PETERS, J.
In the proper circumstances, a statute of limitations may be tolled under the continuous course of conduct doctrine to reflect the policy that, "during an ongoing relationship, lawsuits are premature because specific tortious acts or omissions may be difficult to identify and may yet be
On February 17, 2011, the plaintiff, Florence Haas, filed a revised third amended complaint against the defendant, Arthur J. Haas, alleging claims for an accounting, fraud, constructive fraud and punitive damages.
In its May 23, 2011 memorandum of decision, the court made extensive findings of fact that the defendant does not contest on appeal. At the time of the judgment, the plaintiff was an 88 year old widow. The defendant is her son. Before she became widowed, the plaintiff had relied on her husband to manage her finances and investments. Following the death of the plaintiff's husband in 1986, the defendant assumed his father's role in managing the plaintiff's financial affairs. The defendant, who was a certified public accountant,
For five consecutive years, from 1991 to 1995, the defendant failed to prepare or
As a result of the defendant's failure to file the plaintiff's tax returns, income from stock sales and dividends was attributed to the plaintiff, and she accumulated significant tax liabilities that went uncontested and unpaid. The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) began to levy on the plaintiff's assets. In 2000, the IRS seized approximately $70,400 from the plaintiff's brokerage account. Although the defendant, as the named account holder, was informed of the seizure, he took no action to reclaim the seized funds. Moreover, he failed to inform the plaintiff of the seizure and allowed the two year window for contesting the IRS takings to pass without informing the plaintiff or her attorney. In 2001, the IRS seized $49,118.98 from the plaintiff's retirement account and $8,156.17 from the plaintiff's personal bank account. The IRS also issued garnishments against the plaintiff's social security retirement income and her wages from her part-time employment income and placed a tax lien on the plaintiff's home.
The plaintiff did not discover the defendant's failure to file her tax returns until 2001, after she had retained an attorney, Samuel Starks, to help her with estate planning and to ascertain why she had stopped receiving her social security checks and why the IRS had placed a tax lien on her house. The defendant failed to respond to Starks' numerous requests for information relating to the plaintiff's taxes and to identify assets belonging to the plaintiff that remained under the defendant's control.
In April, 2002, Starks received a letter from the IRS asking for the plaintiff's year 2000 tax return and reflecting alleged stock sale income of $120,080 and dividend income of $5001. Starks was unable to file the plaintiff's 2000 tax return because the documentation needed to account for the stock sales and dividends was in the defendant's possession, and the defendant refused to provide it. Starks filed the plaintiff's tax returns for 2001 through 2003, reporting the income actually received by the plaintiff during those years.
In 2004, the plaintiff retained a certified public accountant, Keith H. Dommreis, to prepare her tax returns. Dommreis prepared the plaintiff's delinquent tax returns starting with tax year 1996. Because the plaintiff had not received the income generated by stock sales reported to the IRS for years 1996 to 2000, Dommreis attributed all income from sale of the plaintiff's stocks during those years to the defendant. According to Dommreis, the records disclosing the basis of the stock sales, which were needed to file proper tax returns, were in the defendant's possession.
From 2001 to 2008, the plaintiff and her attorney made numerous requests of the defendant to identify assets belonging to the plaintiff that remained under his control and to release the plaintiff's financial and tax records. The defendant never responded to any of these requests and continued to withhold documents and information in his possession. At trial, the defendant attributed his failure to provide the requested information to his fear that he would be sued. He also claimed that relevant records had been lost as a result of a fire in his home in December, 2004. The court expressly found that the alleged fire was "not helpful to the defendant's case."
