Opinion
ZARELLA, J.
In this matter involving an auctioneer’s alleged conversion and statutory theft for failure to remit the proceeds of an auction to the seller, the defendants, Auctions Worldwide, LLC (Auctions Worldwide)
and A. David Loeser, Jr.,
appeal
from the trial court’s judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Mystic Color Lab, Inc. (Mystic).
The defendants claim that the trial court improperly (1) concluded that the defendants were liable in tort for the conversion of proceeds from an auction of Mystic’s photo processing equipment, (2) concluded that the defendants were liable for statutory theft of the auction proceeds under General Statutes § 52-564 and, thus, improperly awarded treble damages to Mystic, and (3) failed to apply the economic loss doctrine to the common-law conversion claim, which would have precluded recovery for purely economic loss. Mystic claims that the trial court properly concluded that the auction proceeds belong to Mystic and that Auctions Worldwide was responsible for safeguarding those proceeds. We agree with the defendants as to the claims for conversion and statutory theft and, therefore, need not determine the applicability of the economic loss doctrine. Accordingly, we reverse in part the judgment of the trial court.
The facts of the case are largely undisputed. On March 12, 2003, Mystic, a Connecticut corporation, executed a written commission sale agreement (agreement) with
Auctions Worldwide, a Delaware corporation, to sell certain photo processing equipment that Mystic had used in the course of its business. The purpose of the agreement was defined in ¶ 1, which provides that “[t]he [s]eller [Mystic] hereby hires [Auctions Worldwide] as [its] exclusive agent, to sell the [a]ssets from the date of signing this [agreement to sixty . . . days after the auction is conducted .... [Auctions Worldwide] in [its] sole discretion shall determine whether the [a]ssets are to be sold by private sale or at a public auction . . . .” Pursuant to ¶ 15, the parties agreed that Connecticut law would govern the agreement and that “[i]t is understood that [Auctions Worldwide] is merely an independent contractor retained by [Mystic] and not acting as an agent of [Mystic].”
The agreement further provided under ¶ 2, entitled “[commission,” that “[proceeds from the sale of the [a]ssets shall be paid directly to [Auctions Worldwide].” Mystic specifically agreed to “reimburse [Auctions Worldwide] up to the amount of [$29,500] for labor, advertising, and marketing expenses . . . based on actual costs incurred.” In addition, the agreement provided that Auctions Worldwide “reserve[d] the right to charge a [10 percent] [b]uyer’s [p]remium payable to [Auctions Worldwide] and [would] rebate [10 percent] of the [b]uyer’s premium to [Mystic].” The agreement also stated that Auctions Worldwide would deliver all proceeds due to Mystic “[w]ithin fifteen . . . business days following the auction . . . and each Friday after this period ... as collected and cleared . . . .” The proceeds due to Mystic would be “less [Auctions Worldwide’s] [a]uction [e]xpenses, commission, and other amounts due [Auctions Worldwide].” Auctions Worldwide agreed to deliver the proceeds to Mystic, “together with a preliminary accounting thereof’ and a “final accounting report,” within sixty business days of the date of the auction. The agreement was silent, however,
with respect to any requirements or restrictions regarding Auctions Worldwide’s handling of the funds prior to the time for remittance of the amount due to Mystic.
Pursuant to the agreement, Auctions Worldwide conducted the auction at Mystic’s place of business on May 1, 2003. The photo processing equipment remained on Mystic’s premises after the agreement was executed until the auction buyers took possession after the sale. The amount due to Mystic following the auction, less Auctions Worldwide’s expenses and commission, was $310,847.89.
Upon receipt of the auction proceeds, Auctions Worldwide deposited the funds into its general operating account, where they were commingled with “funds from purchases of other auctions as well as other [money] belonging to Auctions Worldwide.” According to testimony at trial, it was standard practice for Auctions Worldwide to deposit all auction proceeds that it received in its general operating account. Auctions Worldwide did not deliver the final accounting or the proceeds due to Mystic within the time period on which Mystic and Auctions Worldwide had agreed.
Thereafter, Mystic demanded payment of the proceeds. Although Auctions Worldwide acknowledged that it owed money to Mystic, it made no payment until May, 2004. After the time for payment under the agreement had expired, and in response to Mystic’s demands, the defendants, beginning sometime in the fall of 2003, attempted to resolve the debt by proposing various repayment plans, which Mystic rejected. Each proposal called for an initial lump sum payment, to be immediately followed by subsequent payments subject
to various terms.
