VERTEFEUILLE, J.
The primary issue that we must resolve in this certified appeal is whether the Appellate Court properly determined as a matter of law that the plaintiff, the city of Hartford, as assignee of the note and mortgage executed by the defendant Brian McKeever,
The opinion of the Appellate Court sets forth the following facts and procedural history. "In May, 1983, the defendant owned a building in Hartford, known as 206-208 Hamilton Street (property). The property contained multiple units that the defendant rented to tenants. On May 5, 1983, the defendant borrowed a total of $143,065 in two separate loans from the Community Development Corporation (corporation). In one loan transaction (loan one), the defendant and the corporation entered into a promissory note agreement with a principal amount of $28,879. In the other loan transaction (loan two), the defendant and the corporation entered into a promissory note agreement with a principal amount of $114,186. Each loan was secured by a separate mortgage on the property. At the time they entered into the loan agreements, the defendant and the corporation also entered into a separate agreement, entitled `Collateral Assignment of Leases and Rentals' (assignment of rents agreement), pursuant to which the corporation was empowered to collect rent directly from the defendant's tenants if he defaulted on his obligation to make payments on the notes.
"Although the corporation immediately assigned its interest in the notes to Colonial Bank, which later became State Street Bank & Trust Company of Connecticut (State Street Bank), the corporation continued to service the loans. In July, 2001, State Street Bank assigned loan two to the
"On April 21, 2003, the defendant filed a five count counterclaim against the plaintiff, claiming: (1) violation of the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act (CUTPA), General Statutes § 42-110a et seq.; (2) violation of the Connecticut Creditors' Collection Practices Act, General Statutes (Rev. to 1993) § 36-243a; (3) breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing; and (4) breach of a modification agreement previously agreed to by himself and the plaintiff. [The defendant] also sought, in the fifth count, an accounting as to all payments that his tenants had made under the assignment of rents agreement.
"The plaintiff subsequently withdrew its foreclosure complaint, conceding that the defendant had overpaid loan two by $17,397.93. Accordingly, [the plaintiff] offered to compensate [the defendant] in that amount. The defendant, however, declined the plaintiff's offer, electing instead to proceed to trial on his counterclaim to recover what he claimed to have been an overpayment of $195,909 on loan two. The plaintiff filed an answer to the counterclaim, denying its essential allegations, and pleaded as a special defense that CUTPA does not apply to municipalities.
"After a five day trial, the court issued a memorandum of decision in which it concluded that the plaintiff was liable to the defendant for the total amount he claimed to have overpaid on loan two to the plaintiff and all other prior holders of the note. The court therefore awarded him damages of $195,909, albeit without specifying the count of the counterclaim under which it made that award.... [A]pproximately eleven months after the court's November 9, 2010 decision, the plaintiff filed a motion for articulation, requesting for the first time that the court explain, inter alia, under which count of the counterclaim it had found in the defendant's favor. The court responded that, without having access to the court file, it was unable to identify the specific count of the counterclaim under which it had found in the defendant's favor."
The plaintiff appealed to the Appellate Court claiming that the trial court incorrectly had concluded as a matter of law that, as an assignee, it was liable for the defendant's overpayments to the assignor, State Street Bank, or to any other prior holders of the note. Id., at 282-83, 55 A.3d 787. The defendant contended that there was no need for the Appellate Court to consider whether, as a legal matter, an assignee can be held liable for the conduct of its assignor, "because the trial court found, as a factual matter, that the plaintiff was involved from the beginning and specifically that [the corporation] was acting, throughout the history of the loan, as an agent of Colonial Bank which in turn was the plaintiff's trustee."
A majority of the Appellate Court agreed with the plaintiff's legal claim. Accordingly, it reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded the case for further proceedings. Judge Gruendel authored a dissenting opinion in which he contended that the court should "generally preclude affirmative claims against an assignee arising from the acts or liabilities of the assignor, while at the same time permitting equitable claims that merit exception therefrom." Hartford v. McKeever, supra, 139 Conn.App. at 298, 55 A.3d 787. Judge Gruendel further argued that "[t]he present case is a quintessential example of the need for, and the appropriateness of, that exception.... [T]he plaintiff here was involved in the loan transactions from the beginning, as the trial court specifically found and as the plaintiff admitted in its answer." (Citation omitted.) Id., at 303, 55 A.3d 787 (Gruendel, J., dissenting). In support of this conclusion, Judge Gruendel pointed out that the plaintiff had admitted the portion of the defendant's counterclaim alleging that he had "executed two promissory notes to [the plaintiff] in exchange for [the] loans...."
