "through an agent in the defendant's office, made threats to do bodily harm and injury to the defendant and to do damage to [his] property and [that he] signed the [settlement] document under such threats through coercion and under duress [so that] the document is null and void and of no effect as a contract between the parties."

The first of the five counts of the defendant's counterclaim sounds in conversion, based on the plaintiff's "theft" of the broker's files and his refusal to return them until the "settlement agreement" had been signed, and the three counts that follow claim that Lawler, in his subsequent attempts to enforce the terms of the purported settlement agreement violated certain regulations of the real estate commission governing the conduct of brokers and salespersons, as well as the express provisions of the original Agreement concerning unsold listings and the division of commissions on sales after the termination of their association. The fifth count alleges that the plaintiff's conduct constituted a CUTPA violation despite the fact that the defendant's answer to the plaintiff's CUTPA claim states that although the broker "engages in trade or commerce as to the general public [the parties were not] engaged in trade or commerce [with each other] within the meaning of [CUTPA]".

After the plaintiff had rested, and the defendant had moved to dismiss all of the counts of the complaint except for the first count based on breach of contract, the plaintiff renewed the claim that he had made at the outset of the trial that Lawler was an independent contractor, based principally on paragraph 7 of the Agreement which states that "[t]he relationship of the Salesperson to the Broker is that of an independent contractor, and the Salesperson shall not be treated as an employee [of] the CT Page 1653 Broker for Federal Tax purposes or for any other purpose." In response to the court's specific question as to whether the essential "trade or commerce" component of a CUTPA claim could be established where the dispute relates to the termination of the relationship of a broker and his salesperson, counsel stated the plaintiff was providing services to the broker for compensation and that they were both engaged in the trade or commerce of selling real estate, although he acknowledged that no claims were being made that any third parties, including other salespeople in the office or the clients of the agency, had suffered injury or harm of any kind as a result of any of the acts or conduct alleged by the parties against each other in their pleadings.

On the first day of the trial, before any evidence had been presented, and despite the fact that the issue of Lawler's legal status for the purpose of establishing liability under CUTPA was a disputed question of law that had been raised by both parties in their pleadings, plaintiff's counsel stated that they were prepared to stipulate that Lawler was an independent contractor as stated in the standard broker and salesperson agreement that they had signed on January 25, 1994, but the court rejected counsel's offer to agree as to a matter of law without any evidentiary basis for such a "stipulation". In the course of the trial, Thomas Welles, a local real estate broker and owner of the real estate agency that Lawler joined immediately after his termination, testified that although the contractual designation of a salesperson as an independent contractor was required under General Statutes § 20-312b to insulate real estate brokers from liability under the Workers' Compensation Act, it was his personal opinion and "the consensus in the profession [that the] salespeople are more akin to self-employed people."

Welles also offered testimony, based on his personal experience as a real estate broker for more than twenty-five years, about the nature and extent of the broker's right to control the means and methods of the work of his sales agents, which is considered to be the most important test of whether a salesperson is an independent contractor or an employee, and was expressly incorporated into paragraph 7 of the Agreement as a contractual condition of their relationship, despite the fact that § 20-312b does not mandate the inclusion of such a provision in the written contract that is required under the statute in order to protect the broker from liability for workers' compensation. In that connection it should be noted that the second sentence of the same paragraph, as noted earlier in CT Page 1654 this opinion, states that the salesperson's status is that of an independent contractor for all purposes, but omits the significant qualification in subsection (1) of the statute that the salesperson is given that status "for purposes of workers' compensation" only.

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Bluebook (online)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 1651, 21 Conn. L. Rptr. 383, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawler-v-blazawski-no-cv-94-0056909-s-feb-11-1998-connsuperct-1998.