Regis v. Connecticut Real Estate Investors Balanced Fund, Inc.

613 A.2d 321, 28 Conn. App. 760, 1992 Conn. App. LEXIS 333
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedAugust 25, 1992
Docket10806
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 613 A.2d 321 (Regis v. Connecticut Real Estate Investors Balanced Fund, Inc.) 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
Regis v. Connecticut Real Estate Investors Balanced Fund, Inc., 613 A.2d 321, 28 Conn. App. 760, 1992 Conn. App. LEXIS 333 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

Daly, J.

The named defendant1 appeals from the trial court’s judgment of strict foreclosure of a mortgage used to secure the purchase of a piece of real property. The defendant claims that the trial court improperly (1) failed to find that a mutual mistake concerning a material term of the contract existed and (2) rendered judgment of strict foreclosure because the plaintiff made a fraudulent or negligent misrepresentation. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The trial court found the following facts. In 1979, the plaintiff Richard Regis2 purchased property located in the borough of Danielson. Because the property did not abut any accepted street in the borough, the plaintiff obtained a twenty foot right-of-way to gain access to the property. In 1979, the plaintiff submitted an application for a change of zone classification for the property with the Danielson planning and zoning commission. Along with the request for change of zone, the plaintiff submitted a plot plan concerning the proposed construction of a forty-eight unit apartment complex. On March 4,1980, the Danielson planning and zoning commission granted the application and changed the property classification accordingly. On April 3, 1980, the plaintiff was notified that a zoning permit for the construction of a forty-eight unit apartment complex would be issued as long as the plaintiff satisfied all of the conditions set by the zoning commission. The plaintiff, however, never sought issuance of the zoning permit. The plaintiff testified that he never intended to build the apartment complex and submitted the plot plan to secure the change of zone so as to increase the value of the property.

[762]*762During the 1970s, the plaintiff had been involved in real estate transactions with Charles Lehn, a principal of the named defendant. In 1986, Lehn viewed the property and the plaintiff showed him the notice from the zoning commission concerning the permit to construct an apartment complex on the property. Because the notice was issued in 1980, the defendant requested that the plaintiff obtain updated information concerning the construction of an apartment complex. The plaintiff obtained a letter from the chairman of the Danielson planning and zoning commission dated April 30,1986. The April 30,1986 letter indicated that the zoning permit would be granted as long as certain more stringent conditions were satisfied. On May 9, 1986, the property was conveyed to the defendant for $200,000. The defendant made a payment of $30,000 and executed a promissory note secured by a mortgage for the balance of the purchase price. From May 9, 1986, until 1989, the defendant did not attempt to obtain a zoning permit to build the apartment complex. In 1989, the defendant attempted to obtain a zoning permit for the construction of the apartment complex to facilitate a sale of the property to another buyer. The defendant was denied a zoning permit because the property did not have a fifty foot right-of-way to a public road. The defendant’s application for a variance from the right-of-way requirement was denied by the Killingly zoning board of appeals.3

The trial court found that the fifty foot right-of-way requirement was in effect at the time of the sale on May 9, 1986, but was not in effect in 1980 when the plaintiff first sought a zoning permit.

Paul F. Trahan, the chairman of the Danielson planning and zoning commission in 1986, testified about the [763]*763April 30 letter. Trahan knew that the property lacked a fifty foot right-of-way to a public road and testified that he did not notify the plaintiff about the right-of-way requirement because he concluded that the borough of Danielson could not enforce the fifty foot access requirement in this case. He believed that the fifty foot access requirement was not enforceable because the plaintiff had used the property without the fifty foot right-of-way in the past and that the twenty foot right-of-way could not be widened to satisfy the fifty foot access requirement. Trahan testified that he felt that his April 30, 1986 letter constituted zoning approval for the construction of a forty-eight unit apartment complex on the property even though the property did not have a fifty foot right-of-way abutting a public street. The court found that the Danielson planning and zoning commission lacked the authority to waive the fifty foot right-of-way requirement and that only the zoning board of appeals could waive that requirement.

In 1989, the plaintiff brought a foreclosure action against the defendant to recover the unpaid balance of the mortgage. In June of 1990, the defendant made a mortgage payment of $35,000 after which the plaintiff withdrew the foreclosure action. In that action, the defendant did not raise any claim of mutual mistake, negligent misrepresentation or fraud in the first foreclosure action.

The plaintiff brought the present action in October, 1990. The defendant filed a counterclaim for damages and pleaded fraud and mutual mistake as special defenses. The court found that the defendant failed to prove that the plaintiff made a false statement about the property. There was no evidence showing that the plaintiff, as a part of any inducement to purchase, guaranteed the right to build an apartment complex on the property. On the basis of the representations of the [764]*764chairman of the Danielson planning and zoning commission, the plaintiff believed that the defendant could obtain a zoning permit in May, 1986.

The court further found that there was no mutual mistake on the part of the plaintiff. The plaintiff intended to sell this property and complied with the defendant’s requests to update the 1980 zoning permit. The plaintiff did not stipulate, assure or guarantee that the apartment complex could be built on the property. The court found that while Lehn may have mistakenly believed that the plaintiff had guaranteed that Lehn would be allowed to build an apartment complex, such mistake would be unilateral and not mutual.

The court further noted that even if the defendant established its special defense of mutual mistake, it failed to seek timely rescission of the contract. The defendant did not attempt to obtain a zoning permit until three years after its acquisition of the property. Upon learning of the denial of the permit, the defendant did not seek rescission of the contract and offer to return the property to the plaintiff in exchange for the purchase price. The defendant did not raise the defense of mutual mistake in the plaintiff’s first foreclosure action which was withdrawn upon the defendant’s paying the outstanding mortgage arrearage. The defendant also did not raise the defense of mutual mistake in its first answer to the plaintiff’s complaint in this action which was filed on December 14, 1990. In March, 1991, the defendant raised the defense of mutual mistake for the first time. The court found that the defendant’s conduct precluded it from being entitled to rescind the contract even had the defendant established the existence of a mutual mistake between the parties.

The court also examined the contract to determine if the plaintiff had promised the defendant that it would [765]*765be allowed to construct an apartment complex.

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Bluebook (online)
613 A.2d 321, 28 Conn. App. 760, 1992 Conn. App. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/regis-v-connecticut-real-estate-investors-balanced-fund-inc-connappct-1992.