Licari v. Blackwelder

539 A.2d 609, 14 Conn. App. 46, 1988 Conn. App. LEXIS 93
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedApril 5, 1988
Docket3968
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 539 A.2d 609 (Licari v. Blackwelder) 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
Licari v. Blackwelder, 539 A.2d 609, 14 Conn. App. 46, 1988 Conn. App. LEXIS 93 (Colo. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

Bieluch, J.

This is an appeal by the defendants from the judgment of the trial court awarding damages to the plaintiffs for breach of the defendants’ duty as real estate brokers to find a buyer for the plaintiffs’ property at the best possible price, and for acting improperly in dealing for themselves to the financial loss of the plaintiffs. The defendants claim that certain of the court’s factual findings were not substantiated by sufficient evidence, and that some of the court’s conclusions were not only unsupported by the facts of the case, but also were irrelevant to the cause of action brought by the plaintiffs and therefore were not issues properly before the court. Our review of the transcript and record in this case reveals that the court had before it sufficient evidence on which to base its findings, and that the court’s conclusions were fully supported by the facts and the law and were relevant to the issues presented. We therefore find no error.

The trial court found the following facts. The six plaintiffs1 are brothers and sisters who inherited from their parents the family home and property in question located in Westport. The plaintiffs, whom the court found to be “unsophisticated lay people with no extensive dealings in real estate,” decided to sell the property in 1978. The plaintiffs had no real knowledge as to the actual or potential value of their inherited real estate, which was located in a neighborhood of mixed residential and commercial properties at a time of changing property values. Upon the recommendation of a neighbor, the plaintiffs contacted Robert Schwartz, a Norwalk real estate broker, for guidance and assistance in the sale of their property.

[48]*48Schwartz consulted with the real estate agency of the defendants Donald Blackwelder and Hannah Opert, Westport brokers experienced as to the marketing and values of property in the area of the plaintiffs’ home. The defendants and Schwartz discussed several prospective clients generated by the defendants who might be interested in various listings held by Schwartz. The defendants and Schwartz also agreed to a “co-broke arrangement” under which they would share the real estate listings and divide the commissions evenly if one of the defendants’ prospective clients purchased real estate listed by Schwartz. Thereafter, Opert asked Schwartz to secure a listing on the plaintiffs’ property so that it could be shown to a prospective buyer. On October 18,1978, Schwartz obtained an exclusive twenty-four hour right to sell the plaintiffs’ real estate at a price of $125,000, and the property was immediately shown to the defendants’ prospective buyer by a sales agent employed by Schwartz.

Within the twenty-four hour listing period obtained by Schwartz, the defendants made their own offer of $115,000 for the plaintiffs’ property, which was accepted by the plaintiffs. The defendants did not negotiate on behalf of or for the plaintiffs with the potential buyer secured by them, and did not allow for a reasonable period of time to expire for such negotiations before they made their own personal offer. The defendants also did not disclose to the plaintiffs their understanding of the potential value that the plaintiffs’ property might have to other buyers. The plaintiffs, therefore, believed that they had sold their property at its true market value. On December 29,1978, the plaintiffs transferred title to the premises to the defendants upon payment of $115,000 as follows: cash in the amount of $11,500 and a purchase money mortgage2 in the amount of $103,500 from the purchasers.

[49]*49The plaintiffs were led to believe that the defendants would occupy and use the property. The defendants neither took possession nor contracted for any improvements to the property. Instead, immediately upon signing the contract to buy the plaintiffs’ property for $115,000, the defendant Opert contracted on behalf of her partnership to sell the home to another buyer for the price of $160,000. This potential buyer, a neighbor of the plaintiffs, was previously known by them to be interested in the property, but the plaintiffs had instructed Schwartz not to contact him. Title from the defendants passed to this buyer on January 4,1979, six days after its purchase from the plaintiffs, for $160,000, a gain to the defendants of $45,000 on their cash investment of $11,500. Their purchase money mortgage held by the plaintiffs for six days was paid and released at the second title transfer.

The plaintiffs’ revised complaint in two counts claimed first, that the defendants breached their duty to the plaintiffs by withholding from them information of other negotiations with potential buyers for the purchase of the plaintiffs’ property at a higher price, and second, that the defendants intentionally misrepresented the identities of the serious prospective buyers in order to mislead the plaintiffs into selling the property to the defendants at a lower price.

The court, from the testimony and exhibits offered during the trial, found that “the more credible and weightier evidence supported] an ultimate fact conclusion that the defendants were obligated to act on behalf of the best interest of the plaintiffs.” This obligation, the court concluded, “imposed upon the defendants the duty to find a buyer for the property at the best price to the plaintiffs based upon the defendants’ knowledge, [50]*50advice and information concerning all material facts affecting the property in question.” The court also found that the defendants not only breached a duty they owed to their own prospective client, but that “they also acted incorrectly in dealing for themselves at the expense of the plaintiffs.” The defendants’ obligation to the plaintiffs, the court held, was the result of the defendants’ relationship with Schwartz, the listing broker with whom they had an agreement “to split Mr. Schwartz’s commission on the sale to the defendants.” Although it found that the plaintiffs had not proven any actual fraud, the court did find that the defendants’ failure to use “reasonable efforts on behalf of the plaintiffs,” and their own personal offer without disclosure of material facts affecting the plaintiffs’ property rendered the defendants’ “clear profit” of $45,000 ‘ ‘unconscionable. ’ ’

The defendants appeal from the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiffs awarding $45,000 plus legal interest from January 4, 1979, with taxable costs.

The defendants’ claims on appeal begin with an argument that the evidence presented during the trial was insufficient to substantiate several of the court’s factual findings. Specifically, the defendants claim that the court erred in finding (1) that the plaintiffs were unsophisticated lay people with no extensive dealings in real estate, (2) that the plaintiffs had no real knowledge as to actual or potential value of their inherited real estate, (3) that Schwartz consulted with the defendants as to marketing and prices of properties in the neighborhood of the plaintiffs’ property in order to determine the suggested listing price of $125,000, (4) that the defendants asked Schwartz to show the plaintiffs’ property to one of their prospective clients, (5) that the defendants made their own personal offer before allowing a reasonable period of time to expire for negotiations to take place between prospective buyers and the [51]

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Bluebook (online)
539 A.2d 609, 14 Conn. App. 46, 1988 Conn. App. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/licari-v-blackwelder-connappct-1988.