In response, Mystic’s attorney contacted Auctions Worldwide’s controller and demanded that any funds available for immediate payment be wired to Mystic. At no time during the negotiations, however, did Auctions Worldwide transfer funds to Mystic. As of the filing of this appeal, Auctions Worldwide’s payments to Mystic totaled $42,940.22. These funds were paid in two checks dated May and June, 2004, respectively.
Following the May, 2003 auction, Auctions Worldwide used the funds in its general operating account to satisfy numerous financial obligations of the company. These included obligations incurred by other related companies
owned by Loeser for employees’ salaries, rent and utilities. At the time of trial, Auctions Worldwide still existed as a legal entity but no longer was operational, having become insolvent without making any additional payments to Mystic.
Mystic filed this civil action in January, 2004, alleging claims against Auctions Worldwide for breach of contract and claims against both Auctions Worldwide and Loeser for common-law conversion, statutory theft under § 52-564 and violation of the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act (CUTPA), General Statutes § 42-110a et seq. Thereafter, the defendants conceded that they owed Mystic a balance of $267,907.67. By agreement between the parties, the CUTPA claim was withdrawn.
At the conclusion of the trial, the court issued a memorandum of decision. In determining liability for conversion and statutory theft, the court found that Mystic had a “right to the proceeds beginning fifteen days after the auction. All the proceeds were due within sixty days and certainly by the end of . . . 2003.” The court also found that “the evidence at trial clearly proves that the money held by [Auctions Worldwide] belonged to [Mystic] . . . .” According to the trial court, Auction Worldwide’s “retaining possession of the proceeds,” coupled with its use of the funds collected to pay other financial obligations, constituted the “unauthorized act” required for conversion. In concluding that Loeser should be held personally liable, the court found that, as the managing director of Auctions Worldwide, he “wrongfully used his authority and responsibility to divert or direct the diversion of funds owed to [Mystic] . . . .” The court also found that Loeser “derive[d] a personal benefit from the conversion of the [Mystic] funds in that significant amounts were paid to . . . other companies owned and operated by Loeser . . . [and] by satisfying financial obligations other than the obligation owed to [Mystic], Loeser was able to avoid personal liability on certain obligations and to maintain the viability of all three companies . . . .”
The court noted that, once it had found conversion, a finding of liability for statutory theft required proof of the additional element of “intent to deprive another of his property . . . .” The court found that Loeser had the requisite intent by virtue of his failure to “safeguard” the funds from the auction and his diversion of those “funds to his own companies,” knowing that such a diversion would mean that Auctions Worldwide “would not be able to satisfy its obligations to [Mystic].” On the basis
of these findings, the court rendered judgment for Mystic in the amount of $803,723.01, plus statutory interest on the conversion and statutory theft claims. The judgment
consisted of treble damages in accordance with § 52-564.
This appeal followed.
I
Before we consider the merits of the appeal, we address the threshold issue of whether the relationship between an auctioneer and a seller of goods is fiduciary in nature, thus giving rise to an obligation on the part of the auctioneer to “safeguard” the auction proceeds. Mystic urges this court to conclude, as a matter of public policy, that auctioneers act as agents of sellers, that they have a common-law duty to hold proceeds in trust for the benefit of the seller and that a failure to do so creates liability for theft. The record presented, however, does not permit us to reach this issue. Mystic never alleged in its pleadings that the parties had either a fiduciary or an agency relationship. Moreover, Mystic presented no evidence from which the trial court reasonably could have found that the special trust or confidence characteristic of a fiduciary relationship existed between the parties in the present case.
Both Mystic
and Auctions Worldwide were business entities, and no evidence was offered to suggest that Mystic was incapable of negotiating terms that would allocate the risks involved in the transaction. We especially note the absence of any evidence in the record regarding the customary practices of auctioneers in Connecticut, the industry standards that govern the use of written contracts by auctioneers in forming agreements with sellers and the norms within the profession for the handling of funds collected by auctioneers following an auction sale. Indeed, Mystic notes that the trial court made no findings regarding the normal practices of the auction industry or the existence of a fiduciary relationship. Although Mystic, in its posttrial memorandum, encouraged the trial court to adopt the position taken by the New York Supreme Court in
Edwards
v.
