Leary v. Weisman

125 A.2d 493, 20 Conn. Super. Ct. 116, 20 Conn. Supp. 116, 1956 Conn. Super. LEXIS 59
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 4, 1956
DocketFile 21230
StatusPublished

This text of 125 A.2d 493 (Leary v. Weisman) 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
Leary v. Weisman, 125 A.2d 493, 20 Conn. Super. Ct. 116, 20 Conn. Supp. 116, 1956 Conn. Super. LEXIS 59 (Colo. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

Troland, J.

This is an action in tort claiming damages for alleged wrongful acts of the defendants, acting in concert, against the plaintiff, during the period commencing about January 1, 1953, and continuing to the date of the complaint, August 13, 1953.

To pass on the merits of plaintiff’s exceptions to the report of the referee requires first a determination of the issues in the present action. The issues may be clarified and high-lighted by a statement of the situation and circumstances of the parties prior to the period of the proceedings complained about, as established by the pleadings and such facts found by the referee as are not in dispute or are conceded.

BACKGROUND

The defendant Daniel J. Leary was a defendant in the so-called Waterbury Conspiracy Case (State v. Hayes, 127 Conn. 543.) At the commencement of said prosecution the defendant Leary was principal owner and in control of Diamond Ginger Ale, Inc., a prosperous corporation in Waterbury, Connecticut, and at said time the plaintiff, Frank Leary, brother of said defendant, was an employee of said corporation. The defendant Daniel J. Leary was convicted in said prosecution, and thereafter was absent from this state for several years, and later for a long period of time was in confinement at Wethersfield state prison, until his release on parole in March, 1953.

In connection with his trouble and prior to his leaving the state and subsequent confinement, Daniel J". Leary made certain conveyances of real property, including one February 21,1938, of land in Middle-bury, Connecticut, to Frank Leary and his sister Margaret and one later of land in Florida to Frank *118 Leary. In 1944, while Daniel Leary was absent, from this state, the plaintiff, Frank Leary, was-elected president of Diamond Ginger Ale, Inc., and was thereafter re-elected to this office each successive year until 1953. The corporation lost much money in 1952.

About January 1, 1953, Daniel J. Leary was in prison at Wethersfield and eligible to parole. At said, time the defendant Herman J. Weisman was attorney for Diamond Ginger Ale, Inc. Both the plaintiff, Frank A. Leary, and the defendant Daniel J. Leary owned or controlled substantial stock-holdings in the corporation. Daniel J. Leary was-placed on parole in March, 1953, and thereupon, entered the employ of Diamond Ginger Ale, Inc.

THE ISSUES

The plaintiff complains that during the period'. January 1, 1953, to August 13, 1953, “the defendants conspired to defraud the plaintiff of Ms control” of Diamond Ginger Ale, Inc., a Connecticut corporation, and to deprive him of the presidency of said corporation.

Certain specific acts are alleged to have been done-pursuant to said plan of conspiracy. It is claimed the defendant Weisman (a) induced the plaintiff to have the annual meeting of the corporation called for February 2, 1953, postponed to April 29, 1953,. and (b) induced the plaintiff to consent to have the secretary of the corporation sign a letter to the-parole board, drafted by Weisman, seeking the release of the defendant Daniel J. Leary upon assurance said Daniel J. Leary would be employed by the-corporation. After the release of Daniel J. Leary from prison, the complaint charges, both defendants, “pursuant to said plan of conspiracy,” induced, the adjournment of the April 29th meeting of the-corporation to May 13, 1953.

*119 At the meeting held on May 13,1953, it is alleged by the plaintiff, the defendant Weisman “declared that the defendant Daniel J. Leary was in control of said corporation because he had proxies representing 10,500 shares of stock, when he knew this to be untrue,” and, “[p]ursuant to said plan of conspiracy, the defendant, Daniel J. Leary, wrongfully asserted control of said corporation and subsequently had the plaintiff deprived of his office as president of said corporation.”

There is further claim on the part of plaintiff that “pursuant to said plan of conspiracy, the defendant Daniel J. Leary, inspired state-wide publicity calumniating the plaintiff,” and that plaintiff, upon the advice of the defendant Weisman, did not publicly defend himself.

The doing of the above described alleged acts is denied by the defendants. It thus appears that the real issues are limited to events happening in a short period of time, and covering a rather limited field.

The court has outlined the issues because the record is long and reflects the extreme bitterness of a battle between brothers, who have other lawsuits pending before the same referee for findings of facts, and the zeal of counsel, and covers a broad field of extraneous matter introduced and developed as “background.” This evidence, offered largely without objection, was tolerated by the referee but is wholly irrelevant to the issue in this case.

The court has carefully read and reread the entire transcript. The exceptions which are taken to the report of the referee in the main are complaints about the alleged failure of the referee to include in his report findings of subordinate facts which are wholly irrelevant to the issue and which, even if it could be said they were undisputed or admitted facts, which they are not, would have no proper bearing on *120 the determination of any issue or cause of action alleged in this pending complaint.

With reference to plaintiff’s specific exceptions to the report, the following is stated: Plaintiff claims the state referee erred in excluding plaintiff’s exhibit Z for identification from the evidence. The offer was of two photostats of papers, identified by the plaintiff as photostats given to him by the defendant Daniel J. Leary, having a heading “Daniel J. Leary Cash Receipts Bank of Manhattan Co. New York — 1938.” The offer was of matter wholly irrelevant to the issues. The offer was made after plaintiff had rested, and during the testimony of the defendant Daniel J. Leary, but to support the testimony of Frank Leary given on cross-examination during the presentation of plaintiff’s case, concerning which plaintiff’s counsel said: “Now, I certainly think that I am entitled to prove whether or not the answers 'that were given then were true or not and this bears on that.” The offer was objected to as having no relevancy, and for lack of “identification.” The objections were sustained on both grounds. This ruling of the referee is believed to be correct. Exception is taken because the state referee did not include in his report a statement concerning said exhibit Z for identification, as a basis for determining the correctness of his ruling. The state referee should have made such a statement. However, the court has the whole record, has read it and is thus aware of all the circumstances, and is enabled to pass on the correctness of the ruling. The case should not be delayed by sending the matter back to the referee for a statement concerning a matter which is obvious.

Paragraph 3 of the exceptions complains because the referee did not make a finding as to plaintiff’s claims of law in his arguments. The action of the referee was correct in this respect.

*121 Paragraph.

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Related

State v. Hayes
18 A.2d 895 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1941)

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Bluebook (online)
125 A.2d 493, 20 Conn. Super. Ct. 116, 20 Conn. Supp. 116, 1956 Conn. Super. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leary-v-weisman-connsuperct-1956.