Lyle v. James et al
Filing
55
MEMORANDUM OF THE COURT'S DECISION FOLLOWING BENCH TRIAL. See the attached Memorandum of Decision fully articulating the Court's reasons for its ruling after the bench trial in this matter. The Clerk is directed to enter Judgment a gainst Ira James on his unjust enrichment claim and to close this case. Pursuant to the Court's April 24, 2014 Order at docket no. 51, Plaintiff Patrick G. Lyle shall receive attorney's fees in the amount of $2,940.84, to be paid from the funds deposited with this Court on October 28, 2013, which at that time totaled $9,437.50. The remainder of those funds (including interest accrued) shall be distributed, pro rata, in equal shares to the ten Defendants in this action: Ira L. James, Irving James, Thelma R. Russell, Sherman James, Jacob James, Duane K. James, Ann Abdullah, Herman James, Lester James, and Robert James, Jr. Signed by Judge Vanessa L. Bryant on 6/25/14. (Ives, D)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
DISTRICT OF CONNECTICUT
PATRICK G. LYLE,
Plaintiff,
v.
IRVING JAMES, IRA L. JAMES, THELMA
RUSSELL, SHERMAN JAMES, JACOB
JAMES, DUANE K. JAMES, ANN
ABDULLAH, HERMAN JAMES, LESTER
JAMES, and ROBERT JAMES, JR.,
Defendants.
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CIVIL ACTION NO.
3:12-CV-00959 (VLB)
JUNE 25, 2014
MEMORANDUM OF DECISION FOLLOWING BENCH TRIAL
This interpleader action was filed on June 29, 2012 by Patrick Lyle, a
licensed attorney and escrow agent and trustee of the estate of the Defendants’
deceased father, Robert James, Sr. At the time of filing, Lyle held in escrow
$9,437.50 from the sale of two parcels of property in Hartford, Connecticut owned
by Robert James, Sr. The Defendants each claim entitlement to these funds,
which were deposited with the Court on October 18, 2013. Lyle has been unable
to distribute the funds without exposing himself to double liability arising from
the competing claims of the Defendants. A trial to the Court was held on April 28,
2014 with Ira L. James as the sole appearing Defendant. The Court ruled against
Ira James on his unjust enrichment claim at the conclusion of his presentation of
evidence, summarizing the reasons therefore. The Court hereby articulates fully
its reasons for its ruling for the record.
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I.
Findings of Essential Facts
The following facts were adduced at trial:
Robert James, Sr., the father of the ten Defendants, passed away on March
22, 2008. His will indicated that each of his children should share equally in the
net proceeds of his estate, including two properties on Lenox Street in Hartford,
Connecticut. Robert James, Sr.’s probate estate closed on February 4, 2009. Ira
James testified that the final decree of the probate court ordered that each of the
ten Defendant children share equally in the net proceeds of their father’s estate.
On or about September 27, 2011 the Defendants completed the sale of the two
Lenox Street properties, the net proceeds of which include the $9,437.50 at issue
in this action. The proceeds of this sale were to be distributed to the Defendants
in February, 2012.
Ira James has alleged that prior to his death his father Robert James, Sr.
owned and lived in his three-family home on Lenox Street, in which he was the
only resident because the home was antiquated. Concerned with his father’s
safety, Ira James arranged for his father to borrow $8,000 from Ira’s credit union
in order to make improvements to the property and to ready it for additional
tenants. Ira James testified that he brought the loan application to his father, who
completed and signed it. Ira later took the application to the credit union and
arranged for a credit union official to falsely attest that he witnessed Robert
James, Sr. sign the loan documentation. Ira James introduced into evidence a
note to the credit union for $8,000 purportedly signed by Robert James, Sr. It was
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marked as Exhibit 1. Exhibit 1 demonstrates that the loan was issued to Robert
James on October 24, 2004 and that no guarantor or collateral existed. James
testified that the loan term was for approximately sixty months.
Ira James further testified that, although the loan was solely in his father’s
name, Ira made the monthly payments by having the credit union automatically
transfer funds from his credit union account to his father’s account to be applied
to his father’s loan. He testified that he directed and gave the credit union
permission to automatically transfer the funds from his account to his father’s.
Ira James offered no documentary evidence that he or his father authorized these
transfers and payments and for what purpose. Ira James presented twenty-two
statements of his credit union account (which he testified were issued quarterly),
indicating various transactions identified as “transfer/withdrawal.” The
statements did not indicate to whom or for what purpose the money was
transferred or withdrawn. These account statements were marked as Exhibit 3.
