Mucha v. Brown, No. Cv 91 48796 S (Jul. 10, 1997)

1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7245, 20 Conn. L. Rptr. 2
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1997
DocketNo. CV 91 48796 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7245 (Mucha v. Brown, No. Cv 91 48796 S (Jul. 10, 1997)) 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
Mucha v. Brown, No. Cv 91 48796 S (Jul. 10, 1997), 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7245, 20 Conn. L. Rptr. 2 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] Memorandum Filed July 10, 1997 The plaintiff, Jack L. Mucha, has brought this action against the defendant, Richard L. Brown, to recover the principal of a $60,000.00 loan which he made to the defendant on or about May 7, 1987, under an oral agreement between them that was never reduced to writing, that the proceeds of the loan would be used by the defendant to purchase, renovate and sell a house located at 81 Acorn Road in East Dennis, Massachusetts. The parties agreed that the principal amount of the loan would be paid by the defendant upon the resale of the property which was to be purchased, but because the property was not sold as originally contemplated by the parties, the plaintiff instituted this action in October, 1991, in which he seeks to recover the amount of the loan together with interest that he claims has accrued pursuant to the terms of the original agreement.

Pursuant to the court's request prior to trial, counsel for the parties filed a stipulation of facts and they also agreed that the testimony of the parties given at a hearing before an attorney trial referee on July 9, 1993, could be reviewed and considered by the court in making its findings of fact. Accordingly, the facts as stipulated by the parties and the facts found by the court based upon the prior hearing before the attorney trial referee and supplemented by further testimony given at the trial on July 19, 1996, may be summarized as follows.

The parties had been close personal friends for a number of years and from the time they first met in 1981, Brown had not been working since 1975 and had no income other than the social security payments that he received because he was totally disabled. The defendant had no prior experience in real estate CT Page 7246 investment or development and he used the proceeds of the loan to enter into a joint venture with two other individuals, Dean Martin, a builder, and David Mann, a local realtor who lived and maintained his office within a few miles of the property in East Dennis.

The proceeds of the loan were put into a trust designated as "BMM Realty Trust" which was created by the three original investors for the purpose of buying and improving the property, and when Martin subsequently withdrew from the venture, Brown and Mann became equal owners of the trust. At the time that the loan was made by the plaintiff the reasonable expectation of the parties was that there would be an early sale, and because Mucha knew that Brown had been disabled from working for many years and was receiving social security benefits, it was reasonable for both parties to assume that the only source of income practicably available to the defendant for the prompt repayment of the principal of the loan would be the proceeds of the resale of the property after it had been acquired, improved and placed on the market.

The three original participants in the venture entered into the trust agreement after consulting a Massachusetts attorney who advised them that title to the property should be taken in the name of the trust, and although Brown testified that he was not aware of it at the time, the trust instrument made no provision for the repayment of the loan that had been made to him by Mucha. Brown also testified that in the fall of 1987 after their first attempt to sell the property was unsuccessful, they tried to get a mortgage on the property to pay off the loans to Brown from his sister-in-law and Mucha but were not able to do so, and he also stated at the 1993 hearing and at the trial, that the property was listed for sale, and that he hoped it would be sold, but that Mann's cooperation and consent as an equal owner of the property would be required before a sale could be consummated.

In addition to the agreement between the parties that the principal of the loan would be due and payable upon the sale of the property to be purchased, it was also agreed that in the interim the defendant would make monthly interest payments in an amount sufficient to cover the plaintiff's monthly interest payments on equity loans he had taken from two banks in order to obtain the principal amount of the loan. The original amount of the monthly payment was $600.00, representing the actual interest due on those loans at that time because it was the expectation of CT Page 7247 the parties that the property would be fixed up and turned over quickly within two to four months.

In January of 1989, after the plaintiff told the defendant that the interest on his loans had increased to $620.00 a month, the defendant increased his payments to that amount and continued those payments until June of 1990. He later made two partial payments of $230.00 each on August 9, 1990 and September 1, 1990, but he was unable to make any more payments thereafter because he had run out of money after exhausting his credit and equity loan limits.

After the property at 81 Acorn Road in East Dennis was purchased and renovated, it was placed on the market, and because a purchase offer and deposit was accepted on June 1, 1987, the property was taken off the market for three or four months thereafter, but the prospective buyers failed to qualify for a mortgage. Although the property was again placed on the market in the fall of 1987, Brown testified at the hearing before the attorney trial referee (Transcript, July 9, 1993, p. 15) that "the bottom dropped out of the real estate market [and] fifty-six thousand homes went up for sale on the Cape at that period."

In June of 1991, the plaintiff paid off both of the bank loans that had been the source of the money that he had loaned the defendant, and thereafter he had no further interest payments to make to the banks on those loans. The defendant was not aware of that fact until Mucha testified at the hearing before the attorney trial referee on July 9, 1993.

In the summer of 1991, the plaintiff went to Cape Cod to investigate the status of the property and found that it was not listed for sale at that time because Mann, the realtor and partner of the defendant in the trust, had taken it off the market and rented it to a family that was living in the house at the time. After the plaintiff told the defendant what he had learned, Brown told him that he knew nothing about it, and he thereafter listed it for sale, but the property has yet to be sold.

The plaintiff argues that first, the defendant was given a reasonable time in which to sell the property, because excluding the four month period that both parties originally expected it would take to repay the loan from the proceeds of the sale, four years had elapsed before this action was instituted by the CT Page 7248 plaintiff, second, the defendant has not proved that any supervening event was sufficient to have prevented and thus excused the non-occurrence of the condition, and third, the condition was waived in any event because of the defendant's failure to make reasonable efforts to sell the property. The defendant's arguments are, first, because the plaintiff had no reasonable expectation that the defendant had any means for repayment other than from the sale proceeds, the plaintiff must prove that Brown is presently able to do so; second, the contingency was not totally within his control because any sale would require the consent of David Mann to the terms and conditions of any such sale; and third, the court cannot, as the plaintiff suggests, change the original agreement so as to impose a duty on the defendant to repay the loan within a reasonable time despite the fact that the event contemplated by the parties has not yet occurred.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 7245, 20 Conn. L. Rptr. 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mucha-v-brown-no-cv-91-48796-s-jul-10-1997-connsuperct-1997.