Torre v. Delmonico, No. 33 07 75 (Jul. 30, 1992)

1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 7258
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1992
DocketNo. 33 07 75
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 7258 (Torre v. Delmonico, No. 33 07 75 (Jul. 30, 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.

Bluebook
Torre v. Delmonico, No. 33 07 75 (Jul. 30, 1992), 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 7258 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON PLAINTIFF'S MOTION FOR TEMPORARY INJUNCTION The plaintiff is seeking a temporary mandatory injunction which would put her in possession of office premises presently under lease from the defendant DelMonico to the defendants John Williams and Sue Wise. The plaintiff's claim is based on a prior lease she entered into with the defendant DelMonico.

FACTS

The events leading to this controversy may be summarized as follows:

The plaintiff is a practicing attorney with offices or Orange Street in New Haven. In October 1991, she and the defendant DelMonico talked about her possibly purchasing and then leasing office space in the defendant's office building at 51 Elm Street, New Haven. After considerable discussion over several weeks, these two parties entered into a lease on February 20, 1992. The defendant landlord agreed to pay for certain renovations with the occupancy date of April 15, 1992 agreed upon. A contingency clause was included which addressed the month-to-month tenancy of the then tenant, Berlitz International, Inc. (hereinafter "Berlitz").

Relying on assurances from DelMonico (hereinafter CT Page 7259 "landlord") that Berlitz would not present any problems, the plaintiff made final plans to move. She purchased furniture, historical artwork portraying the premises at 51 Elm Street as it appeared in old New Haven, and planned the layout for the use of the space in question.

On March 18, 1992, having learned of the Torre-DelMonico lease, the defendant Wise made several attempts to speak to the landlord. Mr. DelMonico was driving back to New Haven from Boston when he received Ms. Wise's message, and made at least two calls to her. Ms. Wise then expressed her "concerns" over the Torre lease and stated this would cause "problems" if the plaintiff became a tenant. Wise also told DelMonico that he would be responsible for any problems in the building which resulted from the lease. By the end of the day, Wise and DelMonico agreed that the firm of Williams and Wise would lease the unit previously leased to Torre and that they would indemnify Mr. DelMonico from any and all damages and expenses, he suffered as a result of his terminating the lease with Torre.

These agreements were formally executed on March 20, 1992. On March 21, 1992, DelMonico wrote to the plaintiff advising he that he was exercising his right to terminate the lease by virtue of the contingency clause, claiming that he could not effect the Berlitz removal by April 1. (Actually, Berlitz substantially removed on April 2.)

The defendants Williams and Wise do not dispute the fact that they entered into the lease and indemnity agreement knowing of the prior Torre lease. They and the landlord maintain that Torre had no legal right in the lease in that it was terminated by the landlord pursuant to the contingency clause. The Williams and Wise alternative position is that if the landlord did not legally terminate the lease, their actions in persuading the landlord to breach the Torre lease were justified by the in will and bad blood which existed between the plaintiff and the defendants Williams and Wise. For about five years prior to March 1991, the plaintiff had been an associate in the Williams and Wise law firm. Their relationship since March had been acrimonious and litigation had resulted.

I.
The plaintiff has to satisfy five basic requirements to obtain injunctive relief:

1) that she has a legal right upon which to premise her claim; 2) a likelihood of success on the merits at trial; 3) that there is no adequate remedy at law; 4) that she will suffer irreparable harm; and 5) that a balancing of the hardships favors CT Page 7260 granting the injunctive relief. Connecticut Association of Clinical Laboratories v. Connecticut Blue Cross, Inc.,31 Conn. Sup. 110, 113 (1973).

All three defendants have argued that by virtue of the operation of the contingency clause, the landlord properly terminated the lease and thus the plaintiff has no legal right upon which to base her suit. The clause in question reads as follows:

I.4 CONTINGENCY. The parties recognize that the Demised Premises are currently occupied by a tenant, Berlitz International, Inc., and each party's obligation to proceed under this lease is conditioned upon the Landlord causing the Demised Premises to be vacant no later than April 1, 1992, and to be available for occupancy by the Tenant no later than April 15, 1992. If the Demised Premises are not available for occupancy by the Tenant as of April 15, 1992, then this agreement shall be terminated and neither party shall have any claim against the other with respect to this lease. Landlord further agrees to make all reasonable efforts to resolve this contingency prior to April 1, 1992, and to notify Tenant promptly upon such contingency being resolved.

The lease between the landlord and the plaintiff was executed on February 20, 1992. At that time, Berlitz was a month-to-month tenant which had indicated it would be vacating the premises it occupied. On February 25th, the landlord wrote to Berlitz saying the premises in question must be vacated. He had spoken to the Berlitz real estate director on the phone prior to writing.

This appears to represent the sum total of the landlord's efforts to have Berlitz vacate the premises. Conversations subsequent to February 25th had to do with Berlitz's desire to have the use of two or three classrooms on an intermittent basis subsequent to the removal of the bulk of the Berlitz property or April 2d. Contrasted with this modest activity is that of the plaintiff who was buying furniture and artworks for the premises she planned to occupy, meeting with the contractor who was to renovate the area, and studying diagrams of the floor layout to plan the installation of utilities, etc. CT Page 7261

The court notes that the attorney for the landlord during the lease negotiations testified that the landlord never discussed a summary process action with him after the February 20th lease execution. Further, while the plaintiff testified that she had contacted the Berlitz manager and was prepared to work out an arrangement with him that accommodated himself and Berlitz, the landlord produced no evidence to suggest that Berlitz was insisting on staying on. In fact, the unrebutted testimony of the plaintiff was that Berlitz substantially removed from the premises on April 2nd. Although some Berlitz property remained and they were permitted to use the premises into June, the defendants offered no explanation of that arrangement. The landlord never explained why Berlitz, lacking a lease and having indicated it was moving out, was apparently being permitted to trigger the contingency clause which would terminate a four year lease with the plaintiff.

An explanation of the landlord's actions may be found in early testimony in these proceedings. On April 9th, the landlord was examined by the plaintiff's counsel and he told of receiving phone calls on March 18th from Ms. Wise. Up to this point, he had not advised the plaintiff that Berlitz presented a problem nor had he told the plaintiff he was even contemplating resorting to the contingency clause. But, he said, Ms. Wise stated she had a problem with this plaintiff having an office in the same building as Williams and Wise and other occupants would also be concerned. Mr. DelMonico then said:

"She was very upset that there was a problem, and that's what started me on doing something other than that.'

This admission was repeated at a later point in his testimony.

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Bluebook (online)
1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 7258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torre-v-delmonico-no-33-07-75-jul-30-1992-connsuperct-1992.