In response to Judge Gruendel's argument, the majority of the Appellate Court stated that "the trial court made no finding as to the making or significance of the [plaintiff's] alleged admission [that rents were collected on its behalf] and based no legal conclusion upon it. It is thus not within our power to consider the factual and legal ramifications of the admission on the issues before us...."
On appeal to this court, the defendant does not challenge the Appellate Court's legal conclusion that, "[i]n the absence of an express contract provision, an assignee generally does not assume the original responsibilities of the assignor, but he or she may be liable for breach of the terms of
We begin with the standard of review. The defendant's claim that the trial court held that the defendant was
In support of its legal conclusion that the defendant was entitled to recover the full amount that he overpaid on the note from the plaintiff, the trial court relied exclusively on cases and treatises addressing the scope of an obligor's right as a matter of law to recover from the obligee's assignee.
Indeed, neither the trial court nor the defendant has pointed to any evidence that (1) the plaintiff had any reason to know when it became the assignee of the note and mortgage that the defendant had overpaid the loan, or (2) the plaintiff was unjustly enriched by the overpayments.
We therefore reject the defendant's claim that the Appellate Court improperly placed the burden of providing an adequate record on appeal on him instead of on the plaintiff. The judgment of the trial court was based solely on its conclusion that, as a matter of law, the defendant, as mortgagor, was entitled to assert any affirmative claims that he had against the corporation, Colonial Bank and State Street Bank against the plaintiff, as assignee of the note and mortgage, and that was the holding that the plaintiff successfully challenged on appeal to the Appellate Court.
Finally, we address the question of the proper disposition of this case. The Appellate Court concluded that the case must be remanded to the trial court, apparently for a determination of the amount owed by the plaintiff to the defendant, if any, in light of the Appellate Court's determination that the plaintiff was not liable for the overpayments to the corporation, Colonial Bank or State Street Bank. See Hartford v. McKeever, supra, 139 Conn. App. at 287 n. 10, 55 A.3d 787 ("[T]he [trial] court did not make a determination as to the value of the promissory note at the time that State Street Bank assigned it to the plaintiff. As such, setoff may be warranted."). Our review of the record reveals, however, that the trial court expressly found that the note had "been paid in full prior to the assignment" and that the amount of the overpayments that had been made to the plaintiff was $56,930. The trial court based these findings on the testimony of the defendant, which the court found credible. Indeed, even in the absence of this express finding, a finding that nothing was due on the note when it was assigned to the plaintiff was implicit in the trial court's finding that the defendant had overpaid the loan before the assignment. Accordingly, we conclude that the Appellate Court's determination that the trial court had made no finding on this issue was incorrect.
We note that on appeal to the Appellate Court, the plaintiff challenged this finding of the trial court on the ground that the trial court "did not rely on competent evidence from which [it] could determine the amount of debt because it relied on [the defendant's] self-serving documents...." Hartford v. McKeever, Conn. Appellate Court Records & Briefs, supra, Plaintiff's Brief, Appendix A-5 p. 16. The plaintiff also contended that the defendant's testimony was "speculative" because
The remaining issue is the defendant's claim for attorney's fees and interest. The defendant contends that, at trial, the trial court indicated that it would consider the issue of attorney's fees after it rendered its decision on the defendant's counterclaim provided that the defendant filed a request for attorney's fees within thirty days of the decision, and the plaintiff agreed with that procedure. The trial court rendered its decision on November 9, 2010, and on November 23, 2010, the defendant filed: (1) a document captioned "motion for post-judgment interest" in which he stated that "[t]he defendant hereby
The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed and the case is remanded to that court with direction to remand the case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with the preceding paragraph.
