Maag v. Homechek Real Estate Services, Inc.

843 A.2d 619, 82 Conn. App. 201, 2004 Conn. App. LEXIS 128
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedMarch 30, 2004
DocketAC 23285; AC 23286
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 843 A.2d 619 (Maag v. Homechek Real Estate Services, Inc.) 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
Maag v. Homechek Real Estate Services, Inc., 843 A.2d 619, 82 Conn. App. 201, 2004 Conn. App. LEXIS 128 (Colo. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

Opinion

FOTI, J.

The plaintiff, Jenne Maag, brought the underlying action, sounding in negligence, against the defen[203]*203dants, Homechek Real Estate Services, Inc. (Homechek), and Ernest Belmont. The plaintiff and Homechek, appealing separately, challenge the judgment of the trial court, rendered after a jury verdict, against Homechek and in favor of Belmont. The plaintiff claims that the court improperly denied (1) her motion to set aside the verdict and to render judgment in her favor against Belmont, and (2) her motion to compel the jury to reconsider its verdict. Homechek claims that the court improperly (1) denied its motion to set aside the verdict in light of the jury’s answers to the court’s interrogatories and (2) denied its motion to set aside the verdict when there was insufficient evidence that it was directly liable for the plaintiffs damages. We agree with Homechek that the evidence did not support the verdict; accordingly, we reverse the judgment in part and remand the case with direction to render judgment for Homechek.

The jury reasonably could have found that in September, 1997, the plaintiff hired Homechek, doing business as Pro Chek, to inspect a residential property that she was interested in purchasing. Homechek was primarily engaged in the business of conducting real estate inspections. Belmont was a licensed real estate inspector in Homechek’s employ and, acting as Homechek’s agent, inspected the property and prepared a handwritten inspection report that Homechek later issued to the plaintiff in typewritten form. Relying, in part, on that written report, the plaintiff purchased the property.

The plaintiff later learned that a stone retaining wall approximately 120 feet long and located in close proximity to the rear of her new home was deteriorating and in danger of collapsing. The stone wall was integral to a stone terrace at the rear of the property, the home’s foundation, the home’s immediate grounds and the landscaping. The report did not disclose the wall’s defects. To the contrary, Belmont did not inspect the [204]*204retaining wall, but noted in his report that the retaining walls on the premises were in an “acceptable” condition.

The plaintiff, alleging that the defendants’ negligence caused her financial detriment, brought the underlying action. By way of interrogatories, the jury found that both Homechek and Belmont were negligent in the performance of the home inspection for the plaintiff. The jury attributed 100 percent of the negligence to Homechek and awarded the plaintiff $65,480.1 The court [205]*205denied various postverdict motions that were submitted by the parties, and these appeals followed.

I

THE PLAINTIFFS APPEAL

The record reflects the following undisputed facts. After the jury reported that it had reached a verdict, the court assembled the jury in the courtroom. The court reviewed the jury’s answers to the interrogatories and the completed verdict form. The clerk then read aloud both of those documents, and the jury agreed to its verdict. The court stated that the verdict “is accepted and ordered recorded.” The clerk again read aloud the completed interrogatories and the verdict for a second time. The clerk inquired of the jury if it was its verdict; the jury responded that it was.

Immediately thereafter, the plaintiff’s attorney addressed the court outside of the presence of the jury. [206]*206The plaintiffs attorney argued that “the verdict in favor of [Belmont] is inconsistent with the answer to the interrogatories.” The court responded that it had noticed “some question” with regard to the verdict, but that it had accepted the verdict and ordered that it be recorded. The court stated that the plaintiffs attorney could raise any objections to the verdict by way of postjudgment motions. The plaintiffs attorney then stated that the court could accept and order that a verdict be recorded only after it has been read twice. The plaintiffs attorney argued that the court had accepted and ordered that the verdict be recorded after it had been read once, and asked that the court order the jury to reconsider its verdict. The court denied the request, stating that “once the verdict is accepted and ordered recorded, it is done.” The court then returned the members of the jury to the courtroom, thanked them for their service and discharged them.

The plaintiff thereafter filed a pleading titled “Motion to Set Aside the General Verdict and Judgment Entered Thereon for the Defendant Belmont and Motion for Entry of Judgment for the Plaintiff Based on the Answers to the Court’s Interrogatories,” and a pleading titled “Plaintiffs Motion to Set Aside Verdict and Judgment for the Defendant Belmont and Motion N. O. V.” The court denied those motions.2 The plaintiff argued in those motions, as she does on appeal, that the jury’s answers to the court’s interrogatories contradicted the verdict.

A

The plaintiff first claims that the court improperly denied her motion to render judgment consistent with the jury’s answers to the court’s interrogatories. We disagree.

[207]*207“The role of an appellate court where an appellant seeks a judgment contrary to a general verdict on the basis of the jury’s allegedly inconsistent answers to such interrogatories is extremely limited. ... To justify the entry of a judgment contrary to a general verdict upon the basis of answers to interrogatories, those answers must be such in themselves as conclusively to show that as [a] matter of law judgment could only be rendered for the party against whom the general verdict was found; they must negate every reasonable hypothesis as to the situation provable under the issues made by the pleadings; and in determining that, the court may consider only the issues framed by the pleadings, the general verdict and the interrogatories, with the answers made to them, without resort to the evidence offered at the trial. . . .

“It is not the function of the court to search the record for conflicting answers in order to take the case away from the jury on a theory that gives equal support to inconsistent and uncertain inferences. When a claim is made that the jury’s answers to interrogatories in returning a verdict are inconsistent, the court has the duty to attempt to harmonize the answers.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Suarez v. Dickmont Plastics Corp., 242 Conn. 255, 269-70, 698 A.2d 838 (1997).

The plaintiff claims that the jury’s verdict was improper because the jury found that both Homechek and Belmont were negligent, yet attributed 100 percent of the negligence to Homechek. The plaintiff argues: “Since a corporation can only act through its agents and Belmont was the only agent who performed the services which the jury found to be negligent, the pleadings, the court’s charges, the verdict against Homechek and the jury’s answers to the court’s interrogatories compelled the court, as a matter of law, to apply the law to the facts found by the jury in their answers to [208]*208the court’s interrogatories and to enter judgment for the plaintiff on the basis of said interrogatories.” The plaintiff posits that the jury’s allocation of negligence was “of no consequence” and that, as a matter of law, the verdict against Homechek applied to Belmont.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
843 A.2d 619, 82 Conn. App. 201, 2004 Conn. App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maag-v-homechek-real-estate-services-inc-connappct-2004.