Patel v. Barot, No. X01 Cv 96 0158463s (Nov. 30, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 15549
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedNovember 30, 2001
DocketNo. X01 CV 96 0158463S CT Page 15550
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 15549 (Patel v. Barot, No. X01 Cv 96 0158463s (Nov. 30, 2001)) 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
Patel v. Barot, No. X01 Cv 96 0158463s (Nov. 30, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 15549 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION AFTER TRIAL ON THE MERITS
The fundamental issue in the above-captioned case is whether the minds of plaintiff Laljeebhai Patel and defendant Dilip Barot met on sufficient terms concerning an effort to develop public housing for the Bridgeport Housing Authority to constitute an enforceable contract. This court finds that the plaintiffs failed to prove that their expectations concerning their relationship with the defendants ripened to a definite agreement whose essential terms were mutually agreed to by both sides.

The plaintiffs are Laljeebhai Patel, a businessman who engaged in housing development projects during the 1990's, and Capital Development Group, LLC, a Connecticut limited liability company controlled by Patel. The defendants are Dilip Barot, a Florida resident who is the sole shareholder of defendant Creative Choice Homes, Inc., ("CCH-Florida") a Florida company that has completed public housing projects in several states. The additional defendant is CCH Bridgeport, LLC ("CCH-Bridgeport"), a Connecticut limited liability company with an office in Bridgeport, Connecticut. At all relevant times, Barot owned, directly or indirectly, a controlling interest in CCH-Bridgeport.

In their fourth revised complaint, the plaintiffs allege that Barot and CCH-Florida had agreed to undertake a public housing development project in Bridgeport as a joint venture with the plaintiffs and that the defendants breached the agreement by failing to share the alleged profits with the plaintiffs (Count One). Alternatively, the plaintiffs claim that they are entitled to recover in quantum meruit for the reasonable value of services performed on the project (Count Two). At the conclusion of the evidence, the court granted the defendants' motion for evidentiary nonsuit as to Count Two, the quantum meruit claim.

Accordingly, the only claim to be decided is the plaintiffs' claim that they entered into a contract with the defendants that entitled them to half the developer profits realized from the development of public housing units in Bridgeport under a project known as the Father Panik Village Replacement Housing project.

The defendants pleaded several special defenses. In view of the court's finding that the plaintiff has failed to prove the existence of an enforceable contract, it is not necessary to discuss these defenses. CT Page 15551

The court has granted judgment in favor of the plaintiffs on all counterclaims asserted by the defendants, pursuant to a motion invoking Practice Book 15-8 made by the plaintiffs at the conclusion of the defendants' evidence. The defendants had sought to withdraw the counterclaims after the trial had been in progress for 14 days. Pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. § 52-80, the court denied the defendants leave to withdraw their counterclaims after trial had commenced, as such a withdrawal might have required the plaintiffs to defend the same claims in another trial. The defendants did not oppose the court's granting the Practice Book § 15-8 motion as to their counterclaims.

Procedural history

The case was commenced in the Judicial District of Hartford at New Britain in 1996 and was transferred to the complex litigation docket along with a related case for management and trial. Trial to the court, without a jury, commenced on October 4, 2001 and ended on November 1, 2001. The case was tried with a companion case, Plotkin v. Barot, Docket No. X01 CV 97 0162347, in which the plaintiff similarly claimed a right to a share of the profits and/or compensation for services rendered to the defendants. The court set November 16, 2001, as the deadline for filing simultaneous post-trial briefs.

