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Saraceno v. Capitol Theatre Reality Corp.

Supreme Court of Connecticut
Mar 30, 1967
228 A.2d 507 (Conn. 1967)

Opinion

The plaintiffs, as shareholders in the defendant corporation, sought a receiver for, and a dissolution of, the corporation. After the appointment of a temporary receiver, G, another shareholder, applied for an appraisal of the fair value of the plaintiffs' shares. Three appraisers were appointed by the court, and, by stipulation, they were ordered not to receive any evidence from the plaintiffs or G relative to value. The unanimous report of the appraisers determined the value to be $31.53 per share. Pursuant to statute (33-384 [c]), G elected to buy the plaintiffs' shares and deposited full payment with the court clerk. Upon G's motion to correct arithmetical errors in the report, the appraisers unanimously revalued the stock at $28.43 per share. The plaintiffs, without following the prescribed rules of practice for attacking the appraisers' report, filed an objection to its acceptance and requested a hearing. On appeal from the judgment accepting the corrected report, held: 1. Since the court made no finding, the plaintiffs' assigned errors on evidential rulings and conclusions of law or fact, not appearing on the face of the record, could not be tested. 2. Because no proper foundation for an attack on the report was laid, the plaintiffs' attempt to have the court retry the issue of the value of their shares was properly refused, and the court's acceptance of the report could not be disturbed.

Argued March 9, 1967

Decided March 30, 1967

Action for the appointment of a receiver and the dissolution of the defendant corporation, brought to the Superior Court in Middlesex County, where Giuseppina Saraceno, a shareholder, filed an application for an appraisal of the plaintiffs' shares; thereafter the court, Palmer, J., rendered judgment accepting the report of the appraisers and determining the fair value of the plaintiffs' shares, from which the plaintiffs appealed to this court. No error.

Alexander Winnick, with whom was Louis W. Johnson, for the appellants (plaintiffs).

Maurice J. Magilnick and Israel Poliner, for the appellee (Giuseppina Saraceno).


The plaintiffs appeal from a judgment determining, pursuant to 33-384 of the General Statutes, the value of their shares in a corporation. The twenty-two assignments of error, which in turn embrace sixteen subdivisions, assert, in substance, that the court erred in correcting and accepting, as corrected, a report of appraisers and in failing and refusing to permit the plaintiffs to offer evidence at a hearing on the acceptance of the appraisers' report.

The plaintiffs, as shareholders in the defendant corporation, brought this action, seeking a receiver for, and a dissolution of, the corporation. The court appointed and confirmed a temporary receiver. Pursuant to 33-384 (a) of the General Statutes, Giuseppina Saraceno, hereinafter called the defendant, a shareholder in the corporation, applied for an appraisal of the fair value of the plaintiffs' shares. The plaintiffs and the defendant then joined in a stipulation nominating two appraisers, the court selected a third, and the three thus selected were appointed by the court, under 33-384 (b), to recommend to the court a decision as to the fair value of the plaintiffs' shares. The plaintiffs and the defendant, by stipulation, waived their rights to present evidence to the appraisers, and the court accordingly ordered the appraisers not to receive any evidence from the parties relative to the value of the plaintiffs' shares. The appraiser originally recommended by the plaintiffs being unable to serve, the court, on the plaintiffs' recommendation, appointed another to serve in his stead. The appraisers so, appointed filed a report in which they set forth the basis for their conclusion and unanimously determined the value of the plaintiffs' stock to be $31.53 per share. Pursuant to 33-384 (c), the defendant elected to buy the plaintiffs' shares at the value thus determined and deposited with the clerk a cashier's check in full payment for all of the shares owned by the plaintiffs. On the same date, the plaintiffs filed an "Objection To Report of Appraisers And Motion For Hearing Thereon." The defendant filed a motion to correct the report, indicating claimed errors in the appraisers' computation of taxes and their valuation of a chose in action listed in the report. The defendant also filed a motion to accept the report and for judgment determining the fair value of the plaintiffs' shares. The appraisers corrected their report and unanimously determined the value of the plaintiffs' stock to be $28.43 a share. Following a hearing on the plaintiffs' objection to the report and the defendant's motion for judgment, the court accepted the report as corrected and rendered judgment determining the value of the plaintiffs' stock to be $28.43 a share. The present appeal is from that judgment.

There is no finding, and there are no facts admitted by the pleadings. We have before us, therefore, only the complaint, the appraisers' report and corrected report, the motions and orders, and such facts as appear in the stipulation and the judgment. Hartford Federal Savings Loan Assn. v. Lenczyk, 153 Conn. 457, 460, 217 A.2d 694. The memorandum of decision establishes no facts and cannot take the place of the finding, which is essential to test rulings on evidence and conclusions of law or fact drawn by the trier which do not appear on the face of the record. Practice Book 609; Wagner v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 153 Conn. 713, 714, 216 A.2d 182.

Chapter 15 of the rules of the Superior Court governs, so far as applicable, the procedure to be followed in matters referred to appraisers designated to make a report to the court. Practice Book 349; Antman v. Connecticut Light Power Co., 673 117 Conn. 230, 237, 167 A. 715. When the appraisers' report in the present case was filed, the plaintiffs made no request for a finding of subordinate facts by the appraisers. Practice Book 355; Garofalo v. Argraves, 147 Conn. 685, 687, 166 A.2d 158; National Folding Box Co. v. New Haven, 146 Conn. 578, 582, 153 A.2d 420. They made no motion to correct the report. Practice Book 358; see Derby v. Water Resources Commission, 148 Conn. 584, 585, 172 A.2d 907. The defendant, upon discovering an inaccuracy in the appraisers' report, did correctly and successfully move to correct it. The court does not consider exceptions to a report unless the subject matter thereof has been submitted to the author of the report in a proper motion to correct. Practice Book 359.

The plaintiffs have completely ignored the established procedure and chosen, instead, to file an objection to the report and a motion for a hearing thereon. Consequently, no proper foundation for an attack on the report was laid. As already indicated, there is no finding to permit a review of the court's ruling. Practice Book 635.

The plaintiffs printed a lengthy appendix to their brief apparently intended to relate what occurred at the hearing on their objection to the report. Although it furnishes no basis for a review of the court's action, we have read it. It discloses that the plaintiffs' persistent effort was to offer the appraisers and others as witnesses as a means of attacking the report. The court was equally insistent that this was not proper procedure. It appears to be the plaintiffs' theory that General Statutes 33-384 (b) contemplates a duplication of procedure, in other words, a determination of value by appraisers appointed by the court and then a full rehearing of the same issue before the court. It is just such a time wasting procedure that the rules are designed to avoid.


Summaries of

Saraceno v. Capitol Theatre Reality Corp.

Supreme Court of Connecticut
Mar 30, 1967
228 A.2d 507 (Conn. 1967)
Case details for

Saraceno v. Capitol Theatre Reality Corp.

Case Details

Full title:SALVATORE SARACENO ET AL. v. THE CAPITOL THEATRE REALTY CORPORATION

Court:Supreme Court of Connecticut

Date published: Mar 30, 1967

Citations

228 A.2d 507 (Conn. 1967)
228 A.2d 507

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