The Gateway Company v. Dinoia, No. Cv 18-2225 T (Jan. 25, 1994)

1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 751
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1994
DocketNo. CV 18-2225 T
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 751 (The Gateway Company v. Dinoia, No. Cv 18-2225 T (Jan. 25, 1994)) 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
The Gateway Company v. Dinoia, No. Cv 18-2225 T (Jan. 25, 1994), 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 751 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION On June 17, 1954, the plaintiff, The Gateway Company, which was succeeded to by the plaintiff, Heyman Associates No. One, entered into a lease for a term of thirty years with the W. T. Grant Company concerning certain premises known as 41 Main Street, located in the Town of New Milford, Connecticut. On January 20, 1965, Grant, as part of a lease agreement with the defendant Lena DiNoia concerning different premises also located in New Milford, Connecticut assigned the Gateway lease to DiNoia. On April 9, 1976, the Gateway lease was reassigned to the defendant, The Village Green Mall, Inc., which remained in possession of the property until the expiration of the lease in 1985.

After assigning the Gateway lease to DiNoia, Grant went bankrupt, and it is not a party to this litigation. The defendant Village Green has been defaulted in this action for failure to appear. Thus, plaintiffs The Gateway Company and Heyman Associates No. One are presently seeking recovery from the defendants DiNoia and Charles Schnier, who was the grantee of a quit claim deed from DiNoia to him of the premises leased by DiNoia to Grant. CT Page 752

The plaintiff's theory of liablity [liability] against DiNoia as set forth in paragraph 10 of the first count of the plaintiff's substituted complaint is that as an assignee of the Gateway lease, DiNoia became forever liable to the landlord therefor for compliance with the repair clause in said lease. Their theory of liablity [liability] as set forth in paragraph 11 is that Gateway was a third party beneficiary of the agreement between DiNoia and Grant. The plaintiff's theory against defendant Schnier as the grantee of a quit claim deed which did not contain any assumption or agreement to pay clause.

The court finds that these legal theories asserted by the plaintiffs are incorrect both in law and in fact as against the defendants DiNoia and Schnier. The culpable parties, if any, are the original tenant Grant, which went into bankruptcy, or defendant Village Green, which was the tenant during the last nine (9) years of the Gateway lease.

The plaintiffs have offered in evidence various exhibits. The first exhibit is the Gateway lease entered into on June 17, 1954, and the second exhibit is the supplemental agreement extending the Gateway lease dated February 26, 1957. These agreements form the basis of plaintiffs' case. In both said exhibits, Gateway is referred to as the "landlord" and Grant is referred to as the "tenant" Nothing in the Gateway lease provides that any assignee of Grant would be called "tenant" or have any of the obligations of tenant under the lease. The term of the Gateway lease began on the first day of November, 1954, and terminated on January 31, 1985, some thirty years later.

Paragraphs 2 and 20 of the Gateway lease requires the landlord, at its own cost and expense, to construct a building containing 10,800 square feet of ground floor space together with a mezzanine of 3,840 feet, said building to be built according to plans furnished by the tenant to the landlord.

Paragraph 10(a) requires, the tenant during the terms of the lease to make all repairs and replacements both interior and exterior, which may be necessary to maintain the premises in a safe and tenantable condition CT Page 753 and in good order and repair. Paragraph 12 gives the tenant the unrestricted right to vacate or to sublet any part of the premises or to assign the Gateway lease, "but the tenant shall not thereby relieved of any liability hereunder."

Paragraph 13 of the Gateway lease is the customary surrender clause, and it provides that upon termination or expiration of the Gateway lease, the tenant "will peacefully and quietly leave and surrender the demised premises together with all alterations, additions and improvements then a part of such premises in good order and condition; reasonable wear and tear, restoration, repairs and replacements required to be made by the landlord, and loss or damage by fire, the elements and casualty excepted."

Plaintiffs Exhibit 3 is a lease between the defendant DiNoia, as landlord, and Grant, as tenant, dated January 20, 1965, concerning certain space leased in a different shopping center also located in New Milford. The plaintiffs rely on a provision in the DiNoia lease which states that "in order to induce the tenant, Grant to execute this lease, landlord, DiNoia, hereby assumes all of tenant's obligations under that certain lease and lease agreement dated June 17, 1954 between The Gateway Company . . . and Tenant Grant . . . covering premises known as No. 41 Main Street in the Town of New Milford, . . .". The plaintiffs are not a party to the DiNoia lease and are not mentioned therein.

The DiNoia lease contained its own penalty and damage clause. It stated that "in the event of landlord's [DiNoia's] default thereunder, tenant [Grant] shall have a lien against NEW MILFORD SHOPPING CENTER for any amounts expended by tenant [Grant] to cure such default. . ."

Exhibit 4 is a quit claim deed dated May 16, 1973 from DiNoia to Schnier of the New Milford Shopping Center which is the subject of the DiNoia lease. This quit claim deed contains a provision stating that the premises are conveyed "subject to any and all encumbrances appearing of record". Based upon this statement, the plaintiffs claim that Schnier was obligated to fulfill CT Page 754 all the conditions under The Gateway lease, including the make all necessary repairs and to keep the premises in tenantable condition, as required by The Gateway lease. Said quit claim deed, however, does not contain any provision of assumption by the grantee, defendant Schnier.

Exhibit No 5 is an "Assignment of Leases" dated April 9, 1976 from Schnier to Village Green. In the assignment, the defendant Schnier assigned, set over and transferred unto the defendant Village Green all its right to certain leases on the Gateway premises. The assignment contained no reversion and the "to have and to hold" clause provided that neither Charles Schnier Management Company nor any person claiming under it shall thereafter have any claim, right or title in or to the premises or any part thereof. This was thus a complete assignment under Connecticut law, and not merely a sublease. Rocklen v. Radulesco, 10 Conn. App. 271, 274 (1987).

In paragraph 3 thereof, the assignee (Village Green), by acceptance of the assignment, agreed to perform all of the obligations of the landlord. The Gateway lease contained no restriction on assignment and did not require any approval by Gateway. Village Green did, in fact, go into possession of the Gateway premises and paid rent directly to Gateway, or its agent or successor, for the remainder of the term of the Gateway lease.

Plaintiffs' Exhibit 6 constitutes an assignment of lease dated April 9, 1976, the same date as the preceding assignment, from DiNoia and Schnier to Village Green of the same premises described in the original Gateway lease. The only representation contained in said assignment is that the assignors, DiNoia and Schnier, warrant that the monthly rent payments were up-to-date and that landlord had not exercised any right terminate said Gateway lease for any other default. Therefore, at that time, the Gateway lease from the plaintiff to Grant was in full force and effect.

In said assignment, the assignee, Village Green, by acceptance thereof, agreed to perform all of the CT Page 755 obligations of the tenant, Grant, an set forth in the Gateway lease, from and after the date of the assignment thereof. Plaintiffs acknowledged these assignments and thereafter dealt directly with Village Green as tenant until the onset of this litigation.

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441 A.2d 81 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1981)
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Bluebook (online)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-gateway-company-v-dinoia-no-cv-18-2225-t-jan-25-1994-connsuperct-1994.