O & G/O'Connell Joint Venture v. Chase Family Ltd. Partnership No. 3

523 A.2d 1271, 203 Conn. 133, 1987 Conn. LEXIS 825
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 14, 1987
Docket12964
StatusPublished
Cited by149 cases

This text of 523 A.2d 1271 (O & G/O'Connell Joint Venture v. Chase Family Ltd. Partnership No. 3) 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
O & G/O'Connell Joint Venture v. Chase Family Ltd. Partnership No. 3, 523 A.2d 1271, 203 Conn. 133, 1987 Conn. LEXIS 825 (Colo. 1987).

Opinion

Peters, C. J.

The dispositive issue in this appeal is whether an arbitration panel engaged in misconduct warranting the vacation of an arbitration award under General Statutes § 52-418 (a) (3) when the panel failed to admit into evidence a single document proffered by the defendants after the completion of extensive hearings.1 Pursuant to an arbitration clause in the construction contract between the parties, the plaintiff, O & G/O’Connell Joint Venture, submitted to the American Arbitration Association (AAA) a demand to arbitrate a dispute arising out of the defendants’ allegedly wrongful termination of that contract. Upon the completion of arbitration hearings and the submission of post-hearing briefs, a three member arbitration panel [135]*135awarded the plaintiff the sum of $1,877,084 plus interest as damages, and the defendants the sum of $52,570 plus interest on a counterclaim. The defendants then filed an application in the Superior Court to vacate the award pursuant to General Statutes § 52-418, and the plaintiff filed an application for confirmation of the award pursuant to General Statutes § 52-417.2 Concluding that the arbitration panel had engaged in misconduct in violation of General Statutes § 52-418 (a) (3), the trial court granted the defendants’ application and denied the plaintiff’s application.3 The plaintiff has appealed from those judgments. We find error.

The parties stipulated to the following underlying facts. The plaintiff is a joint venture contractor comprised of O & G Industries, Inc. (O & G), and Daniel O’Connell’s Sons, Inc. (O’Connell). The defendants, Chase Family Limited Partnership No. 3 and Olympia & York Hartford, Inc., are the owners of a multistory office building, known as One Commercial Plaza, in downtown Hartford. After negotiations that began in June, 1981, the parties entered into a written contract, dated March 8, 1983, but effective as of October 15, 1981, for the construction of that building. Subse[136]*136quently, on January 5, 1984, while the building was under construction, the defendants notified the plaintiff of the termination of its employment.

Pursuant to an arbitration agreement providing for the arbitration of disputes in accordance with the Construction Industry Arbitration Rules of the AAA,4 the plaintiff submitted to the AAA on January 12, 1984, [137]*137an unrestricted demand for arbitration.5 The demand alleged, inter alia, wrongful termination of the plaintiffs employment, and requested two types of relief, a declaration that the construction contract remained in full force and effect and damages “in an amount as yet undetermined.” In response, the defendants filed [138]*138an answer and an amended counterclaim. Between June, 1984 and June, 1985, a three member arbitration panel held fifty-two hearings, during which it heard extensive testimony and received voluminous documentary evidence. The panel rendered an award on October 10, 1985, providing the relief set forth above.

The defendants filed a timely application in the Superior Court to vacate the award of the arbitration panel. Among the issues that they raised was their claim that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover damages resulting from the lost business opportunity it had allegedly suffered in its capacity as a joint venturer.6 General Statutes § 52-418. The defendants’ application complained further that the arbitration panel was guilty of misconduct because it had declined to admit into evidence a copy of the joint venture agreement entered into by the two joint venturers, which the defendants [139]*139had attempted to proffer after the completion of the arbitration hearings. Shortly thereafter, on November 29, 1985, the plaintiff filed an application for an order confirming the arbitration award. General Statutes § 52-417. The two applications were heard together in the trial court.

In the defendants’ argument to the trial court concerning the applicability of § 52-418, they relied on a detailed history of the significance of the joint venture agreement and the circumstances surrounding their efforts to bring the agreement to the attention of the arbitration panel. This history is recited in the stipulation of facts.

The defendants explained that the joint venture agreement was significant because it negated the plaintiff’s claim for lost opportunity damages which, according to the defendants, was not supported by evidence presented at the hearings and had been raised for the first time in the plaintiffs post-hearing brief to the arbitration panel. In that brief, the plaintiff asserted that the defendants’ “wrongful and bad faith termination of the Contractor has effectively destroyed the Contractor’s ability to bid projects as a joint venture.” The plaintiff argued further that “[although the evidence is circumstantial, the Panel may rightfully—and conservatively—infer that but for the termination the Contractor would have been awarded at least two highrise jobs within the reasonable life-expectancy of the joint venture.” (Emphasis in original.) Anticipating and responding to this claim in their brief, filed simultaneously with that of the plaintiff, the defendants asserted that “[t]he contractor has offered no convincing evidence that the termination will cause the O & G/O’Connell joint venture any economic harm . . . .”7 [140]*140In their subsequent reply brief to the arbitrators, the defendants again maintained that the plaintiff had no viable claim for loss of business opportunity, because “[t]he reality is that this joint venture between O & G and O’Connell was formed specifically and only to construct One Commercial Plaza.”8 The defendants, nonetheless, argued to the court that the joint venture agreement was essential to show that the joint venture had no life expectancy beyond the construction project at issue here and that lost opportunity damages were therefore inappropriate.

In the arbitration proceedings, the defendants had proffered the document in the following manner. After the scheduled hearings had been completed in June, 1985, and both parties had submitted their initial post-hearing briefs, the defendants’ counsel sent to the AAA on August 14, 1985, a letter addressed to the arbitrators, requesting permission to introduce a copy of the joint venture agreement into evidence.9 The defend[141]*141ants’ counsel did not, however, enclose with the letter a copy of the agreement itself. The letter explained that the document was being offered to negate the plaintiffs claim for lost opportunity damages, and that the defendants had not submitted it earlier because that claim had not been raised by the plaintiff at the hearings. Upon being telephonically advised by an AAA administrator of this request, the plaintiff’s counsel informed the AAA by letter, dated August 16, 1985, [142]*142that he had no objection to the admission of the agreement as part of the record. On August 19, 1985, the AAA sent each arbitrator a copy of the defendants’ August 14 letter. The AAA did not send them a copy of the agreement itself, because it had never received a copy, and did not send to either the arbitrators or the defendants’ counsel the August 16 letter from the plaintiff’s counsel consenting to admission of the document.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
523 A.2d 1271, 203 Conn. 133, 1987 Conn. LEXIS 825, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/o-goconnell-joint-venture-v-chase-family-ltd-partnership-no-3-conn-1987.