Ira James did not present evidence that he authorized money to be transferred
from his account to his father’s account, nor did he show evidence that the
withdrawals/transfers from his father’s account coincided with the dates and
times of deposits to or loan payments made from his father’s account. Ira James
also offered documentation, marked as Exhibit 4, evidencing that Robert James,
Sr. had repaid the loan in full.
Further, while Ira James testified that the proceeds from this $8,000 loan
paid for physical improvements to the Lenox Street apartments, including
improvements to lighting and the installation of cabinets and countertops in the
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kitchen, he admitted that he had no receipts or other documentation
demonstrating that the loan funds were used to make improvements to this
property. He also testified that his daughter moved into the house after
improvements were made, indicating that he had a personal interest in improving
the home. Additionally, although Ira testified that his sister, Thelma Russell, also
a Defendant in this action, could have attested that the loan funds were applied to
home improvements, Thelma Russell failed to appear before the Court to so
testify. Finally, he testified that his brother Jacob also moved into an apartment
in the house. There was no evidence of the rent his daughter and brother Jacob
paid to live in the house or how any rent they paid was applied.
Ira James attested that his father verbally agreed to repay Ira for his
payment on the loan and that no written agreement exists memorializing such
promise. Mr. James testified that later, when Robert James, Sr. was in poor
health and would not survive long, he notified three of his siblings (also
Defendants in this action) that he was paying his father’s loan. He further
testified that his father did not substantiate his claim to his siblings. The siblings
he testified he told about the loan repayment were Irving, the executor of his
father’s estate; Thelma Russell; and Jacob, who had moved into one of the
apartments in his father’s triplex on Lenox Street. Ira also testified that he did not
tell Irving, Thelma, or Jacob that he expected repayment. Rather, Ira thought “it
was understood” that they “would do the right thing” by repaying him from the
proceeds of the sale of the Lenox Street property. He also testified, however, that
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he told Irving that he had been paying the loan and that he expected to be repaid,
to which Irving allegedly agreed.
After Robert James, Sr.’s death his estate was probated. Irving James did
not include the loan as a debt of the estate and Ira James testified that he did not
make a claim against the estate for reimbursement for paying the loan. Nor did
he determine whether Irving had included it as a debt of the estate. As noted
previously, the estate closed on February 4, 2009. While Ira first asserted that he
knew nothing about the probate proceedings and was only vaguely aware that
they existed until after he received a copy of his father’s will and its settlement
from Attorney Lyle’s predecessor, Attorney Barlow, reflecting an equal
distribution of his father’s estate to him and his siblings, upon questioning he
admitted that he had probably received notice of the proceedings. He further
admitted that he did not contest the proposed distribution of his father’s estate in
the probate proceeding despite knowledge that the estate was being probated.
In the absence of his objection, the final decree of the probate court ordered that
each of the ten Defendant children share equally in the net proceeds of their
father’s estate. Ira James did not appeal this determination. Mr. James testified
that the only time he made a claim for repayment of the loan amount was after the
Lenox Street property was sold, when he gave Attorney Lyle copies of some of
the credit union account statements and demanded a disproportionate share of
the estate in reimbursement for paying the loan.1 Several of his siblings
1
The Lenox Street property was sold in September 2011. Ira James testified that
he presented Attorney Lyle with documentation as to his claim to the loan
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contested Ira’s claim to a larger share of the estate based on repayment of his
father’s loan.
Finally, Ira James failed to introduce any evidence of how the respondents
were unjustly enriched, if at all. He failed to introduce evidence of the
appreciated value of the home after the improvements funded by the loan
proceeds were made and he failed to introduce any evidence of the difference
between the price for which the house was sold versus the price for which it
would have sold had the improvements not been made.
Based on the facts adduced at trial, the Court finds that Ira James has not
proved by a fair preponderance of the evidence that the loan was his father’s
debt, that he repaid his father’s debt, that the loan was used to improve the Lenox
Street property, that his siblings derived a disproportional benefit from the
proceeds of the loan, or that his siblings agreed to reimburse him through a
reallocation of their share of their father’s estate or otherwise for the cost of
improvements to the Lenox Street property.
II.
