Stamford Computer Group v. Leep Assoc., No. Cv 9110-2140 (Jan. 3, 1992)
This text of 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 1042 (Stamford Computer Group v. Leep Assoc., No. Cv 9110-2140 (Jan. 3, 1992)) 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.
Opinion
The tenant failed to pay rent for the months of July, August, September and October, 1991. By a promissory note, the defendant obligated itself to pay Stamford Computer Group, Inc., owned by plaintiff Lawrence Goichman, the amount of $63,646.68. This loan agreement was made in July 1990 at a time when the tenant was having difficulty paying rent. The tenant requested the landlords reduce the rent; the landlords refused. Then both parties agreed that the tenant would borrow one-half the monthly rent for a period from June 1, 1990 to May 1, 1990. The landlords decided they could not lend that amount, but proposed that Stamford Computer Group, Inc. do so. The tenant therefore borrowed the aforementioned sum, which included 11% interest from the corporation; the defendants, Pat Krisher and Maryann Krisher guaranteed payment. Checks were made to Leep Associates in monthly amounts of $4,891.20. No repayment was made by the defendants.
The plaintiffs have brought this action seeking damages. The tenant is still in possession of the premises. Based on the personal guarantees of the promissory note, the plaintiffs seek an attachment of the individual defendants' interests in real estate.
Connecticut courts have held that a determination regarding issuance of a prejudgment attachment of real property must be based upon a finding of civil probable cause. That was defined in Wall v. Toomey,
The plaintiff does not have to establish that he will prevail, only that there is probable cause to sustain the validity of the claim. One Fawcett Place Limited Partnership v. Diamandis Communications, Inc.,
The Supreme Court was not called upon to decide whether or not the probable cause standard violated federal due process. The Court's discussion of the probable cause standard was not only dicta; Halloran v. Byington, 5 Conn. L.RPTR, No. 7,161 (Nov. 18, 1991): it was CT Page 1044 also inconclusive. Discussing Conn. Gen. Stat. 52-278 e(a), 52-278 (c)(a)(2) 1991: and Ledgebrook, supra, and Anderson v. Nedovich,
The Doehr court was called upon to determine whether the issuance of an ex parte real estate attachment in a tort case, absent exigent circumstances, was an unconstitutional deprivation of property under any standard of review of the documents presented in support of the application for attachment.
In Union Trust v. Heggelund,
The case before this court is significantly different from Doehr. No ex parte order was issued by the court. The defendants were given prior notice of the hearing on the subject of the attachment. They had an opportunity to confront the plaintiff Lawrence Goichman through cross-examination and the opportunity to testify in opposition. Furthermore, this case arises as the result of an alleged breach of a lease. "A lease is a contract for the possession . . . of lands . . . on the one side, and a recompense of rent or other income on the other. . . ." Jo-Mark Sand Gravel Co. v. Pantanella,
In Doehr, the Supreme Court referred to the threefold inquiry of Mathews v. Eldridge,
In this case the court recognizes that there will be a temporary deprivation of the use of the real estate to the defendants. However, the procedures followed by the court, to wit: a full evidentiary hearing attended by both parties prior to attachment are the very procedures absent in Doehr. These procedures minimize the risk of erroneous deprivation. The party CT Page 1045 seeking the prejudgment remedy had an interest: his property is being used by the defendants who are allegedly either breaching the lease agreement by paying no rent or who owe a significant sum on a promissory note.
Although the plaintiffs through the corporation, and the defendants as individuals, do not have a landlord-tenant relationship, they dealt with each other interchangeably both as individuals and as business entities regarding the issue of rental payments.
For the foregoing reasons the prejudgment remedy is granted in accordance with the plaintiffs' application for Order dated October 29, 1991.
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