T.H.P. Associates Ltd. v. Norwich Mus., No. Cv97-0080952-S (Oct. 10, 1997)

1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 10440
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1997
DocketNo. CV97-0080952-S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 10440 (T.H.P. Associates Ltd. v. Norwich Mus., No. Cv97-0080952-S (Oct. 10, 1997)) 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
T.H.P. Associates Ltd. v. Norwich Mus., No. Cv97-0080952-S (Oct. 10, 1997), 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 10440 (Colo. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The above-captioned case, in which the plaintiff seeks to recover a claimed debt, came before this court on October 1, 1997 for trial on the merits. Post trial reply briefs were to be filed by October 8, 1997.

The plaintiff T.H.P. Associates Limited Partnership ("T.H.P.") alleged in its revised complaint that the defendant Norwich Museum Trust, Inc., ("museum trust") agreed to reimburse it in the amount of $100,000.00 for back real estate taxes T.H.P. paid when it sold certain property on Main Street in Norwich. T.H.P. alleges that the museum trust confirmed in writing its CT Page 10441 agreement to pay the sum but failed to do so after T.H.P. demanded payment.

The museum trust raised no affirmative defenses and denied all allegations of the complaint except the allegation of demand for payment.

After hearing the evidence and examining the exhibits, the court finds the facts to be as follows.

T.H.P. is a limited partnership formed for the purpose of acquiring and developing certain properties in Norwich known as 25-27, 35, 37-41, 43-49, 57, 75 and 87-91 Main Street. T.H.P. bought the properties on September 7, 1989 for two million dollars. At an unspecified time in 1989, T.H.P. entered into an agreement with the City of Norwich to sell the properties to the City for over a million dollars. For reasons not relevant to this suit that agreement was not pursued to a closing T.H.P. renegotiated with the City and agreed to sell the Main Street properties to it for $830,000. The City required T.H.P. to pay accrued real estate taxes in the approximate amount of $100,000. Part of the City's plan in acquiring the properties was to convey 77-85 Main Street to the museum trust, which hoped to develop a heritage museum or some other such tourist attraction on the site as a focus for development in Norwich. T.H.P. was reluctant to sell the property to the City for realized proceeds of only $730,000 (the purchase price reduced by the back taxes). T.H.P.'s lawyer, Thomas Cotter, contacted the directors of the museum trust and asked the museum trust to pay the $100,000 so that T.H.P. would go through with the sale and the museum trust could receive its building. Upon a vote of its executive committee, the museum trust agreed to pay the taxes. Since the museum trust could not do so with funds of its own, one of its directors, Thomas Marien, agreed on its behalf to reimburse T.H.P. for the taxes after T.H.P. paid them.

Edward J. Safdie, the general partner of T.H.P., testified that Marien, who had for many years been Safdie's accountant, made statements that led Safdie to believe that the $100,000 would be paid within six to nine months. Safdie did not, however, testify that this interval was specifically stated as the date for payment in the oral agreement between the parties. Marien Marien testified that he told Safdie that the $100,000 would be paid on the same basis as its plan to pay the City of Norwich for acquisition of the building and for certain windows that had been CT Page 10442 bought from the City to be used in renovation.

T.H.P. entered into evidence the text of a resolution passed by the executive committee of the museum trust on October 11, 1994 and signed by its president. The resolution is as follows:

Resolution: To agree to reimburse Thames Harbor Plaza the sum of $100,000 for the real estate taxes paid as a result of the sale for the Mercantile Exchange to the City of Norwich. Payment will be made as soon as funds are available.

It is undisputed that "Thames Harbor Plaza" is a reference to T.H.P. Associates Limited Partnership.

The court finds that the text of the above resolution was not provided to Safdie or T.H.P. prior to its sale of the property to the City and that the parties reached no definite agreement as to the date for payment of the $100,000. Safdie knew that the museum trust's assets consisted at the time only of a state grant that could not be used to pay T.H.P. T.H.P.'s expectations that it would be paid within nine months are the product not of any explicit agreement by the museum trust to pay at that time but of Safdie's calculations as to how long he thought development should take.

The two directors of the museums trust who testified, Thomas Marien and Margaret S. Wilson, stated that at the time of the agreement they believed that the steps necessary to renovate the building, rent out retail space, and obtain a mortgage based on the income stream from the retail space would be about two years, and that they expected to pay T.H.P. from the mortgage loan.

The court finds that the parties did not reach any specific agreement as to the time for repayment and that they had differing and unexpressed expectations of when payment would be made. The museum trust has admitted paragraph 3 of the revised complaint, in which T.H.P. alleges that it has made demand for payment. The court finds that none of the $100,000 has been paid to date.

The museum trust has never solicited donations or conducted a fund-raising event. According to the testimony of Margaret Wilson, it did nothing in furtherance of its plans in 1994 or 1995 to try to raise funds. The renovation of the building was substantially completed at the end of 1996. A prospective tenant CT Page 10443 for about one-third of the rental space was found and the museum trust held informal discussions with one bank, the Norwich Savings Society, concerning a mortgage in the amount of $1.5 million, however, these discussions did not ripen to an actual application. William J. Terwilliger, manager of the commercial loan department at Norwich Savings Society, testified that his bank would require less of the rental space to be occupied if the museum trust applied for a mortgage in a lower amount.

The museum trust has not attempted to obtain a mortgage in any amount less than $1.5 million.

ASSIGNMENT

The museum trust presented evidence that it claimed indicated that the obligation at issue had been assigned to another entity, N. Invest L.L.C. The museum trust did not present into evidence any document setting out such an assignment but rather argues that the court should infer such an assignment from certain entries in financial statements of Mr. Safdie and N Invest L.L.C. Those documents contain no actual confirmation of any assignment of the debt of the museum trust, and the court finds that the inferences urged by the defendant are strained and unconvincing.

DUE DATE

The museum trust argues that the parties agreed that the $100,000 would not be due until the museum trust obtained a mortgage that enabled it to pay that amount and that this condition has not yet been satisfied, so that payment is not yet due. This court has found that the agreement of the parties did not include a provision that payment was due upon that or any other specified condition. Even the defendant's own resolution does not mention the obtaining of a mortgage but rather states that "[p]ayment will be made as soon as funds are available." (Ex. F).

Letters sent by the museum trust to Mr. Safdie in 1996 concerning the museum trust's own views on when payment would be made reflect only that party's own intentions, not any actual terms or conditions agreed to by T.H.P. The court finds credible Mr. Safdie's testimony that Mr. Marien stated at the time of the transaction that the museum trust had a number of possible sources of future funds, including grants, donations, and proceeds from loans. CT Page 10444

In its trial brief, the museum trust has cited cases concerning the time for payment when an agreement contains a condition precedent for payment. See Lach v.

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Lach v. Cahill
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87 A. 277 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1913)
Leventhal v. Town of Stratford
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Griffin v. Smith
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Norton v. Shepard
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Luttinger v. Rosen
316 A.2d 757 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1972)
Phillipe v. Thomas
489 A.2d 1056 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 10440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thp-associates-ltd-v-norwich-mus-no-cv97-0080952-s-oct-10-1997-connsuperct-1997.