Analysis
First, this Court holds that the probate exception to federal jurisdiction
does not bar this action. The probate exception to federal jurisdiction “is an
historical aspect of federal jurisdiction that holds ‘probate matters’ are excepted
from the scope of federal diversity jurisdiction.” Lefkowitz v. Bank of New York,
528 F.3d 102, 105 (2d Cir. 2007) (citing Marshall v. Marshall, 547 U.S. 298, 307
amount in 2010. As these dates are not germane to the Court’s decision, it is
unnecessary to reconcile them.
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(2006)). The probate exception “reserves to state probate courts the probate or
annulment of a will and the administration of a decedent's estate; it also
precludes federal courts from disposing of property that is in the custody of a
state probate court.” Marshall, 547 U.S. at 296. It does not, however, “bar federal
courts from adjudicating matters outside those confines and otherwise within
federal jurisdiction.” Id. Pursuant to the probate exception, a federal court
should decline subject matter jurisdiction only if a plaintiff seeks to administer an
estate, probate a will, or do “any other purely probate matter,” or if a plaintiff
seeks “to reach a res in the custody of a state court.” Lefkowitz, 528 F.3d at 106
(citing Marshall, 547 U.S. at 312). Here, Ira James is not asking this Court to
administer an estate, probate a will, perform purely probate matters, or reach a
res in the custody of a state court. Rather, James brings an unjust enrichment
claim against the nine other beneficiaries of his father’s estate, which is permitted
under Connecticut law.
“[W]herever justice requires compensation to be given for property or
services rendered under a contract, and no remedy is available by an action on
the contract, restitution of the value of what has been given must be allowed.”
Town of New Hartford v. Conn. Res. Recovery Auth., 291 Conn. 433, 451 (2009)
(quoting 26 S. Williston, Contracts (4th Ed. 2003) § 68:4, p. 57). Unjust enrichment
provides the basis for recovery in such a situation. Id. “A right of recovery under
the doctrine of unjust enrichment is essentially equitable, its basis being that in a
given situation it is contrary to equity and good conscience for one to retain a
benefit which has come to him at the expense of another.” Id. at 451 (citation
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omitted). In analyzing a claim of unjust enrichment, the test a court must employ
is “what, under a given set of circumstances, is just or unjust, equitable or
inequitable, conscionable or unconscionable, it becomes necessary in any case
where the benefit of the doctrine is claimed, to examine the circumstances and
the conduct of the parties and apply this standard.” Id. Unjust enrichment is a
“broad and flexible remedy.” Id. A party seeking recovery for unjust enrichment
must prove “(1) that the defendants were benefited, (2) that the defendants
unjustly did not pay the plaintiffs for the benefits, and (3) that the failure of
payment was to the plaintiff[’s] detriment.” Id. at 451-52. “This doctrine is based
upon the principle that one should not be permitted unjustly to enrich himself at
the expense of another but should be required to make restitution of or for
property received, retained or appropriated.... The question is: Did [the party
liable], to the detriment of someone else, obtain something of value to which [the
party liable] was not entitled?” Id. at 452 (citing Franks v. Lockwood, 146 Conn.
273, 278 (1959)). Further,
determinations of whether a particular failure to pay was
unjust and whether the defendant was benefited are
essentially factual findings ... that are subject only to a limited
scope of review on appeal.... Those findings must stand,
therefore, unless they are clearly erroneous or involve an
abuse of discretion.... This limited scope of review is
consistent with the general proposition that equitable
determinations that depend on the balancing of many factors
are committed to the sound discretion of the trial court.
Id. (citation omitted); Schirmer v. Souza, 126 Conn. App. 759, 764 (2011) (same).
Finally, the measure of restitution in an unjust enrichment case ordinarily is not
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the loss to the plaintiff but the benefit to the defendant. Ramondetta v. Amenta,
97 Conn. App. 151, 165 (2006).
Unjust enrichment, although a quasi-contract grounded in the theory of
restitution, may be related to the existence of an implied contract.
An implied in fact contract is the same as an express contract,
except that assent is not expressed in words, but is implied
from the conduct of the parties.... On the other hand, an
implied in law contract is not a contract, but an obligation
which the law creates out of the circumstances present, even
though a party did not assume the obligation.... It is based on
equitable principles to operate whenever justice requires
compensation to be made.... An implied in law contract may
arise due to one party being unjustly enriched to the detriment
of the other party.... Accordingly, an implied in law contract is
another name for a claim for unjust enrichment.