Horsemen’s Sales Co.,
148 Misc. 2d 212, 214, 560 N.Y.S.2d 165 (1989), that an auctioneer has a fiduciary duty to remit the proceeds of the sale to the seller and that the auctioneer is personally liable for its failure to do so, Mystic did not introduce evidence of a fiduciary relationship at trial. We therefore decline to decide whether there are circumstances in which an auctioneer-seller relationship may give rise to a fiduciary duty on the part of the auctioneer to the seller.
II
We now turn to the defendants’ claims that the trial court improperly found the defendants liable for common-law conversion and for statutory theft under § 52-564, which requires a determination that the parties have a bailor-bailee relationship. The defendants claim that the relationship between Mystic and Auctions Worldwide is most properly viewed as that of a debtor and creditor, rather than a bailor and bailee, because the auction proceeds did not constitute property that belonged to Mystic, proof of which is necessary to establish liability for conversion and statutory theft. Mystic responds that (1) it had a right to possess the proceeds, and, therefore, the proceeds were properly regarded as its property, (2) Auctions Worldwide exceeded its contractual authority in handling the proceeds when it failed to remit the funds to Mystic and instead used them to satisfy its own financial obligations, and (3) Auctions Worldwide had an obligation to safeguard the funds for Mystic. We agree with the defendants.
Mystic’s brief summarizes the question before us as follows: “[D]id [the] [defendants merely owe Mystic a
debt, or did the proceeds belong to Mystic?” Whether the proceeds of the auction constituted property that belonged to Mystic is a question of law subject to our plenary review. See, e.g.,
Hope
v.
Cavallo,
163 Conn. 576, 579, 316 A.2d 407 (1972) (issue of ownership of motor vehicle is question of law).
We acknowledge that there is no Connecticut precedent directly on point with respect to the contractual duty of an auctioneer to remit auction proceeds to a seller. We therefore begin our analysis with a brief review of the law on conversion and statutory theft.
Conversion is an unauthorized assumption and exercise of the right of ownership over property belonging to another, to the exclusion of the owner’s rights. E.g.,
Deming
v.
Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co.,
279 Conn. 745, 770, 905 A.2d 623 (2006);
Hi-Ho Tower, Inc.
v.
Com-Tronics, Inc.,
255 Conn. 20, 43, 761 A.2d 1268 (2000);
Devitt
v.
Manulik,
176 Conn. 657, 660, 410 A.2d 465 (1979). Similarly, statutory theft is the stealing of another’s property or the knowing receipt and concealment of stolen property. See General Statutes § 52-564 (“[a]ny person who steals any property of another, or knowingly receives and conceals stolen property, shall pay the owner treble his damages”).
Statutory theft, how
ever, requires an element over and above what is necessary to prove conversion, namely, that the defendant intentionally deprived the complaining party of his or her property.
Suarez-Negrete
v.
Trotta,
47 Conn. App. 517, 521,705 A.2d 215 (1998). Nonetheless, to prevail on either claim, the party alleging conversion or statutory theft must prove a sufficient property interest in the items in question. See
Father
v.
Samperi,
190 Conn. 412, 419-20, 461 A.2d 681 (1983) (plaintiffs property rights are at heart of conversion, and proof of ownership is plaintiffs burden);
Discover Leasing, Inc.
v.
Murphy,
33 Conn. App. 303, 309, 635 A.2d 843 (1993) (prima facie case for conversion and statutory theft requires proof that property in question “belonged to” plaintiff). Accordingly, a claim for conversion may be brought when the relationship is one of bailor and bailee but not when it is one of debtor and creditor. See
United States
v.
Johnston,
268 U.S. 220, 226-27, 45 S. Ct. 496, 69 L. Ed. 925 (1925).
A debtor-creditor relationship arises from a debt owed by one party to another. The debt owed arises from an obligation, often contractual, on the part of the debtor, not from a preexisting property interest of the creditor. See Black’s Law Dictionary (6th Ed. 1990) (defining debt as “[a] sum of money due by certain and express agreement” and “[a] specified sum of money owing to one person from another, including not only obligation of debtor to pay but right of creditor to receive and enforce payment”). In contrast, “[a] relationship of bailor-bailee arises when the owner, while retaining general title, delivers personal property to another for some particular purpose upon an express or implied contract to redeliver the goods when the purpose has been fulfilled, or to otherwise deal with the goods according to the bailor’s directions. ... In
bailment, the owner or bailor has a general property [interest] in the goods bailed .... The bailee, on the other hand, has mere possession of items left in its care pursuant to the bailment.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted).
B. A. Ballou & Co.
v.