In this opinion ROGERS, C.J., and ZARELLA, EVELEIGH and ESPINOSA, Js., concurred.
PALMER, J., with whom McDONALD, J., joins, dissenting.
I agree with the majority that, as a general matter, an innocent assignee of a note and mortgage does not assume the original responsibilities of the assignor and, therefore, is not liable for affirmative claims against the assignor by the obligor. I disagree, however, with the majority's determination that the Appellate Court was not required to address the claim of the named defendant, Brian McKeever (defendant), that it should recognize and apply an equitable exception to this rule. The majority concludes that the Appellate Court was not required to address this claim because the trial court did not address it, and, therefore, the record is inadequate for review. Contrary to the majority's assertion, and as I explain more fully hereinafter, it is clear that the trial court did address the defendant's claim. But even if it had not, the plaintiff, the city of Hartford (city), has never denied the fundamental facts underlying it — namely, that the city always was the real party in interest to the notes and mortgages and, additionally, that all of the defendant's overpayments were collected by the city's trustee
In reaching its contrary determination, the majority rejects the defendant's contention that the record is sufficient for appellate review because the trial court expressly found that the city was not an innocent assignee but, rather, was "involved [in the transactions] from the [very] beginning," that "it would be highly inequitable for the city ... to be unjustly enriched by [money] paid by [the defendant] that [was] not in fact due," and that the city "had an interest from the very beginning and over the years in the execution and administration of the mortgages." Rather than defer to these findings, the majority dismisses them as mere "dicta." Footnote 12 of the majority opinion. The majority also rejects the defendant's contention that the record is adequate for review because the city never disputed that it was involved in the execution and administration of the notes and mortgages from the beginning, and even admitted in its pleadings that it was a party to those transactions.
The majority also incorrectly asserts that there is no evidence that "the [city] was unjustly enriched by the [defendant's] overpayments"; text accompanying footnote 13 of the majority opinion; and, therefore, that there was no basis to conclude that the equities favor the defendant. Once again, the majority refuses to acknowledge that the city never has denied that the overpayments were collected by the trustee on its behalf, as required by law, and that the money went directly to the city to pay its bondholders. Indeed, during oral argument, counsel for the city stated that it would have been "fatal" to the city's tax exempt bond program if the money had been used for any other purpose. Thus, contrary to the majority's suggestion, to the extent that the record lacks direct evidence that the city benefited from the defendant's overpayments, it is only because the city never has claimed otherwise. At trial, and on appeal to the Appellate Court, the city disputed only the amount of the overpayments and whether it was legally responsible for overpayments that occurred prior to the assignment.
I also disagree with the majority's assertion that the trial court never addressed the defendant's equitable claims, and, as a consequence, the Appellate Court also was not required to address them. At trial and in his posttrial briefs, the defendant maintained that the city, rather than the trustee or the CDC, was always the real party in interest, as evidenced by the loan and mortgage documents and the fact that, "when the bonds were paid, [the trustee] assigned its rights with respect to the [remaining] note and mortgage to the city for [only $1].... If money was still due under the note and mortgage, why else would the city obtain the right to collect money under the note and mortgage unless it was a real party to the total transaction from the beginning?" Indeed, as I previously discussed, the defendant alleged in his counterclaim that the city was a party to the notes and mortgages, which the city admitted.
Furthermore, although the trial court never specified the count or counts of the counterclaim on which the defendant had prevailed, it expressly noted in its memorandum of decision that the defendant was seeking an accounting from the city. It is well established that "[a]n action for an accounting calls for the application of equitable principles."
Nevertheless, as I have explained, even if the trial court had not addressed the defendant's equitable claims, there is nothing to prevent this court from doing so on the basis of the pleadings and the undisputed evidence in the record clearly establishing that the CDC was simply a proxy or agent for the city with respect to the execution and administration of the notes and mortgages. Moreover, even if the record required further fact-finding in order to resolve this claim, the proper disposition would be to remand the case to the trial court for additional findings on that issue; the trial court did not address the claim only because it improperly had found in favor of the defendant on another claim, a determination that was based on an incorrect interpretation of the law.
