Tadros v. Tripodi

866 A.2d 610, 87 Conn. App. 321, 2005 Conn. App. LEXIS 54
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 2005
DocketAC 24622; AC 24623; AC 24944; AC 24624; AC 24945
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 866 A.2d 610 (Tadros v. Tripodi) 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
Tadros v. Tripodi, 866 A.2d 610, 87 Conn. App. 321, 2005 Conn. App. LEXIS 54 (Colo. Ct. App. 2005).

Opinion

Opinion

McLACHLAN, J.

These appeals arise from the acrimonious dissolution of the medical practice of the plaintiff Raafat R. Tadros and the defendant Giuseppe Tripodi, [324]*324both of whom axe surgeons. Of the eight lawsuits filed between the parties and their various entities,1 six were consolidated and tried to the court, the seventh remains open following a foreclosure sale2 and the eighth was withdrawn. In short summary, after trial, the court concluded that the defendants, Tripodi and his wife, Concetta Tripodi, secretly had stolen $876,985.27 from the medical practice over the course of several years. The court ordered them to pay the plaintiff Raafat R. Tadros, Giuseppe Tripodi and Thomas Alosco, M.D., P.C. (professional corporation) treble damages totaling $2,630,955.81, plus interest in the amount of $537,418.50. In addition, the court concluded that Giuseppe Tripodi was hable to Tadros for unpaid rent in the amount of $211,875, plus interest. Finally, as a prejudgment remedy, the court garnished the proceeds of the foreclosure sale of a building owned by Tadros’ and Guiseppe Tripodi’s real estate corporation held by the clerk of the Superior Court after Giuseppe Tripodi purchased the property at a foreclosure auction. The defendants claim that the court improperly (1) admitted hearsay evidence for a limited nonhearsay purpose and then improperly considered the evidence for its truth as proof of the amount stolen, (2) concluded that Giuseppe Tripodi was hable for unpaid rent, (3) awarded the plaintiffs prejudgment interest pursuant to General Statutes § 37-3a and (4) concluded that it had the authority to garnish funds held by the clerk of the Superior Court. We affirm the judgments of the trial court.

[325]*325The following background facts essentially are undisputed. Tadros hired Giuseppe Tripodi in 1985, and the two later formed a professional corporation, Raafat R. Tadros and Giuseppe Tripodi, M.D., P.C. In 1990, Tadros and Giuseppe Tripodi purchased real estate and conveyed it to their newly formed real estate corporation, Middlebury Medical Center, Inc. (real estate corporation). The practice occupied the second floor of the building while the first floor was leased to other medical professionals. In 1996, Thomas Alosco, also a surgeon, joined the professional corporation and later became an equal shareholder with Tadros and Giuseppe Tripodi.3 Alosco did not at any relevant time own an interest in the real estate corporation.

By the end of2000, both the personal and professional relationship between Tadros and Giuseppe Tripodi soured, and they terminated their practice effective January 1, 2001. Giuseppe Tripodi formed a new entity, the defendant Middlebury Surgical, LLC, and Tadros and Alosco formed a new professional corporation, Raafat R. Tadros and Thomas Alosco, M.D., P.C. The two new entities continued to share the same office space until March 24, 2001, when Tadros and Alosco moved their practice to a different location. By agreement of the parties, Giuseppe Tripodi remained in the practice’s original offices in the building owned by the real estate corporation.

The court in its memorandum of decision made the following findings of fact specifically related to the Tripodis’ theft of funds from the plaintiff professional corporation. “Between 1991 and 2001, $876,985.27 of the corporation’s revenues were ‘discounted’ in the corporation’s records. The effect of the discount was to offset the accounts receivable of the corporation so that the [326]*326corporate records would not show the revenue that it had earned. Although the evidence was circumstantial, the evidence points unequivocally to the conclusion that the Tripodifs] misappropriated and committed the theft of this money. . . . [T]he items entered in the corporation’s computer records under ‘discount’ were accompanied by computer codes used exclusively by Concetta Tripodi.4 These codes were not used by Joyce Benoit, an administrative assistant in the office who was supervised by Concetta Tripodi in handling the office’s financial records and who was the only other person in the office with substantial computer expertise.

“Second, between February 13 and 20, 2001, while the professional corporation was in the throes of an acrimonious breakup, corporation counsel Mark Neikrie and his agents seized the corporation’s computer. They returned the computer to the office on February 21 and then seized it again on March 9, [2001]. During the period between February [21] and March [9], 2001, when the computer was back in the office, Concetta Tripodi made over 200 deletions of prior computer entries, some of which involved patient balances. Almost half of the matters deleted had been originally entered prior to 2000, and some had been entered as far back as 1993.5 Although the exact economic effect of all of the deletions is not clear, they nonetheless reveal unauthorized tampering with the computer records at a particularly suspect time.

“Third, numerous canceled patient or insurance payment checks bore an endorsement of Guiseppe Tripodi [327]*327alone or, less frequently, some other endorsement different from that usually used by the professional corporation. These checks were deposited into bank accounts other than the one used by the corporation for deposits. The amount in these checks was then entered under ‘discount’ in the corporation’s records. This money was, thus, plainly diverted from the corporation by the Tripodis.

“Fourth, Guiseppe Tripodi requested and received cash for certain varicose vein procedures performed on Saturdays. Occasionally, the cash would be missing on Monday morning and, thus, would not be available for the daily deposit into the corporate bank account. Guiseppe Tripodi told Benoit that he took cash from patients and used the cash for the medication for the varicose vein procedure. Concetta Tripodi told Benoit that the former would take care of the related computer entries.

“Fifth, Guiseppe Tripodi sought to end his medical practice with Tadros because Guiseppe Tripodi felt that he was not receiving adequate compensation for the work that he was doing. Tadros preferred to adhere to the original agreement whereby each partner would receive equal shares of the earnings. Guiseppe Tripodi’s dissatisfaction with the compensation scheme forms a strong motive for the theft.

“Sixth, at his deposition, Guiseppe Tripodi invoked the fifth amendment privilege against self-incrimination in response to questions concerning whether he was stealing from the business, depositing corporate revenues into noncorporate bank accounts and failing to pay income taxes on these moneys. At her deposition, Concetta Tripodi invoked the fifth amendment in response to questions concerning the deposit of corporate revenues to noncorporate accounts, her use of the office computer to discount these deposits and her use [328]*328of the computer in late February or early March, 2001, to make changes to conceal the misappropriation of funds. The court can and does draw an adverse inference from the breathtaking scope of the Tripodis’ invocation of the fifth amendment.”

Further facts will be provided as necessary to address the defendants’ specific claims.

I

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
866 A.2d 610, 87 Conn. App. 321, 2005 Conn. App. LEXIS 54, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tadros-v-tripodi-connappct-2005.