Wilcox Trucking v. First Hartford Realty, No. 366925 (Nov. 23, 1992)

1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 10510
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedNovember 23, 1992
DocketNo. 366925
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 10510 (Wilcox Trucking v. First Hartford Realty, No. 366925 (Nov. 23, 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
Wilcox Trucking v. First Hartford Realty, No. 366925 (Nov. 23, 1992), 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 10510 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION CT Page 10511 The plaintiff in this action, Wilcox Trucking, Inc. (Wilcox), alleged in its complaint dated October 13, 1989 that "from September 26, 1986, and continuing until August 1, 1988, . . . at the request of and for the benefit of defendant, [the plaintiff] delivered topsoil, loam, gravel and sand" to certain tracts of land which were being developed by the defendant, First Hartford Realty Corporation (FHRC), in the towns of Manchester and Vernon, and that it also removed and disposed of stumps, hauled gravel and rented earth moving equipment to the defendant in connection with its development of those projects.

The defendant, in its answer to the complaint, denied that it owed the sum of $117,991.60 as claimed by Wilcox and also filed a counterclaim in which it alleged that the parties had "entered into an agreement in which FHRC agreed to sell and Wilcox agreed to buy surplus gravel removed by Wilcox" from one of the projects known as "Manchester Industrial Park III" (MIP III) located on Utopia Road in Manchester. The defendant also alleged that the agreement provided that Wilcox would pay fifty cents per cubic yard for the surplus gravel removed from MIP III and that pursuant to the agreement approximately 301,375 cubic yards of gravel were removed by Wilcox from June, 1986 to August, 1988 for which FHRC had not been paid.

In the first three counts of the defendant's counterclaim, damages in the amount of $150,925.00 were claimed by FHRC by reason of Wilcox's removal of the surplus gravel, based on the plaintiff's breach of the agreement, and on theories of unjust enrichment and quantum meruit. Counts four, five and six of the counterclaim originally filed by the defendant alleged that the agreement between the parties also provided that Wilcox was to bring the grade of the lots in MIP III to one-tenth of a foot of the proposed grades as shown on the plans which were given to him by FHRC, that "approximately 44,347 cubic yards of non-surplus material" had been improperly overexcavated, and that FHRC was entitled to damages based on theories of fraudulent concealment and unjust enrichment.

When the case was reached for trial the parties stipulated to a judgment in favor of Wilcox on the complaint for $117,991.60, and also filed an agreed statement of facts pertaining to the issues raised in the defendant's counterclaim. CT Page 10512 The stipulation of facts included a list of 29 dates from September 1986 to August 1988 which they agreed were the only times that Wilcox removed material from, or delivered material to, MIP III for the benefit, or at the direction of FHRC.

The stipulation also stated that the daily work reports of FHRC during the period in question would be introduced as business records and listed sixteen other dates on which Wilcox did not move or was not likely to have moved material from MIP III, as well as seven days when Wilcox did not remove any material except "as shown on the daily work reports." As a part of the stipulation the parties also stated that "[a]s to the remaining 120 dates for which daily work reports exist, there remains a dispute as to whether Wilcox Trucking was performing any work on MIP III other than reflected on the daily work reports."

At the conclusion of the evidence, the court allowed FHRC to revise its counterclaim by deleting the fourth, fifth and sixth counts and by adding a new paragraph (para. 7) to the first count, in which it alleged that it was entitled to an additional sum by way of damages for the cost of moving and relocating the remaining surplus material because of Wilcox's failure to grade the lots as required by the agreement.

The plaintiff's answer to the revised counterclaim stated that it admitted entering into "an agreement in which FHRC agreed to sell and Wilcox agreed to buy surplus gravel [to be] removed by Wilcox from certain real property . . . and that the unit price for said surplus gravel removed by Wilcox would be 50 cents per cubic yard." Wilcox also asserted by way of special defenses that 1) the first count was barred by the statute of frauds, 2) any overexcavation was the result of improper information provided to Wilcox by FHRC, 3) Wilcox did not remove any surplus material for its own benefit, 4) FHRC breached the verbal agreement by selling the gravel to someone else and after Wilcox learned of that sale and had informed FHRC "that there was no longer an agreement", the parties operated thereafter under "verbal barter agreements" in which Wilcox performed services for FHRC's benefit "in exchange for certain amounts of gravel", and 5) FHRC "made material changes to the proposed final grades on Lots 1, 2 and 3 of the premises, thereby depriving Plaintiff of the benefit to which it was entitled pursuant to the alleged June, 1986 verbal agreement."

CT Page 10513 The principal witness for the defendant in the course of the trial of the issues raised by the counterclaim was Michael Sweeney, the purchasing agent for FHRC, who was authorized by the corporation to solicit bids and to negotiate and administer contracts on its behalf. The negotiation and performance of the agreement which was the basis for the judgment entered by stipulation on the plaintiff's complaint, and the negotiation of the oral agreement which is the subject of the counterclaim, were conducted exclusively between Sweeney and David Wilcox, who is the sole owner of the plaintiff corporation and was its principal witness at the trial.

The defendant first offered into evidence the invoices (Exhibit 1) and the purchase orders (Exhibit 2) which were the basis for the stipulated judgment of $117,991.60 entered in favor of Wilcox in payment for the services it provided for the benefit of FHRC from September 26, 1986 and continuing until August 1, 1988 as stated in the plaintiff's complaint. It is undisputed that those services were performed during that period in connection with the development of MIP III, an industrial park located on Sheldon Road in Manchester consisting of twelve separate lots and a roadway known as Utopia Road.

Sweeney testified that the property was owned by Somersville Corporation, the development arm of First Hartford's corporate organizational structure, and that at the time of its acquisition it was an undeveloped forty-five acre former gravel pit that had not been used for a long period of time. He also stated that about 100,000 cubic yards, or one-third of the total available sand and gravel as estimated in June of 1986 by Fuss O'Neill, FHRC's engineering consultant, had been previously excavated and were stockpiled in various locations on the twelve lots of the proposed MIP III development.

Sweeney also testified that early in June of 1986, he and Stuart Greenwald, the treasurer of Somersville Corporation, agreed that the proceeds of the sale of surplus gravel on the property were to be given to FHRC as compensation for its management services in the development of MIP III. Greenwald was also called as a witness to corroborate the claim that such an agreement had been made and that therefore FHRC would be "entitled to any benefits to be realized" from the sale of sand and gravel as alleged in each of the three counts of the defendant's revised counterclaim.

CT Page 10514 In the course of his testimony as a witness called by FHRC, Wilcox stated that when he became aware of the fact that there was a "tremendous amount of gravel" on the MIP III site he went to Sweeney "and proposed that I would like to buy the gravel in the hills." Transcript, testimony of David R. Wilcox, p. 45.

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Bluebook (online)
1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 10510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilcox-trucking-v-first-hartford-realty-no-366925-nov-23-1992-connsuperct-1992.