Findings of fact

In 1995, Charles Tisdale, a Bridgeport resident who had worked in Bridgeport antipoverty programs and, from 1985 through 1988, as director of planning and development in the administration of Mayor Thomas Bucci in Bridgeport, introduced Patel to Barot, with the thought that these two businessmen with roots in Gujarat, India, might be interested in working together on projects in Connecticut. At that time, Patel was a lawyer who had left the law firm where he had been employed and who was not engaged in the active practice of law. His practice at Schatz, Schatz, Ribicoff Kotkin had included bond financing, and he had participated in development transactions. Barot, an immigrant who had started his own Florida-based development firm after working as a night clerk in motels, had completed some public housing projects and had bid on others in a number of states. Patel and Barot worked together on a proposal to develop public housing project in New Haven, Connecticut known as Elm Haven. In 1995 to 1996, they also pursued a second New Haven housing project known as the Florence Virtue housing project in a relationship that was not memorialized in a written contract and about which they later had disagreements.

In late 1995, Patel and Barot turned their attention to a public CT Page 15552 housing development that the Bridgeport Housing Authority was proposing. Having been ordered in a consent decree entered in Concerned TenantsAssociation of Father Panik Village v. Samuel Pierce, Secretary of theDepartment of Housing and Urban Development, USDC Civ. No. B-87-809 TFGD, to replace the public housing units at a notoriously troubled housing project known as Father Panik Village, the housing authority had access to funds from the federal department of Housing and Urban Development ("HUD") to build replacement housing. The consent decree required provision of 1063 units of replacement housing within six years of HUD's approval of demolition of the Father Panik buildings. The housing authority announced a request for proposal ("RFP"), a document requesting written proposals to develop replacement housing including both a turnkey project to be funded by HUD and private units to be financed from mixed sources, including the sale of tax credits and loans from banks. The RFP specified that units of public housing were to be built on scattered sites. No sites had been selected, nor was the number of units that could be developed at each site specified. The housing authority appointed a selection committee to choose among the responses to the RFP. The winner was to be the "preferred developer," an entity entitled to develop and build the units authorized in the RFP without having to bid on each segment or site individually.

The RFP did not specify whether the candidates for "preferred developer" status had to be corporations, partnerships, individuals or any other particular form of entity. The RFP specified that each candidate must submit by January 26, 1996, a proposal containing particular documents and schedules. The RFP included the information that the housing authority's sole source of funding was $45 million of HUD development funds and stated that the party selected as the preferred developer would enter into separate contracts with the housing authority for new construction, rehabilitation projects, and turnkey projects. The RFP noted that applicants should "provide a list of people who will be assigned to this contract" and provide a biographical sketch for each. It further stated that proposals would be judged in part on the basis of the applicant's "[d]emonstrated successful experience in utilizing minority and women female (sic) owned business and compliance" and "experience in hiring and training Section 3 residents." (Ex., p. 211, p.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Bridgeport Pipe Engineering Co. v. DeMatteo Construction Co.
268 A.2d 391 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1970)
Randolph Construction Co. v. Kings East Corporation
334 A.2d 464 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1973)
Ubysz v. DiPietro
440 A.2d 830 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1981)
Augeri v. C. F. Wooding Co.
378 A.2d 538 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1977)
Harry A. Finman & Son, Inc. v. Connecticut Truck & Trailer Service Co.
363 A.2d 86 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1975)
Molloy v. Rourke
76 A. 517 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1910)
Cavallo v. Lewis
473 A.2d 338 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1984)
Finley v. Aetna Life & Casualty Co.
520 A.2d 208 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1987)
Curry v. Burns
626 A.2d 719 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1993)
Suffield Development Associates Ltd. Partnership v. Society for Savings
708 A.2d 1361 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1998)
Kasper v. Anderson
498 A.2d 132 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1985)
Manzin v. United Bank & Trust Co.
506 A.2d 169 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1986)
Jacobs v. Thomas
557 A.2d 145 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1989)
L & R Realty v. Connecticut National Bank
732 A.2d 181 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1999)
Willow Funding Co., L.P. v. Grencom Associates
779 A.2d 174 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2001)
Coady v. Martin
784 A.2d 897 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2001)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 15549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patel-v-barot-no-x01-cv-96-0158463s-nov-30-2001-connsuperct-2001.