Even after the plaintiff filed the present action, in October, 2005, the defendant continued this pattern of withholding information by contesting the plaintiff's attempts to obtain pretrial discovery. The defendant did not produce the documents that established the basis for the sale of the plaintiff's stocks until 2008. The plaintiff did not learn the location and the amount of the plaintiff's brokerage accounts controlled by the defendant until June, 2008. The defendant did not disclose the IRS seizure of funds from the plaintiff's brokerage account to the plaintiff or her attorney until the first day of trial, August 19, 2008. The defendant repeatedly failed to produce personal financial records that were requested by the court-appointed forensic accountant and delayed the production of other evidence. It was not until the last day of trial that the defendant finally produced a spreadsheet that outlined the stock transactions on the plaintiff's brokerage accounts between 1978 and 2001, including the basis of the stock sales.
In light of these factual findings documenting the defendant's continuing misconduct, the court concluded that the fiduciary relationship between the defendant and the plaintiff continued until the commencement of the 2008 trial, because, until that time, the defendant withheld significant and highly relevant information from the plaintiff. For a period of approximately twelve years, the defendant had withheld and refused to disclose information and documents in his possession that potentially could have reduced or eliminated the plaintiff's tax liabilities. The defendant's deliberate concealment of evidence of his culpability for the plaintiff's losses demonstrated a course of continuing misconduct that tolled the applicable statute of limitations, § 52-577.
The court awarded the plaintiff damages in the amount of $206,117.34, representing
In his appeal to this court, the defendant claims that the trial court improperly (1) applied the continuing course of conduct doctrine to toll the statute of limitations on the plaintiff's claims and (2) awarded the plaintiff $45,522 in damages representing unaccounted for funds missing from the plaintiff's brokerage accounts. We affirm the judgment of the court.
The defendant's principal claim on appeal is that the court improperly applied the continuing course of conduct doctrine to toll the three year statute of limitations governing the plaintiff's claims, § 52-577.
The question of whether a party's claim is barred by the statute of limitations is one of law subject to plenary review. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd's, London v. Cooperman, 289 Conn. 383, 407-408, 957 A.2d 836 (2008). "The issue, however, of whether a party engaged in a continuing course of conduct that tolled the running of the statute of limitations is a mixed question of law and fact.... We defer to the trial court's findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous." (Citation omitted.) Giulietti v. Giulietti, 65 Conn.App. 813, 833, 784 A.2d 905, cert. denied, 258 Conn. 946, 947, 788 A.2d 95, 96 (2001).
"[F]actual findings of a trial court ... are reversible only if they are clearly erroneous.... This court cannot retry the facts or pass upon the credibility of the witnesses.... A finding of fact is clearly erroneous when there is no evidence in the record to support it ... or when although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.... We do not examine the record to determine whether the trier of fact could have reached a conclusion other than the one reached. Rather, we focus on the conclusion of the trial court, as well as the method by which it arrived at that conclusion, to determine whether it is legally correct and factually supported." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., at 837, 784 A.2d 905.
"Section 52-577 applies to .... actions alleging fraud.... It is a statute of repose in that it sets a fixed limit after which the tortfeasor will not be held liable and in some cases will serve to bar an action before it accrues.... Nonetheless, [w]hen the wrong sued upon consists of a continuing course of conduct, the statute does not begin to run until that course of conduct is completed....
"[I]n order [t]o support a finding of a continuing course of conduct that may toll the statute of limitations there must be evidence of the breach of a duty that remained in existence after commission of
"In sum, a precondition for the operation of the continuing course of conduct doctrine is that the defendant must have committed an initial wrong upon the plaintiff.... Second, there must be evidence of the breach of a duty that remained in existence after commission of the original wrong related thereto.... [T]hat continuing wrongful conduct may include acts of omission as well as affirmative acts of misconduct...." (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Id., at 833-35, 784 A.2d 905.
