Meribear Productions, Inc. v. Frank

340 Conn. 711
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedSeptember 22, 2021
DocketSC20473
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 340 Conn. 711 (Meribear Productions, Inc. v. Frank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meribear Productions, Inc. v. Frank, 340 Conn. 711 (Colo. 2021).

Opinion

MERIBEAR PRODUCTIONS, INC. v. JOAN E. FRANK ET AL. (SC 20473) Robinson, C. J., and McDonald, D’Auria, Mullins, Kahn and Ecker, Js.

Syllabus

The plaintiff, M Co., which had obtained a judgment in California against the defendants, J and G, sought to enforce that judgment in Connecticut and to recover damages in connection with a home staging services and lease agreement between the parties. Pursuant to the agreement, M Co., a California corporation, was to provide design and decorating services, including the delivery and installation of rental furniture and décor, for the purpose of making the defendants’ Connecticut residence more attractive to potential buyers. J was the sole signatory to the agreement, Page 96 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL January 11, 2022

712 JANUARY, 2022 340 Conn. 711 Meribear Productions, Inc. v. Frank but M Co. negotiated the agreement exclusively with G. The lease required an initial payment and had an initial term of four months. If the residence was not sold within that term, the lease would continue on a month-to-month basis at a monthly rate. One provision of the agreement contained both a choice of law clause, providing that Califor- nia law governed the agreement, and a forum selection clause, which vested courts in Los Angeles, California, with jurisdiction over disputes arising under the agreement and provided that the parties consented to the jurisdiction of that court. Beneath that provision, G amended the choice of law clause, writing in that, ‘‘[s]ince this is a contract for an agreement taking place in the state of Connecticut, Connecticut laws will [supersede] those of California.’’ Additionally, although G did not sign the agreement, he signed an addendum to the agreement authorizing M Co. to charge his credit card for the initial payment. G made the initial payment to M Co., which then delivered and installed the rental furniture and décor. Thereafter, the defendants defaulted on their pay- ment obligations. The defendants denied M Co. access to the premises when it attempted to repossess its furniture and décor, which ultimately remained in the residence for approximately three years. M Co. filed an action in California Superior Court, which rendered a default judgment against the defendants after they failed to appear. When the default judgment remained unsatisfied, M Co. filed the present action, seeking enforcement of the California judgment and alleging breach of contract and quantum meruit. As to the claim seeking enforcement of the Califor- nia judgment, the trial court concluded that the California court lacked personal jurisdiction over J, but not over G, and that the California court’s judgment was entitled to full faith and credit as to G. As to the breach of contract claim, the court found that J had breached the home staging services agreement. In doing so, it rejected J’s special defense that the agreement was unenforceable because it failed to comply with certain provisions of the Home Solicitation Sales Act (§ 42-134a et seq.) (HSSA). The court specifically determined that a home staging agree- ment, which involves the use of goods and services to facilitate the sale or rental or real property, was excluded from the purview of the HSSA, which exempts transactions ‘‘pertaining to the sale or rental of real property’’ from its requirements. Accordingly, the trial court rendered judgment for M Co. and against G in connection with the enforcement of the California judgment and awarded M Co. the full amount of that judgment. In connection with the breach of contract claim, the court rendered judgment for M Co. and against J, and awarded M Co. damages for the conversion of M Co.’s furniture and décor, as well as for the associated rental loss of that inventory. Having done so, the court declined to address M Co.’s quantum meruit claim as to J. Thereafter, M Co. withdrew the breach of contract and quantum meruit claims as to G, and the defendants appealed. Held: January 11, 2022 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL Page 97

340 Conn. 711 JANUARY, 2022 713 Meribear Productions, Inc. v. Frank 1. The trial court correctly concluded that the California court had personal jurisdiction over G, G having consented to jurisdiction in California by virtue of the agreement’s forum selection clause, and, accordingly, the trial court properly found that the California judgment was enforceable against G: although a nonsignatory to a contract generally is not bound by a forum selection clause contained therein, under the ‘‘closely related’’ doctrine, a nonsignatory may be bound by that clause if he was so intimately involved in the negotiation, formation, execution, or ratifica- tion of the contract that it was reasonably foreseeable that he would be bound by it, considering factors such as the nonsignatory’s relation- ship to the signatory and whether the nonsignatory received a direct benefit from the agreement; in the present case, the defendants did not dispute that the forum selection clause in the agreement was valid and enforceable, and G was so closely related to the agreement that he was bound by its forum selection clause, especially when G was married to J and lived in the residence she owned, in which they wrongfully used M Co.’s inventory for three years; moreover, in addition to receiving a direct benefit under the agreement, only G, and not J, participated in the negotiations, he made a substantive change to the agreement prior to its execution, notably amending the choice of law clause while leaving the forum selection clause in that same provision untouched, and he executed an addendum to the agreement, pursuant to which he author- ized the sole payment made to M Co. that prompted M Co.’s full perfor- mance of its contractual obligations. 2. The defendants could not prevail on their claim that the home staging services agreement was unenforceable due to M Co.’s noncompliance with certain provisions of the HSSA, as the trial court correctly con- cluded that the transaction between the parties was not a ‘‘home solicita- tion sale,’’ as defined therein, and, therefore, was outside the purview of the HSSA: the provisions of the HSSA apply only to ‘‘home solicitation sale[s],’’ the statutory (§ 42-134a (a) (5)) definition of which excludes any transaction ‘‘pertaining to the sale or rental of real property’’; moreover, although a narrow construction of that language that applied only to contracts for the sale or rental of real property was inconsistent with the dictionary definitions of the phrase ‘‘pertaining to,’’ this court none- theless concluded that it would yield absurd results to construe the real property exception as applying to all transactions for goods and services that relate to, or are an adjunct or accessory to, the sale or rental of real property; accordingly, this court turned to extratextual sources, including legislative history, the federal regulations on which the real property exception was based, and sister state precedent, and, consistent with the liberal construction afforded to remedial statutes such as the HSSA, concluded that a ‘‘home solicitation sale’’ is not strictly limited to the sale or rental of real property but, instead, includes a limited category of consumer goods and services that may be excluded under the real property exception; in the present case, the sale of the residence Page 98 CONNECTICUT LAW JOURNAL January 11, 2022

714 JANUARY, 2022 340 Conn. 711 Meribear Productions, Inc. v. Frank was the stated purpose of the agreement, the duration of the agreement was defined by how long it took for the property to sell, and the sale of the property delimited the agreement’s various terms by, for example, allowing M Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
340 Conn. 711, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meribear-productions-inc-v-frank-conn-2021.