Strol v. Strol, No. Cv 94 0066081 (Sep. 5, 1996)

1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5433-GGG
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 1996
DocketNos. CV 94 0066081, CV 95 0068350
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5433-GGG (Strol v. Strol, No. Cv 94 0066081 (Sep. 5, 1996)) 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
Strol v. Strol, No. Cv 94 0066081 (Sep. 5, 1996), 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5433-GGG (Colo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiff, Gerard J. Strol brought these two consolidated cases seeking to set aside and declare as null and void two quit claim deeds, both dated May 19, 1994 and filed in the respective town clerks' offices of New Milford and Danbury on May 20, 1994, claiming that Gerard Strol had no intention of conveying his interests in his New Milford and Danbury properties but was tricked into signing the deeds by his brother, defendant Ronald H. Strol, who told Gerard that he was signing documents relating to their boat business. The plaintiff Gerard also asks for damages in the amount of lost rents from May 20, 1994 to the present time, double damages, attorneys fees and costs. Defendant Marie F. Strol has been named as party defendant because she was the purported grantee under these two quit claim deeds.

The plaintiff Gerard and the defendant Ronald are brothers. Gerard, four years younger, worked for Ronald for twenty years from 1974 to 1994 as the service manager of the marina on Candlewood Lake in New Milford called Marineland, Inc. Gerard's job consisted of repairing motor boats, running the docks on the lakefront, and assisting boat owners in storing their boats over CT Page 5433-HHH the winter. Ronald took care of all the boat sales and financial management of the Marineland business. Ronald was the President and sole shareholder of Marineland, and handled all of the paperwork. Ronald was Gerard's boss, set his salary and supervised his activities at Marineland.

Ronald was also engaged in many other business activities including a substantial real estate empire which ultimately grew to over 100 real estate properties by the late 1980's, consisting of residential homes, condos and apartments he owned and rented out. Ronald and his wife, Joyce Strol, managed all of these 100 plus properties, finding tenants, collecting rents, paying expenses, repairs, taxes, and insurance. Since the 1970's, Ronald has held a Connecticut real estate agent's license, and has attended the required continuing education courses to maintain it.

On December 30, 1976, Gerard purchased from Ronald a single family residence known as Cedar Terrace in Danbury, Connecticut by warranty deed filed in the Danbury Land Records, Vol. 589, Page 973 (Exhibit P-3). Gerard gave Ronald a mortgage deed dated December 30, 1976 to secure a promissory note from Gerard to Ronald in the amount of $28,477.50, recorded in the Danbury Land Records, Vol. 589, Page 975 (Exhibit P-4). Gerard also assumed a mortgage on the property to People's Bank from Ronald in the face amount of $28,000 dated August 14, 1972 and filed in the Danbury Land Records, Vol. 520, Page 454 (Exhibit P-2). Ronald and Ronald's wife Joyce managed the property for Gerard in the same way as they managed the many other real estate properties Ronald owned at that time, finding tenants, paying expenses, collecting rents, and paying off the two mortgages on the property.

On December 22, 1986, Gerard received from his mother Marie the single family residence known as 6 Candlewood Springs, New Milford by quit claim deed filed in the New Milford Land Records in Vol. 361, Page 333 (Exhibit P-11) executed by Ronald using the power of attorney from Marie filed on the New Milford Land Records, Vol. 361, Page 331 (Exhibit P-10). As for the Danbury house, this property was managed by Ronald and Joyce Strol who used the rentals to pay taxes, insurance, and repairs, with the excess being used to pay off the two mortgages on the Danbury property. The People's Bank mortgage was ultimately paid off in 1991. (Exhibit P-9).

Every year, Gerard's accountant, who was also Ronald's CT Page 5433-III accountant, would get from Ronald an accounting of the income and expenses for the two properties which would then be reported on Gerard's Form 1040 at Schedule E. At trial, Gerard testified that these properties resulted in a net taxable income of $2,676 in 1991 and $2,476 in 1992, and a net loss of $1,866 in 1993.

Gerard testified at trial that he did maintenance work from time to time on the properties and paid real estate taxes for one of the properties when the rental account was short.

Each week, during their twenty years of working together, Ronald would present Gerard with documents to sign which Ronald told Gerard concerned the marina business, such as boat registrations and titles.

In Ronald's deposition (Exhibit P-22 at page 39), as introduced at trial, Ronald admitted that "at the time Gerard signed that (the quit claim deed from the Danbury property), prior to my bankruptcy, Gerard would sign anything and everything that was put in front of him."

Ronald's real estate empire collapsed in 1990 and on March 28, 1991 he filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy which was converted to Chapter 7 on March 4, 1993. As a result, Ronald lost all of his real estate holdings and other assets.

In June of 1994, Gerard discovered that on May 20, 1994, quit claim deeds dated May 19, 1994 (Exhibits P-7 and P-13) had been filed on the Danbury and New Milford Land Records, purporting to transfer Gerard's interest in the properties to Marie. Gerard went to the New Milford and Danbury Police Departments to swear out complaints against Ronald for forgery and on July 28, 1994 started the present actions in the Danbury and Litchfield Superior Courts, and filed lis pendens on both land records. The Danbury Superior Court action was transferred to the Litchfield Superior Court and given the new docket number CV 95 0068350S.

At trial Gerard has testified that he had no recollection of ever signing quit claims deeds, and the only possibility as to how his signature could have gotten on those deeds was that he had been tricked by Ronald into signing them when Ronald put them in with other documents relating to the Marineland business which needed Gerard's signature. It is significant that each of the deeds has a checkmark next to where Gerard signed, in the same way that Ronald always checked places for Gerard to sign the CT Page 5433-JJJ Marineland documents which needed his signature.

Gerard testified that he had no intention of transferring the properties to Marie at anytime. Gerard testified that he needed these properties because he desperately needed a place to live for his wife and three children now that the bankruptcy trustee was selling 20 Greenwood Road in New Milford, the house where he and his family had been living. If so, it is unreasonable for the transfer to have been made to Marie Strol.

Ronald, by his own admission, stated that when Gerard signed the deeds, the date was left blank, and then years later a date was typed in, May 19, 1994, known to Ronald to be false, and done without Gerard's permission. Ronald testified at trial that he went to the New Milford Town Hall and executed the notary portion of the deed, when he knew that Gerard had not signed the deed on May 19, 1994, nor had Gerard acknowledged that on that date or any other date that it was his free act and deed.

Ronald insisted that Gerard had signed the quit claims deeds in late December 1986 or early January 1987 to coincide with the time that Gerard acquired the Mew Milford property from Marie on December 22, 1986. Time and again during his testimony, Ronald confirmed that the two quit claim deeds were signed in late December of 1986 and at no other time.

Exhibits P-6 and P-12, the original quit claim deeds, are forms imprinted with the name of the law firm, "Guendelsberger and Taylor". Attorney Kenneth E. Taylor testified at trial that these quit claim deed forms could not have existed until sometime in 1990 because the name of his firm had not changed until January 1, 1990.

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Bluebook (online)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5433-GGG, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strol-v-strol-no-cv-94-0066081-sep-5-1996-connsuperct-1996.