Citytrust,
218 Conn. 749, 753, 591 A.2d 126 (1991). A bailment therefore contemplates redelivery of goods entrusted to the bailee, whereas a debtor-creditor relationship contemplates the payment of an obligation defined by agreement between the parties.
Furthermore, a bailment may not exist when the goods entrusted to a party properly are intermingled or commingled with goods belonging to others. See id., 753-56 (bailment cannot exist when property is properly commingled or combined with property owned by others). In
B. A. Ballou & Co.,
the plaintiff could not prevail on its claim of conversion when no bailment could be shown. Id., 756. In that case, we specifically concluded that, “[b]ecause [the recipient of the plaintiffs scrap metal (recipient)] commingled the scrap metal and had it remanufactured by a third party who mixed it with new metal as needed, there was no way of determining whether any of the same scrap sent to [the recipient] by [the plaintiff] ever returned to [the plaintiff] as finished brass.” Id., 751. If the purported bailee is not bound to return the same items that were delivered to him by the bailor, but may deliver any other item or items of equal value, there is no bailment. See id., 755; cf. 2 Restatement (Second), Agency § 398, comment (c) (1958) (when there is commingling of funds, auctioneer-seller relationship should be viewed as that of debtor and creditor).
The defendants concede that, if the proceeds from an auction are treated as a bailment, they constitute property that belongs to Mystic, and, therefore, actions in violation of the bailment relationship may give rise to claims for conversion and statutory theft. Cf.
John
ston
v.
United States,
supra, 268 U.S. 226-27. The analysis of a possible claim for conversion or theft when the subject of the claim is an obligation to pay money that is owed, however, results in a different conclusion. Although our case law is clear that a claim for money, not just tangible goods, may be the subject of conversion or statutory theft, a claim for money owed on a debt is not sufficient to establish such causes of action. E.g.,
Deming
v.
Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co.,
supra, 279 Conn. 772; see also
Bridgeport Harbour Place I, LLC
v.
Ganim,
Superior Court, judicial district of Waterbury, Complex Litigation Docket, Docket No. CV-040184523-S (February 16, 2006) (40 Conn. L. Rptr. 764) (“no Connecticut case holds that money owed by a debtor is the property of the creditor and allows for a cause of action in statutory theft when the debt is not paid” [internal quotation marks omitted]). Moreover, in order to establish a valid claim of conversion or statutory theft for money owed, a party must show ownership or the right to possess specific, identifiable money, rather than the right to the payment of money generally. See
Deming
v.
Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co.,
supra, 772; see also
Macomber
v.
Travelers Property & Casualty Corp.,
261 Conn. 620, 650, 804 A.2d 180 (2002) (“[a] plaintiff must establish legal ownership or right to possession in the particular thing, the specifically identifiable moneys, that the defendant is alleged to have converted” [internal quotation marks omitted]). In
Deming,
we observed that “[a] mere obligation to pay money may not be enforced by a conversion action . . . .”
Deming
v.
Nationwide Mutual Ins.
Co., supra, 772; see also
Macomber
v.
Travelers Property & Casualty Corp.,
supra, 650. When an action arises from a claim under an express or implied contract, a claim in tort is inappropriate.
Deming
v.
Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co.,
supra, 772; see also
Macomber
v.
Travelers Property & Casualty Corp.,
supra, 651 (comparing
claim for money to claim for specific chattel and noting similar requirement that funds at issue be specifically identifiable).
Courts from other jurisdictions that have examined the auctioneer-seller relationship when an auctioneer fails to remit proceeds also suggest that, in the absence of the segregation of auction proceeds, the relationship should be viewed as that of a debtor and creditor. See, e.g.,
In re Rine & Rine Auctioneers, Inc.,
74 F.3d 848, 853 (8th Cir. 1996);
United States
v.
Lawson,
925 F.2d 1207, 1210 (9th Cir. 1991);
In re Farrell & Howard Auctioneers, Inc.,
172 B.R. 712, 716 (Bankr. D. Mass. 1994);
In re Walker Industrial Auctioneers, Inc.,
38 B.R. 8, 12-13 (Bankr. D. Or. 1983). For example, the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals, in
In re Rine & Rine Auctioneers, Inc.,
rejected the determination of the lower court that the auctioneer and the seller were in an agency relationship and held that the seller was a creditor of the auctioneer’s bankruptcy estate, even though the auctioneer withheld the auction proceeds from the seller. See
In re Rine & Rine Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 853-54. The commingling of the proceeds with other funds was integral to the Eighth Circuit’s determination that the auction proceeds were not the property of the seller. See id., 853. The court observed that, although “the auction proceeds were segregated from [the auctioneer’s] general funds . . . they were nevertheless deposited in an account where they were intermingled with the funds of other auction customers and lacked any indicia of [the seller’s] ownership.” Id. The Eighth Circuit also considered the seller’s claim that the auction proceeds were held in a trust that had been created as a result of the auctioneer’s oral representations that it would segregate the auction proceeds. In rejecting this claim, the court stated: “[T]here is no basis to conclude that the parties manifested an intent to create such a trust.” Id.