Vertex, Inc. v. Waterbury, 278 Conn. 557, 573-74 (2006). Pursuant to Connecticut
law, a plaintiff may prevail under unjust enrichment on an implied contract theory
“by demonstrating that it performed services at the request of the opposing party
and in expectation that compensation would be made for them.” Nora Beverages,
Inc. v. Perrier Grp. of Am., Inc., 164 F.3d 736, 752 (2d Cir. 1998).
Here, there are facts inconsistent with the assertion that Robert James, Sr.
borrowed the money at issue. The Court finds suspect the assertion that a credit
union official would falsely attest to and notarize a signature on its own loan
document. Further, Ira James has failed to prove that he had an agreement to be
reimbursed. Instead, he argues that his siblings should reimburse him for the
funds he expended to repay a loan to make improvements of which they neither
knew nor approved, as to either the expenditures or the loan to finance them.
James has presented no evidence that he had an agreement in words or deeds
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with anyone to reimburse him, and no factual support was adduced at trial of
James’ siblings’ acquiescence or knowing acceptance of a benefit to them. To
the extent that Ira James testified that he informed his brother Irving that he was
paying his father’s loan and that Irving agreed to reimburse him, an assertion that
Ira James’ other testimony contradicted, the evidence presented at trial indicates
that this arrangement was too indefinite and uncertain as to its terms to
constitute a contract. Moreover, other plausible inferences may be drawn from
the facts introduced at trial that are inconsistent with James’ assertion that he
was repaying the loan on behalf of his father: most notably that his daughter and
brother both moved into apartments in Robert James’ triplex for which they
would be paying rent that presumably would exceed the monthly amount of the
loan (approximately $133 monthly, if the term of the loan was sixty months as Ira
James testified). The Court thus cannot conclude that Ira James had any implied
contractual relationship with his siblings for reimbursement of the funds
expended in paying off his father’s loan. See, e.g., Stewart v. King, 121 Conn.
App. 64, 72 (2010) (upholding trial court’s dismissal after bench trial of unjust
enrichment claim where the plaintiff “alleged that the defendants were unjustly
enriched as a result of their not abiding by an arrangement that [the trial court]
found not to have existed” due to absence of evidence of course of conduct
implying mother’s promise to pay son for materials and services in construction
of home on land owned by mother and stepfather, and where the plaintiff “failed
to establish the amount and basis of his claim of his investment of his time, labor
and money by which the defendants allegedly were unjustly enriched”); Nora
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Beverages, Inc. v. Perrier Grp. of Am., Inc., 164 F.3d 736, 752 (2d Cir. 1998)
(affirming grant of summary judgment on plaintiff’s unjust enrichment claim
where plaintiff failed to establish either benefit to the defendants or that the
plaintiff had performed services at the defendants’ request under an implied
contract theory); Brighenti v. New Britain Shirt Corp., 167 Conn. 403 (1974)
(concluding that where plaintiffs had not come to agreement with defendant from
which they sought recovery and instead voluntarily expended funds assuming
the risk that they would be repaid, there was no quasi-contract entitling plaintiffs
to recover under unjust enrichment). See also Beattie v. McMullen, 80 Conn. 160
(1907) (holding that there was no implied promise or constructive contract on the
part of the district to pay for the extra work incurred by plaintiff subcontractors,
who provided the stone for a municipal bridge to contractors and who had
provided higher grade stone than required by the contract, and who knew that the
district relied on contractors to furnish stone and understood that subcontractors
would furnish stone to contractors, and that contractors were to pay
subcontractors directly, and where only the contractors could look to district for
payment).
The Connecticut Appellate Court has held, though, that unjust enrichment
may be present in the absence of a contractual relationship. Schirmer v. Souza,
126 Conn. App. 759, 767 (2011) (noting that there is “ample appellate decisional
precedent and legal authority that a contractual relationship is not a prerequisite
to recovery based on unjust enrichment”). Even so, Ira James has presented
insufficient factual information for the Court to conclude that, under this set of
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circumstances and the conduct of the parties at issue, it was unjust or
inequitable for Ira James’ siblings to decline to reimburse him for repayment of
the $8,000 loan, or that his siblings were unjustly enriched or benefitted.
First, Mr. James presented no evidence of either the application of the loan
proceeds (by way of receipts or any other documentation) to the making of
improvements to the Lenox Street property, or of the material appreciation of the
Lenox Street property after such improvements were undertaken.