In the present case, it is undisputed that the defendant initially violated his fiduciary obligations to the plaintiff by failing, in 1991 and for five consecutive years thereafter, to prepare and to file tax returns on her behalf. It is equally undisputed that the plaintiff discovered the defendant's failure to file her taxes in 2001, and did not initiate litigation against the defendant until October, 2005. If nothing further had transpired in the relationship between the parties, the defendant properly could rely on the statute of limitations to bar the plaintiff's present cause of action. See General Statutes § 52-577 ("[n]o action founded upon a tort shall be brought but within three years from the date of the act or omission complained of"). The critical questions are, therefore, whether the court properly found that, between 2001 and 2005, the defendant engaged in further misconduct related to his initial wrongful acts and properly concluded that this subsequent misconduct tolled the running of the statute of limitations. See Jarvis v. Lieder, 117 Conn.App. 129, 148-49, 978 A.2d 106 (2009); Giulietti v. Giulietti, supra, 65 Conn.App. at 833-34, 784 A.2d 905.
The court's conclusion that the continuing course of conduct doctrine applied to toll § 52-577 was based on its factual findings of (1) a special relationship between the parties that gave rise to a continuing duty on the part of the defendant and (2) a pattern of continuing misconduct by the defendant that related back to his initial wrongful acts. The court's pivotal determination was its finding that the defendant's duty to the plaintiff was prolonged by the defendant's active concealment and withholding of documents and information relating to his initial failure to file the plaintiff's taxes. This course of conduct continued until the time of the filing of the plaintiff's complaint and even thereafter, when the defendant deliberately resisted requests for discovery. Our review of the record persuades us that these factual findings are not clearly erroneous.
It is undisputed that the defendant, an accountant, assumed a fiduciary responsibility to act for the benefit of the plaintiff, his elderly and fiscally unsophisticated mother, in managing her financial affairs. The record reveals that the defendant was aware of the financial predicament that inevitably would result from his failure to file the plaintiff's taxes, but did not inform the plaintiff of his failure to act or advise her to seek the assistance of another accountant or a tax attorney. Moreover, the record reveals that the defendant actively concealed his misdeeds and impeded the
"[T]he continuing course of conduct doctrine reflects the policy that, during an ongoing relationship, lawsuits are premature because specific tortious acts or omissions may be difficult to identify and may yet be remedied." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Watts v. Chittenden, supra, 301 Conn. at 583-84, 22 A.3d 1214; see Giulietti v. Giulietti, supra, 65 Conn. App. at 834, 784 A.2d 905. This case presents precisely the relationship and the misconduct contemplated by such a policy. The defendant's later misconduct deliberately made it difficult for the plaintiff to discover his initial wrongdoing and, once that wrongdoing came to light, made it difficult for her to obtain the information she needed to prosecute her claims. Given the court's factual findings, which are supported by the record, we are persuaded that the court's conclusion that the continuing course of conduct doctrine applied to toll the statute of limitations on the plaintiff's claims was legally correct.
The defendant also claims that the court improperly awarded the plaintiff $45,522 in damages representing unaccounted for funds missing from the plaintiff's two brokerage accounts.
"[T]he trial court has broad discretion in determining damages.... The determination of damages involves a question of fact that will not be overturned unless it is clearly erroneous." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Bhatia v. Debek, 287 Conn. 397, 418-19, 948 A.2d 1009 (2008).
We conclude that there is sufficient evidence in the record to support the court's damages award. Richard Finkel, the forensic accountant appointed by the court to conduct an accounting of the plaintiff's financial records, testified that he had examined every transaction from the plaintiff's two brokerage accounts from 1986 through 2000, and that he was able to account for all but $45,522 of the disbursements made from those accounts. Finkel testified that he had identified checks drawn on the plaintiff's brokerage accounts that were deposited into the defendant's personal bank account. Although Finkel asked the defendant to provide him with copies of his personal bank account statements and checks, the defendant refused to provide statements from the years 1992, 1993 and 1999. The court was entitled to credit Finkel's testimony.
In sum, we conclude that the court properly applied the continuing course of conduct doctrine to toll the statute of limitations on the plaintiff's claims and properly awarded damages thereon.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.