Shuchman v. State Employees Retirement Commission

472 A.2d 1290, 1 Conn. App. 454, 1984 Conn. App. LEXIS 549
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedOctober 11, 1983
Docket(2307)
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 472 A.2d 1290 (Shuchman v. State Employees Retirement Commission) 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
Shuchman v. State Employees Retirement Commission, 472 A.2d 1290, 1 Conn. App. 454, 1984 Conn. App. LEXIS 549 (Colo. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

Dupont, J.

The facts of this appeal 1 are not in dispute. The plaintiff began employment with the University of Connecticut School of Law in September, 1967. Prior to that date, he had been employed full time with the departments of education of two other states. The plaintiff sought and was denied retirement credit under the State Employees Retirement Act; General Statutes §§ 5-152 through 5-192d; for his service elsewhere. 2 The denial was based upon his failure under General Statutes § 5-177 to make a retirement contribution within one year of his first full time employment with this state. 3 The plaintiff then brought an action for a mandatory injunction, seeking a judgment directing the *456 defendant to allow him to purchase retirement credit for his out-of-state teaching service. The trial court rendered judgment for the defendant.

On appeal, the issues raised by the plaintiff are: (1) whether the court erred in admitting into evidence two documents relevant to the issue of the plaintiffs actual notice of the time limitations of General Statutes § 5-177; (2) whether the court erred in finding actual notice; and (3) whether the court erred in finding that the statute did not deny the plaintiff equal protection of the law. 4

I

The plaintiff claims error in the trial court’s finding that an inquiry about the purchase of retirement credits for his out-of-state teaching was made in March, 1968, and in its finding that the plaintiff had received timely notice of his ability to purchase the credits in June, 1968. The findings were based, in part, upon the introduction into evidence of a memorandum of March, 1968, from the office manager and registrar at the law school to the university personnel assistant. The memorandum stated that the plaintiff was interested in receiving information concerning “buying-in retirement” and that he had taught at other schools and believed he could buy retirement benefits for the years *457 spent teaching elsewhere. It concluded by asking the personnel director to send such information to the plaintiff. The author of the memorandum testified that someone had asked her to write it, that she did not know who had asked, that it was her job to write such memoranda involving retirement benefits, that normally such a memorandum would be written upon an inquiry by the dean or by a member of the faculty of the law school, and that she had personally typed the particular memorandum. Another witness responsible for maintaining personnel records testified that the original document was kept in her office in the plaintiffs personnel file folder. The defendant claimed it to be admissible under General Statutes § 52-180. 5 On appeal, the plaintiff argues that the writing is inadmissible because it was not based upon information transmitted to the entrant by an observer whose business duty it was to transmit such information. 6

The trial court is given discretion under General Statutes § 52-180 (a) to determine whether the criteria of *458 the statute have been satisfied and, in reviewing the decision of the trial court to admit the evidence, an appellate court should construe the statute liberally. Emhart Industries, Inc. v. Amalgamated Local Union 376, U.A.W., 190 Conn. 371, 388, 461 A.2d 422 (1983). Many Connecticut cases hold that records are to be excluded from evidence under the statute if the information contained therein is not obtained from those who had a duty to transmit it. These cases, however, involve mere volunteers with no business connection to the business, the record of which was sought to be introduced. Hutchinson v. Plante, 175 Conn. 1, 392 A.2d 488 (1978); General Motors Acceptance Corporation v. Capitol Garage, Inc., 154 Conn. 593, 227 A.2d 548 (1967); Sheary v. Hallock’s of Middletown, Inc., 149 Conn. 188, 177 A.2d 680 (1962); D'Amato v. Johnston, 140 Conn. 54, 97 A.2d 893 (1953).

The entrant in the present case testified that a faculty member or the dean must have requested that she obtain the information, and also testified to the other prerequisites of General Statutes § 52-180. Someone, not necessarily the plaintiff, but one involved in the business of the law school, made a request for information. It could not have been an officious intermeddler, foreign to the affairs of the school. “It is well-settled that permissible information in a business entry or record may include information garnered from other persons whose business duty involved submitting that information for inclusion in the report or entry.” State v. Cosgrove, 181 Conn. 562, 568-69, 436 A.2d 33 *459 (1980). It is not necessary to prove the specific identity of the informant. McCormick, Evidence § 286.

The lack of personal knowledge of the entrant as to the particular source of the information affects the weight of the evidence, not its admissibility. Note, “Revised Business Entry Statutes: Theory and Practice,” 48 Colum. L. Rev. 920, 926 (1948). Furthermore, General Statutes § 52-180 (b) (1) provides that the failure to produce the person who has personal knowledge of the event recorded will not affect the admissibility of a document, although that failure may affect the weight to be accorded to it. The reliability of business records should depend upon the extent to which they are considered reliable by the party for whom they are kept. C. Laughlin, “Business Entries and the Like,” 46 Iowa L. Rev. 276 (1961). There was no error in the admission of the memorandum.

At the very least, the writing indicates that the author of the memorandum believed that the plaintiff sought information about his “buying-in retirement” credits, even if the writing did not conclusively prove that it was the plaintiff who initiated the memorandum. See United States v. Burruss, 418 F.2d 677, 678 (4th Cir. 1969). The plaintiff testified that he had no recollection of asking the entrant to seek such information for him. Any inference arising from the writing as to the plaintiff’s knowledge of possible retirement credits for out-of-state teaching could be tested by the court against the plaintiff’s disclaimer of knowledge.

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Bluebook (online)
472 A.2d 1290, 1 Conn. App. 454, 1984 Conn. App. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shuchman-v-state-employees-retirement-commission-connappct-1983.