Second, no evidence was presented tending to show that Mr. James’ nine
siblings unjustly failed to pay Mr. James for the benefits allegedly acquired by the
application of the loan proceeds or the appreciation resulting therefrom. No
evidence was presented that Mr. James’ siblings agreed to reimburse him for his
payments on his father’s loan and, indeed, Mr. James testified that he told only
three of his siblings of the existence of the loan prior to his father’s death. His
father did not substantiate his claim and he did not expressly seek, nor did he
expressly receive, a promise from his siblings to reimburse him.
James also testified that he disproportionately benefitted from the
improvements to the Lenox Street property. After improvements were rendered
his daughter moved into the third floor apartment above her grandfather’s home
for a reduced rent, demonstrating that part of the benefit of the alleged loan
proceeds accrued to Ira James’ immediate family members rather than to his
siblings.
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Moreover, he testified that none of his siblings had deceived him during or
concealed the probate proceedings from him, and that nothing prevented him
from presenting his claim during the probate proceedings, facts which could
demonstrate that Mr. James did not expect to be, or feel entitled to be,
reimbursed for his repayment of the loan or, at the very least, that his siblings did
not hinder his ability to seek reimbursement. Finally, Mr. James has not shown
that his siblings were unjustly enriched because he has not shown that the
property appreciated by the improvements, by what margin it appreciated, or that
its value was greater at the time it was sold than it would have been had the
improvements not been made. Adding the fact that his daughter lived in the
Lenox Street house, Mr. James has not shown that his siblings were
disproportionately unjustly enriched.
Lastly, James testified that he had expended time and money for the
benefit of and provided services to his father prior to his father’s death for which
he had no expectation of reimbursement, including cooking meals for his father,
cutting the Lenox Street property’s grass, removing snow from the property, and
caring for the fruit trees on the property. He further testified that his sister,
Thelma Russell, provided services to his father, including taking care of his bills,
but no evidence demonstrated that Ms. Russell received additional compensation
for these services from her father’s estate. Given these facts, the Court cannot
conclude that Ira James’ siblings believed that he expected reimbursement for
his repayment of his father’s loan, nor that they unjustly failed to pay him for the
financial service he allegedly provided to his father.
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Even if Mr. James has successfully proven that his siblings have been
unjustly enriched, however, his claim is time-barred pursuant to Connecticut’s
probate statutes. Connecticut probate law requires that a claim be presented to
the estate within 150 days of the appointment of the first fiduciary. Conn. Gen.
Stat. § 45a-356(a). If a claim is not presented within this time period, “no fiduciary
shall be chargeable for any assets that a fiduciary may have paid or distributed in
good faith in satisfaction of any lawful claims, expenses or taxes or to any
beneficiary before such claim was presented.” Id. Every claim must be
presented to the fiduciary in writing, and “[n]o creditor shall be entitled to enforce
payment of his claim against assets in the hands of a fiduciary in any proceeding
in any court unless his claim is presented” in accordance with the provisions of
[§ 45a-358].” Conn. Gen. Stat. § 45a-358(a), (c).
The requirement that written claims be submitted to the
fiduciary within 150 days of the fiduciary's appointment is
intended to permit the fiduciary to assemble the assets of the
estate in an orderly manner, identify the creditors and debtors
of the estate, distribute the assets in an orderly fashion, and
ultimately, pay claims, expenses and taxes in the correct
amounts and in the correct order of priority.
Riendeau v. Grey, CV106002202S, 2010 WL 3448184, at *2 (Conn. Super. Ct. Aug.
11, 2010). If a creditor files a claim with the fiduciary, he may not commence suit
unless and until such claim has been rejected in whole or in part by the fiduciary.
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 45a-363(a).
Although a creditor to an estate may not bring suit against the
estate/fiduciary unless he has first presented his claim to the estate and has been
rejected in whole or in part, he may bring an action against the beneficiaries of an
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estate for a claim he failed to present to the estate. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 45a-372
provides, in relevant part:
the failure of a plaintiff to present his claim to the fiduciary as
prescribed by law shall not impair his right to maintain an
action against the beneficiaries under section 45a-368;
provided nothing contained herein shall extend the time
limited for the commencement of an action to enforce
plaintiff's claim.
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 45a-372(a). See also Popple v. Comm'r of Revenue Servs., CV
990497727S, 2000 WL 1207280, *1 (Conn. Super. Ct. July 26, 2000) (“After [the
date of distribution], the claim of the creditor is not extinguished, as was the case
under prior law after expiration of the claims period, but instead the creditor must
pursue his rights and remedies against the beneficiaries of the estate.”) (citation
omitted); Hunt v. Watkins, CV 940316277S, 1995 WL 781366, *2 (Conn. Super. Ct.