The Appellate Court stated that, although this court "has recognized that the Uniform Commercial Code [UCC], General Statutes § 42a-1-101 et seq., is formally limited to transactions involving personal property, it has determined that the [UCC] may furnish a guide for the law governing real property mortgages. See Olean v. Treglia, 190 Conn. 756, 762, 463 A.2d 242 (1983)." Hartford v. McKeever, supra, 139 Conn.App. at 285 n. 8, 55 A.3d 787. Accordingly, the court relied on General Statutes § 42a-3-305, governing defenses and claims in recoupment, for guidance. Id. We note that, although a mortgage is not subject to the UCC, a promissory note that is secured by a mortgage is subject to the UCC if it meets the definition of a negotiable instrument set forth in General Statutes § 42a-3-104 (a), which provides that a writing may be a negotiable instrument if it (1) is payable to order or to bearer, (2) is payable on demand or at a definite time, and (3) contains an unconditional promise or order to pay a fixed amount of money, with or without interest or other charges, and no other promise, order, obligation or power is given by the maker or drawer except as otherwise authorized. See Lenares v. Miano, 74 Conn.App. 324, 328 n. 4, 811 A.2d 738 (2002). The note at issue in the present case is not a negotiable instrument because it is not made payable to order or to bearer. We agree with the Appellate Court that, even when not applicable on its terms, the UCC can provide guidance in a case such as the present one.
Greenblatt also testified that, if the defendant had made all of his loan payments in a timely manner, the total repayment amount would have been $248,331.60, and the loan would have been paid in full after fifteen years. Because the defendant fell behind on his payments, however, he was ultimately required to pay much more over a much longer period. Greenblatt did not know precisely how much more the defendant was ultimately required to pay as the result of his default. The trial court ultimately found that Greenblatt was not a credible witness.
With respect to Judge Gruendel's argument in his dissenting opinion that the plaintiff had admitted that the corporation, Colonial Bank and State Street Bank had collected the amounts due on the loan on its behalf; see Hartford v. McKeever, supra, 139 Conn.App. at 304, 55 A.3d 787; the fact that those entities may have used a portion of the loan payments to pay off the plaintiff's obligations to its bondholders does not necessarily mean that the entire amount of the loan payments was collected on the plaintiff's behalf or that the plaintiff actually benefited in any way from the overpayments. With respect to Judge Gruendel's argument that the plaintiff had admitted the portion of the defendant's counterclaim alleging he had "`executed two promissory notes to [the plaintiff] in exchange for [the] loans'"; id., at 303 n. 14, 55 A.3d 787; on the basis of the record before us, we can only state that this admission is inexplicable in light of the uncontroverted evidence that the promissory notes named the corporation as the payee. See footnote 6 of this opinion. Indeed, in his reply brief to the trial court, the defendant admitted that "the original loan was made ... from [the corporation] to [the defendant]." Perhaps the plaintiff intended to admit that it now had the rights of a payee on the subject notes pursuant to the assignment. In any event, neither the trial court nor the defendant has relied on this admission.
The dissent contends that, to the contrary, "the [plaintiff's] admissions are not inexplicable. Indeed, the [plaintiff] explained them to this court at length at oral argument." (Emphasis in original.) Specifically, the dissent points out that counsel for the plaintiff stated at oral argument before this court that the corporation was the mortgage holder, that the plaintiff was legally obligated to retain a trustee to collect the money and that the trustee was doing so for the benefit of the plaintiff. Thus, the dissent appears to contend that counsel's representation to this court that the plaintiff was legally prohibited from taking promissory notes from persons like the defendant who received loans from the bond proceeds somehow explains the plaintiff's admission that the defendant executed the notes in favor of the plaintiff. We disagree. The plaintiff and its respective trustees are separate entities, and the nature of the legal relationship between the plaintiff and its trustees and the rights and obligations that flowed from that relationship were not litigated in the present case. Thus, nothing in the record supports the defendant's allegation that he executed the promissory notes in favor of the plaintiff or explains the plaintiff's admission of that allegation. Finally, we take issue with the dissent's statement that we have repeatedly asserted that the record is inadequate to review the defendant's claim that the corporation, Colonial Bank and State Street Bank were acting at all times on behalf of the plaintiff and for the benefit of the plaintiff. We have concluded only that the record is inadequate to determine (1) the legal ramifications of the fact that those entities, as trustees, were obligated to act on the plaintiff's behalf, and (2) whether the plaintiff actually benefited from the overpayments. See footnote 15 of this opinion.