Similar results were reached in
In re Walker Industrial Auctioneers, Inc.,
and
In re Farrell & Howard Auctioneers, Inc.
Both cases involved a claim of a preferential transfer in a bankruptcy proceeding and required the court to determine whether the seller was a creditor of the auctioneer’s bankruptcy estate. See
In re Farrell & Howard Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 172 B.R. 715-16;
In re Walker Industrial Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 38 B.R. 9, 12. The auctioneer-seller relationship in each case was governed by a written agreement calling for the auctioneer to collect the proceeds of the auction sale and to remit the amount due to the seller, following a deduction for the auctioneer’s commission and ex-penses, within a certain time period.
In re Farrell & Howard Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 713;
In re Walker Industrial Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 12. In concluding that the seller was a creditor, each court relied on the contract between the parties and on the absence of any provision requiring the auctioneer to segregate the auction proceeds for the seller. See
In re Farrell & Howard Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 715-16;
In re Walker Industrial Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 12-13.
In
United States
v.
Lawson,
supra, 925 F.2d 1209-11, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals likewise held the auctioneer-seller relationship to be that of a debtor and creditor in California, where an auctioneer is permitted to commingle funds from multiple auctions.
In that case, the auctioneer was charged with theft of government property under 18 U.S.C. § 641. The government’s argument was that the auctioneer’s failure to remit the proceeds of an auction of property belonging to the Small Business Administration (seller) amounted to
theft of that property. See id., 1209-10. Determination of the validity of the claim rested on whether the seller was an owner of the proceeds such that the auctioneer could be held hable for theft. See id. The court found that the property belonged to the auctioneer and that the seller’s claim was for money owed as a creditor. See id., 1210-11. The court concluded: “[T]he contracts [between the seller and the auctioneer] failed to state that the proceeds belong to the [seller]. Instead, the contracts merely required [the auctioneer] to ‘promptly’ remit net sales proceeds to the [seller]. Although [the auctioneer] did maintain a separate account for the proceeds, this was not required by the contracts. The [District [C]ourt was correct in concluding that a debtor/creditor relationship existed . . . .” Id., 1211.
Secondary authority also characterizes the auctioneer-seller relationship as that of a debtor and creditor when the comcningling of funds occurs. See, e.g., 7 Am. Jur. 2d 422, Auctions and Auctioneers § 80 (1997) (“It has been said that an auctioneer may properly commingle his funds with those of his principal .... [When] the auctioneer is permitted to commingle funds, his status toward the principal with regard to the money he receives is more properly viewed as that of a debtor than of a bailee.”); see also 2 Restatement (Second), supra, § 398, comment (c). These sources further suggest that an auctioneer’s commingling of auction proceeds with funds from other auctions or other sources is not abnormal and does not constitute misconduct on the part of the auctioneer. 2 Restatement (Second), supra, § 398, comment (c) (“In the case of certain professional agents, such as auctioneers and factors, it is customary, and hence ordinarily understood, that the agent can properly mingle his funds with those of his principal. ... If the funds are properly mingled, the
inference is that the agent becomes a debtor to the amount received for the principal . . . .”).
With these principles in mind, we now review the parties’ agreement in the present case. In determining whether the relationship was in the nature of a bailment or that of a creditor and debtor, we must ascertain the parties’ intent. As in any contractual relationship, we first examine the language used in the agreement. E.g.,
Connecticut Light & Power Co.
v.
Lighthouse Landings, Inc.,
279 Conn. 90, 109, 900 A.2d 1242 (2006) (“[t]he intent of the parties as expressed in a contract is determined from the language used interpreted in the light of the situation of the parties and the circumstances connected with the transaction” [internal quotation marks omitted]). If the intention of the parties is not clear, we may look to the customs of the industry as understood by the parties when they entered into the agreement. See
Presidential Capital Corp.
v.
