Peterson v. Woldeyohannes

961 A.2d 475, 111 Conn. App. 784, 2008 Conn. App. LEXIS 584
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedDecember 30, 2008
DocketAC 28650
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 961 A.2d 475 (Peterson v. Woldeyohannes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson v. Woldeyohannes, 961 A.2d 475, 111 Conn. App. 784, 2008 Conn. App. LEXIS 584 (Colo. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

GRUENDEL, J.

The plaintiff, Alyssa Peterson, appeals from the judgment of the trial court, which, despite having entered a default against the defendant Hannah Woldeyohannes, 1 found in the defendant’s favor following the hearing in damages. On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the court improperly permitted the defendant to defend the action and improperly rendered judgment in favor of the defendant. We reverse the judgment of the trial court.

The following facts and procedural history are relevant to our consideration of the plaintiffs appeal. The plaintiffs complaint alleged that in February, 2004, she and the defendant, social acquaintances, entered into an oral agreement to form a partnership for the purpose of purchasing six condominium units in Hartford. The alleged partnership engaged the services of an attorney to negotiate the purchase and to draw up a purchase agreement for the units. Before the partnership had the opportunity to enter into an agreement with the sellers, however, the units were conveyed to A to Zee, LLC. The defendant is the sole owner of A to Zee, LLC. The plaintiff thereafter filed a ten count complaint alleging the creation of an oral partnership between herself and the defendant, and seeking recovery based on a number *786 of theories. In particular, the complaint alleged that the defendant breached the partnership agreement and breached her fiduciary duty to the plaintiff and the partnership by usurping the opportunity to purchase the units.

The remaining procedural history illustrates the long and tortured history of this case. On August 18, 2004, the plaintiff served requests for production, seeking the defendant’s telephone records from two telephones for the previous year. The plaintiff asserts that these telephone records might have provided the bases for additional investigation during discovery and might have established contact between herself and the defendant, and between the defendant and various parties and attorneys involved in the sale of the condominium units.

Having received no response to her requests for production, on September 28, 2004, the plaintiff filed a motion requesting that the court order sanctions for the defendant’s failure to respond to the requests, which the court denied in light of a motion for extension of time that the defendant filed on October 4, 2004. In the latter motion, the defendant requested a thirty day extension of time for responding to the requests for production and represented that she had “been proceeding diligently in an effort to comply” with the requests. The plaintiff objected to the defendant’s motion for extension of time on the ground that it was filed outside of the thirty day period required by Practice Book §§ 13-7 (a) and 13-10 (a). Thereafter, the defendant filed notice of objections to the requests for the telephone records. 2

The plaintiff then filed a motion to compel the defendant to comply with the requests for production on February 16, 2005, and the defendant objected to that *787 motion on April 1, 2005. At a hearing on April 25, 2005, the court ordered the defendant to produce the telephone records requested, noting that the records were relevant to the case. Having never received any further response to the requests for telephone records, the plaintiff filed a motion to compel and for contempt on June 23,2005, less than one month before the scheduled start of trial. On July 11, 2005, the court entered an order requiring that the defendant “comply fully with [the court’s] order dated April 25, 2005, by no later than 5 p.m. on Wednesday, July 13, 2005. If the defendant fails to comply, a default shall enter. The plaintiffs request for other relief, including a finding of contempt, costs, and other relief pursuant to Practice Book § 13-14 is denied without prejudice and may be renewed if the above order is not fully complied with.”

The defendant did not comply with the court’s July 11, 2005 order, and on July 14, 2005, six days before the scheduled start of trial, the plaintiff filed a renewed motion for contempt. At the hearing on the plaintiffs renewed motion for contempt on September 14, 2005, the trial having been postponed, the court engaged the defendant’s counsel in a discussion regarding the noncompliance. The court asked: “Would you define for me . . . the ways in which that order has not been complied with?” Counsel replied: “[T]he documents requested were not in my possession. I have attempted, through a subpoena, to gamer those documents from the parties that possess them. . . . [Y]our order did not give me sufficient time to get them. I have again subpoenaed . . . those records. And . . . they have not shown up . . . from the telephone company.”

The court then asked the defendant’s counsel why the court had not heard about the inability to comply until almost one month later, to which counsel replied: “I believe that I wasn’t sure that it may have made a difference. ... I wasn’t able to comply. The fact of *788 the matter was that I was not able to comply . . . with part of the order.” The court then inquired as to whether anyone had attempted to access the telephone records online, why the defendant did not maintain her own records and why the defense had not made an attempt to obtain the records earlier. The defendant’s responses to these questions were unsatisfactory to the court, and it entered a default for failure to comply with the court’s orders of April 25 and July 11, 2005.

The case then proceeded to a hearing in damages on September 21, 2005, pursuant to Practice Book § 17-34. At the opening of that hearing, the plaintiffs counsel indicated that she had received some of the telephone records at 4 p.m. the previous evening. The remaining majority of the records, however, had been destroyed by the telephone company in accordance with its policy of only retaining records for one year. 3

Also at the beginning of the hearing in damages, the court heard the defendant’s motion to open the default. The court denied the motion, noting that “[apparently [two other judges] both felt, despite what you’ve said . . . that the records were relevant ... to the issues of the case; that they were not irrelevant. That it is not just a question of . . . showing how many phone calls . . . but if she had the dates and with whom . . . the phone calls were made, then she could have asked questions from those parties as to what was said on key dates and so forth. And she . . . didn’t have the opportunity to do so. . . . I’ve had two judges now, by your own admission, consider the relevance of those records and found that they were relevant. And that, for whatever reason, your efforts to either obtain them *789 were not made with sufficient energy or sufficient compliance and that the plaintiff was disadvantaged thereby.”

On the second day of the hearing in damages, September 22, 2005, the court permitted the defendant, over the plaintiffs objection, to file a notice pursuant to Practice Book § 17-34 (a) 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
961 A.2d 475, 111 Conn. App. 784, 2008 Conn. App. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-woldeyohannes-connappct-2008.