The dissent states, however, that the plaintiff has never claimed that "the trial court incorrectly had concluded or failed to address [in its memorandum of decision the plaintiff's] claim that it was not liable for overpayments collected by the trustee...." See footnote 4 of the dissenting opinion. The plaintiff had no reason to raise such a defense in its posttrial brief, however, because the defendant has never claimed that the plaintiff was liable for the overpayments as a trust beneficiary. Indeed, when the plaintiff argued at trial that "the trustee bears full liability ... [and the] beneficiary doesn't bear liability if the loan is somehow mismanaged," the trial court stated that it was "not questioning the [loan] to Colonial [Bank] as [t]rustee. I understand you're the beneficiary." Similarly, the court later stated, "I understand on Colonial [Bank] where the beneficiary is not liable." Thus, the court agreed with the plaintiff's position. Presumably, the defendant declined to make a claim in his posttrial brief, or anywhere else, that the plaintiff was vicariously liable as a trust beneficiary for the mismanagement of the loans by the corporation, Colonial Bank and/or State Street Bank because he agreed with the plaintiff and the trial court that that was not the case. Indeed, the only comment that counsel for the defendant made in response to the plaintiff's argument at trial that it was not liable as a trust beneficiary was, "I would think the trustee is [the plaintiff's] agent." The defendant never briefed the claim, however, that the plaintiff was liable as a principal for its agents' mismanagement of the loans. Accordingly, the dissent's argument that the trial court's statement that the plaintiff had not proven any of its defenses somehow applied to the plaintiff's unopposed argument during trial that it was not liable as a trust beneficiary is simply untenable. There was absolutely no reason for the trial court to conclude that the plaintiff had not proven a defense to a claim that the defendant had never raised.
The dissent contends that "[t]he trial court's finding that the [plaintiff] was involved in the transactions from the beginning is obviously responsive to this contention" by the defendant. Even if that were the case, it is reasonable to conclude that the trial court declined to issue a ruling on the defendant's claim that the plaintiff was liable for the overpayments because it was the actual party in interest because the defendant failed to brief it adequately. For the reasons that we have explained, even if the plaintiff was involved in the transaction from the beginning, and even if the corporation, Colonial Bank and State Street Bank were acting on the plaintiff's behalf, those facts, standing alone, would not support the conclusion that the plaintiff is liable to the defendant for the overpayments in the absence of any legal analysis of those facts, which the defendant did not provide.
The majority also observes that the defendant and I have cited "[no] authority for the proposition that a trust beneficiary [such as the city] is deemed to have benefited from any action taken by the trustee in the name of the beneficiary that benefited the trustee...." Footnote 15 of the majority opinion. In the city's pretrial statement regarding liability, as well as at oral argument before the trial court, the city argued that, as beneficiary of the trust, it was not liable for the trustee's mismanagement of the trust prior to July 19, 2001. Although the trial court did not directly address this claim in its memorandum of decision, it found "that the city as to its defenses has not proven them by a preponderance of the evidence, whether [it is] the Uniform Commercial Code or any other defenses." (Emphasis added.) In light of this clear and unambiguous finding, and without an articulation by the trial court in this regard, we can presume only that the trial court ultimately rejected the city's claim that it was not liable for the overpayments that the trustee collected, regardless of what the trial court may have said in passing with respect to this issue while the trial was ongoing. Furthermore, on appeal to the Appellate Court, the city did not claim that the trial court incorrectly had concluded or had failed to address its claim that it was not liable for overpayments collected by the trustee, nor does it raise such a claim before this court as an alternative ground for affirming the judgment of the Appellate Court. In light of this procedural history, it is apparent that the city has abandoned any claim that it might otherwise have had with respect to the legal ramifications of its relationship to the trustees.