Reale,
231 Conn. 500, 511, 652 A.2d 489 (1994) (“custom and usage of the trade can supplement or qualify an agreement” if each party knows or has reason to know of that usage), citing 2 Restatement (Second), Contracts § 221 (1981).
Keeping in mind that Mystic’s claim is that the proceeds from the sale of its equipment are the subject of the alleged bailment, rather than the items themselves, we conclude that it is clear from the agreement’s language that Auctions Worldwide was not charged with the responsibility of delivering the auction proceeds to Mystic. The agreement provided that any proceeds from the sale would be “paid directly” to Auctions Worldwide
by the buyer. The agreement further provided that Auctions Worldwide would collect and clear the receipts, thus indicating that Auctions Worldwide would be required to deposit the auction proceeds in a bank account. Auctions Worldwide was not required to hold the proceeds in trust or in a special account designated for Mystic. Nor did the agreement prohibit Auctions Worldwide from depositing the funds into its general operating account. Moreover, the agreement permitted Auctions Worldwide to deduct from the proceeds of the auction its expenses and fees before remitting the amount “due” to Mystic. Finally, Auctions Worldwide was not required to remit any amount “due” until fifteen days following the sale. Thus, although the agreement is not dispositive, its provisions do not suggest that the parties intended to create a bailor-bailee relationship.
In addition, no evidence was adduced at trial regarding the parties’ understanding of the customs and practice of the industry, other than that Auctions Worldwide handled all of the other auction proceeds collected in the course of its business in a similar fashion. We therefore conclude that Auctions Worldwide was not in a bailor-bailee relationship with Mystic. Under the facts presented, it was impossible for a bailment of the auction proceeds to exist between Mystic and Auctions Worldwide. At the time of the auction, the money ultimately used to purchase Mystic’s equipment was in the possession of third party buyers and thus was not the property of Mystic. It was the buyers, not Mystic, who delivered the auction proceeds to Auctions Worldwide, which received them pursuant to the terms of the agreement. Furthermore, the auction proceeds represented not only consideration for the sale of the plaintiffs photo processing equipment but also money owed to Auctions Worldwide for the expenses of the auction and its commission. Mystic retained no security interest in the proceeds, and, under the terms of the agreement,
Auctions Worldwide had the exclusive right to the auction proceeds for fifteen days after the auction, had the freedom to use the funds during the fifteen day period for its own use and was under no contractual obligation to segregate the auction proceeds from funds in its general account.
The intermingling of the proceeds with Auctions Worldwide’s general operating funds also rendered them unidentifiable and untraceable, which further defeats a claim that a bailment could have existed. See
B. A. Ballou & Co.
v.
Citytrust,
supra, 218 Conn. 754.
We therefore conclude that the relationship between the parties was that of a debtor and creditor. Auctions Worldwide had a contractual obligation to pay to Mystic the amount due under the agreement within the time period established by the agreement. The circumstances in the present case are analogous to those of
In re Rine & Rine Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 74 F.3d 848,
United States
v.
Lawson,
supra, 925 F.2d 1207,
In re Farrell & Howard Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 172 B.R. 712, and
In re Walker Industrial Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 38 B.R. 8.
As in
In re Farrell & Howard Auction
eers, Inc.,
supra, 713, and
In re Walker Industrial Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 12, the parties’ agreement in the present case contained no language requiring segregation of the auction proceeds or any provision requiring that Auctions Worldwide hold the auction proceeds in trust or for the benefit of Mystic.
During the fifteen day period following the auction, Auctions Worldwide had complete control over the funds. The parties’ agreement contained no provision limiting how the funds could be used or directed during that fifteen day period. Furthermore, there is no evidence in the record, nor did either party plead, that there was any intent to form a trust with regard to the auction proceeds or any language in the agreement suggesting that Auctions
Worldwide would receive the proceeds “on behalf of’ Mystic. See, e.g.,
In re Rine & Rine Auctioneers, Inc.,
supra, 853. We therefore conclude that Mystic’s claims for conversion and statutory theft must fail, in keeping with our precedent barring such claims for money owed. See
Deming
v.
Nationwide Mutual Ins. Co.,
supra, 279 Conn. 772-73. Accordingly, the trial court incorrectly determined that the auction proceeds belonged to Mystic and improperly rendered judgment in favor of Mystic on its claims of conversion and statutory theft.
The judgment is reversed as to the counts of Mystic’s complaint alleging common-law conversion and statutory theft and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment for the defendants with respect to those counts; the judgment is affirmed in all other respects.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.