Dec. 29, 1995) (“When a person has a claim against a decedent or the decedent's
estate and the assets of the estate have been distributed, the claimant may
pursue an action under 45a-368 against a beneficiary to the extent of the fair
market value of the property received by the beneficiary.”).
A suit against the beneficiaries of an estate must be commenced by the
earlier of (1) two years after the date of the decedent’s death, or (2) the expiration
date of the statute of limitations for such a claim. Conn. Gen. Stat. § 45a-375(c).
As to claims arising after the death of a decedent, suit against the beneficiaries of
an estate must be commenced by the earlier of (1) two years after the date the
claim arose or (2) the expiration date of the statute of limitations for such a claim.
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 45a-375(d).
15
First, Mr. James never filed suit against the beneficiaries of his father’s
estate. He simply informally disputed the equal distribution of the estate after it
was probated and made a claim against the proceeds of the sale of the property.
It was because Ira James never brought suit that Attorney Lyle was forced to file
this interpleader action. Mr. James also failed to file his claim for reimbursement
with the probate court during the pendency of the probate proceedings, even
though he had notice of the proceedings and testified that nothing prevented him
from asserting his claim. As such, he is barred from asserting his claim against
the estate in a court of law pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. §§ 45a-356(a) and 358(c).
Pursuant to Conn. Gen. Stat. § 45a-372, Ira James may maintain an action
against the beneficiaries of his father’s estate after the estate has been probated
and without having asserted his claim during the probate proceedings provided
that he has complied with the time limitations enumerated in Conn. Gen. Stat. §
45a-375. James, however, has not complied with the statutory time limitations as
he has never filed suit.
Even if the Court construes this interpleader action as a suit by Mr. James
against his siblings, however, it is untimely under the relevant statute of
limitations. Robert James, Sr. died on March 22, 2008. Because an unjust
enrichment claim is an equitable action, “the court may exercise its discretion in
determining the applicable statute of limitations.” Piazza v. First Am. Title Ins.
Co., No. 3:06CV00765(AWT), 2007 WL 988713, *2 (D. Conn. Mar. 30, 2007); Mahon
v. Chicago Title Ins. Co., 3:09CV00690 AWT, 2012 WL 3544883, *2 (D. Conn. Aug.
16, 2012). Connecticut courts have applied the six year statute of limitations for
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contract actions to unjust enrichment claims. See, e.g., Flaherty v. Borough of
Naugatuck, CV054004400S, 2007 WL 586788, at *3 (Conn. Super. Ct. Feb. 2, 2007)
(holding that “[t]he six-year contract statute of limitations applies to the present
case [for unjust enrichment,]” as unjust enrichment is a form of contract action);
Paradigm Contract Mgmt. Co., Inc. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co., 3:10CV211
MRK, 2011 WL 4348132, *7, n. 3 (D. Conn. Sept. 16, 2011) (“Although there is no
Connecticut appellate authority that squarely addresses the issue, other courts
have found that the six-year Connecticut statute of limitations for breach of
contract also applies to unjust enrichment claims.”). For his claim to be timely,
Ira James must have commenced an action against the estate’s beneficiaries by
March 22, 2010, two years after the date of his father’s death, pursuant to Conn.
Gen. Stat. § 45a-375(c). This action, however, was commenced on June 29, 2012.
Thus, even if the Court credits Attorney Lyle’s interpleader as a suit by James, Ira
James’ claim for unjust enrichment against the beneficiaries of his father’s estate
is untimely under Conn. Gen. Stat. § 45a-375.
IV Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, judgment must enter against Ira James on his
unjust enrichment claim. Pursuant to this Court’s April 24, 2014 Order at docket
no. 51, Plaintiff Patrick G. Lyle shall receive attorney’s fees in the amount of
$2,940.84, to be paid from the funds deposited with this Court on October 28,
2013, which at that time totaled $9,437.50. The remainder of those funds
(including interest accrued) shall be distributed, pro rata, in equal shares to the
ten Defendants in this action: Ira L. James, Irving James, Thelma R. Russell,
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Sherman James, Jacob James, Duane K. James, Ann Abdullah, Herman James,
Lester James, and Robert James, Jr.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
________/s/______________
Hon. Vanessa L. Bryant
United States District Judge
Dated at Hartford, Connecticut: June 25, 2014
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