Total Recycling Services of Connecticut, Inc. v. Connecticut Oil Recycling Services, LLC

20 A.3d 716, 129 Conn. App. 296, 2011 Conn. App. LEXIS 321
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedJune 7, 2011
DocketAC 32243
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 A.3d 716 (Total Recycling Services of Connecticut, Inc. v. Connecticut Oil Recycling Services, LLC) 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
Total Recycling Services of Connecticut, Inc. v. Connecticut Oil Recycling Services, LLC, 20 A.3d 716, 129 Conn. App. 296, 2011 Conn. App. LEXIS 321 (Colo. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinions

[298]*298 Opinion

SCHALLER, J.

The defendant, Connecticut Oil Recycling Services, LLC, appeals from the judgment of the trial court denying its motion for attorney’s fees, rendered on remand following the decision of this court in Total Recycling Services of Connecticut, Inc. v. Connecticut Oil Recycling Services, LLC, 114 Conn. App. 671, 970 A.2d 807 (2009). On appeal, the defendant claims that the court abused its discretion by (1) requiring it to itemize attorney’s fees incurred for the litigation on three contracts and (2) denying appellate attorney’s fees for its prior appeal. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.1

The following relevant facts and procedural history were described by this court in Total Recycling Services of Connecticut, Inc. “In a four count complaint filed on October 19, 2006, the plaintiffs, Total Recycling Services of Connecticut, Inc. (Total Recycling), and White-wing Environmental Corp. (Whitewing), brought an action to enforce their alleged rights under three contracts relating to the sale of an oil recycling business to the defendant .... The plaintiffs sought damages either for breach of contract by the defendant or for unjust enrichment of the defendant, claiming nonpayment of amounts due. The defendant denied any liability to the plaintiffs and filed a five part counterclaim for damages resulting from the plaintiffs’ alleged failure to honor their contractual and statutory obligations to the defendant. The defendant also sought attorney’s fees in accordance with the provisions of two of the contracts between the parties.” Total Recycling Services of Connecticut, Inc. v. Connecticut Oil Recycling Services, LLC, supra, 114 Conn. App. 673.

[299]*299“In the defendant’s motion for attorney’s fees, it relied on the terms of the agreement to transfer Total Recycling’s customer list and Whitewing’s agreement not to compete. Each of these agreements entitled the defendant to recover ‘costs or damages, including reasonable attorney fees resulting from any breach of any representation, warranty or covenant contained in this Agreement.’ The trial court concluded that these provisions were inapplicable because the jury had awarded damages to the defendant only with respect to Total Recycling’s breach of the agreement to convey equipment, which did not contain such a clause.” Id., 679-80. This court disagreed and, noting that the plaintiffs had “not challenged the jury’s findings that Total Recycling breached the agreement to transfer its customer list and that Whitewing breached the agreement not to compete”; id., 680; held that “[t]he attorney’s fee clauses in these contracts did not require the defendant to prove more than breach.” Id., 680-81.

This court remanded the case for further proceedings on the defendant’s claim for attorney’s fees, holding that “[t]he parties have not had the opportunity, to date, to address the proper construction of the clause, in both contracts, that permits the defendant, on a showing of the plaintiffs’ breach, to recover ‘costs or damages, including reasonable attorney fees . . . .’ It is, for example, not clear whether the phrase ‘including attorney fees’ modifies both ‘costs’ and ‘damages.’ . . . The parties similarly have not had the opportunity to present evidence on the reasonableness of the fees accrued by the defendant during the course of this litigation. A remand will provide an opportunity for the resolution of these issues and other related questions that the parties may want to present.” Id., 681.

Following the remand, the defendant filed a motion for attorney’s fees with the trial court. The defendant attached to the motion an affidavit and itemized fist of [300]*300attorney’s fees incurred in the course of the litigation. The list did not distinguish the items of work on the separate contracts with respect to which the defendant successfully counterclaimed. By memorandum of decision filed November 30, 2009, the court, Jones, J., refused to award any fees to the defendant because it concluded that it was “necessary for the defendant to identify which reasonable attorney’s fees were incurred in prosecuting its breach of contract counterclaim with regard to the contracts that specifically provide for attorney’s fees.”2 The court allowed the defendant the opportunity to make the requisite showing at a future hearing.

The defendant filed a renewed motion for attorney’s fees, attaching the same affidavit and list of attorney’s fees incurred. On March 29, 2010, the court, Bear, J., held an evidentiary hearing, during which the defendant presented the testimony of an expert witness, William Gallagher, a trial attorney with many years of experience. Gallagher testified that it would be “extremely difficult” to sort out the attorney’s fees based on the billing in the file because “no one itemized, and that’s not the custom to itemize in that great detail.” Gallagher also testified that he believed that a decision of this court, Heller v. D. W. Fish Realty Co., 93 Conn. App. 727, 890 A.2d 113 (2006), allows for fees in any case where “services are intertwined in such a way that it’s not possible to sort them out . . . .”

Gallagher’s testimony was the only testimony heard by the court, but the attorneys for both parties made arguments to the court. The defendant’s attorney argued that he could not parse out his time spent on the three contracts and he does not keep track of his [301]*301time in that manner. The plaintiffs argued that the defendant failed to satisfy the November 30, 2009 order.

On April 19, 2010, the court denied the defendant’s motion for attorney’s fees. The court held that the order requiring the defendant to identify the fees associated with the litigation of the two contracts providing for fees was the law of the case. The court also held that Jacques All Trades Corp. v. Brown, 57 Conn. App. 189, 200, 752 A.2d 1098 (2000), governed in the present case, preventing the defendant from recovering all fees. The defendant has appealed.

“[W]e review an award of attorney’s fees under the abuse of discretion standard of review. This standard applies to the amount of fees awarded . . . and also to the trial court’s determination of the factual predicate justifying the award. . . . Under the abuse of discretion standard of review, [w]e will make every reasonable presumption in favor of upholding the trial court’s ruling, and only upset it for a manifest abuse of discretion. . . . [Thus, our] review of such rulings is limited to the questions of whether the trial court correctly applied the law and reasonably could have reached the conclusion that it did.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Moasser v. Becker, 121 Conn. App. 593, 595, 996 A.2d 1200 (2010).

I

The defendant first claims that the court improperly refused to grant the defendant’s motion for attorney’s fees on the basis that it had not identified which attorney’s fees were incurred in litigation of the contracts that allowed for such fees.3

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 A.3d 716, 129 Conn. App. 296, 2011 Conn. App. LEXIS 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/total-recycling-services-of-connecticut-inc-v-connecticut-oil-recycling-connappct-2011.