Kemon v. Boudreau ( 2021 )


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    KENNETH S. KEMON v. KENNETH BOUDREAU,
    EXECUTOR (ESTATE OF ELIZABETH LEE
    KEMON BOUDREAU), ET AL.
    (AC 42918)
    KENNETH KEMON v. KENNETH BOUDREAU,
    EXECUTOR (ESTATE OF ELIZABETH
    LEE KEMON BOUDREAU), ET AL.
    (AC 42919)
    Alvord, Moll and Alexander, Js.
    Syllabus
    The plaintiff, S, and his sister, E, were beneficiaries of a trust, executed by
    their father. E was the original trustee until her death in 2016, when
    the defendant K became the successor trustee. Upon E’s death, K repre-
    sented to S that the trust’s assets had been fully disbursed to S and E,
    but for $50,000 that had been set aside in a lawyers’ trust account as a
    litigation reserve. Thereafter, the Probate Court approved an accounting
    submitted by K in 2016. Subsequently, S appealed to the Superior Court
    in 2017 from the probate order approving the 2016 accounting, claiming
    that the 2016 accounting was incomplete. In addition, S commenced a
    separate action in 2018 in the Superior Court, with similar claims to the
    probate appeal, but he also included claims asserting breach of trust,
    breach of the implied covenant of good faith and fair dealing, breach
    of fiduciary duty, and tortious interference with an expectation of inheri-
    tance in counts two, three, four and six against K for his actions involving
    the payment of various fees and the $50,000 litigation reserve. The cases
    were consolidated for trial, and the trial court rendered judgment for
    the defendants in each case. Held:
    1. The trial court erred in determining that S had abandoned counts two,
    three, four, and six at trial in the Superior Court action on the basis of
    statements by S’s counsel made during closing argument, as S adequately
    advanced counts two, three, four, and six at trial for the court’s consider-
    ation: during closing argument, S’s counsel identified punitive damages
    in the form of attorney’s fees as one of S’s requests for relief predicated
    on K’s alleged ‘‘wilful, wanton conduct,’’ counts two, three, four, and
    six were supported by allegations that K had engaged in ‘‘wilful, wanton’’
    conduct, and, collectively, counsel’s statements implicated the allega-
    tions pleaded by S in support of those counts concerning K’s conduct;
    moreover, the trial court’s articulation addressing counts two, three,
    four, and six must be disregarded, as the articulation was inconsistent
    with the memorandum of decision in which the trial court originally
    disposed of those counts only on the ground that S had abandoned
    them, and the articulation instead improperly addressed the merits of
    all or some of S’s claims.
    2. The trial court erred in rendering judgment in favor of K in the probate
    appeal, as S’s receipt of an accounting in 2018 satisfied the relief he
    was pursuing in his probate appeal during its pendency; because there
    was no practical relief that the court could have granted him, the court
    was deprived of subject matter jurisdiction over the probate appeal, and,
    accordingly, the court’s lack of subject matter jurisdiction necessitated
    a judgment of dismissal rather than a judgment for the defendants on
    the merits and, therefore, the form of the judgment was improper.
    Argued February 11—officially released June 29, 2021
    Procedural History
    Action, in the first case, for an order to compel an
    accounting of a trust, and for other relief, brought to
    the Superior Court in the judicial district of Hartford,
    and an appeal, in the second case, from an order of the
    Probate Court approving an accounting, brought to the
    Superior Court in the judicial district of Hartford, where
    the cases were consolidated and transferred to the Com-
    plex Litigation Docket and tried to the court, Mou-
    kawsher, J.; judgments for the named defendant et al.,
    from which the plaintiff filed separate appeals to this
    court. Reversed in part; new trial in Docket No. AC
    42918; improper form of judgment; reversed; judg-
    ment directed in Docket No. AC 42919.
    E. James Loughlin, for the appellant in each case
    (plaintiff).
    Charles D. Ray, with whom, on the brief, were James
    E. Regan and Angela M. Healey, for the appellees in
    each case (named defendant et al.).
    Opinion
    MOLL, J. These consolidated appeals arise from a
    dispute between the plaintiff, Kenneth S. Kemon, who
    is a trust beneficiary, and the defendant Kenneth Bou-
    dreau, who is, among other things, the executor of the
    estate of the deceased trustee, Elizabeth Lee Kemon
    Boudreau (trustee). With respect to Docket No. AC
    42918, the plaintiff appeals from the judgment of the
    trial court rendered in favor of the defendant1 on the
    plaintiff’s amended complaint. On appeal, the plaintiff
    claims that the court improperly concluded that (1) he
    had abandoned at trial counts two, three, four, and six
    of his amended complaint, and (2) to the extent that
    the court addressed, in a postappeal articulation, the
    merits of his breach of fiduciary duty claim set forth
    in count four of his amended complaint, the court
    improperly determined that there was no evidence in
    the record demonstrating that the defendant breached
    any duty owed to the plaintiff. We agree with the plain-
    tiff that the court committed error in concluding that
    he had abandoned the aforementioned counts of his
    amended complaint. Accordingly, we reverse in part
    the judgment rendered in AC 42918. With respect to
    Docket No. AC 42919, the plaintiff appeals from the
    judgment of the court rendered for the defendant in
    the plaintiff’s appeal from a probate order approving
    an accounting. On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the
    court incorrectly rendered judgment in the defendant’s
    favor notwithstanding that the probate appeal had been
    rendered moot. We conclude that the probate appeal
    became moot during its pendency, at which point the
    court was divested of subject matter jurisdiction over
    it. We further conclude that the form of the judgment
    is improper because the court’s lack of subject matter
    jurisdiction necessitated a judgment dismissing the pro-
    bate appeal, rather than a judgment for the defendant
    on the merits. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment
    rendered in AC 42919.
    The following facts and procedural history are rele-
    vant to our resolution of these consolidated appeals.
    On December 21, 2009, Solon B. Kemon, the plaintiff’s
    father (grantor), executed an inter vivos trust (trust).
    The trust named Elizabeth Lee Kemon Boudreau, the
    plaintiff’s sister, as the trustee. The plaintiff and the
    trustee were the primary beneficiaries of the trust.
    Section 5.5 of the trust provided in relevant part that,
    upon request, the trustee ‘‘shall render an account of
    the administration of the trust to the then living adult
    income beneficiaries and adult remainderman . . .
    and the approval thereof by the living adult beneficiaries
    and living adult remainderman shall be conclusively
    binding upon all parties in interest under this [a]gree-
    ment. . . .’’
    On August 8, 2012, the grantor died. On May 1, 2016,
    the trustee died. Thereafter, the defendant was
    appointed as the executor of the trustee’s estate.
    On August 11, 2016, in order to ‘‘resolve the issues’’
    raised in a civil action filed in July, 2016, by the plaintiff
    against the trustee,2 the defendant filed with the Probate
    Court for the district of Simsbury a petition to approve
    an appended accounting reflecting the trust’s transac-
    tions from August 8, 2012, to April 30, 2016 (2016
    accounting). The defendant represented that, at the
    time of the trustee’s death on May 1, 2016, the trust’s
    assets had been fully disbursed to the plaintiff and the
    trustee with the exception of $50,000 that had been set
    aside in a lawyers’ trust account by Attorney John F.
    Kearns III, who was the defendant’s attorney at the time
    and who had represented the trustee prior to her death,
    ‘‘for litigation and probate accounting fees due to the
    acrimony between the parties’’ ($50,000 litigation
    reserve).3 On January 18, 2017, the Probate Court,
    Becker, J., approved the 2016 accounting, but ordered
    the defendant to amend it to include a certain condo-
    minium unit in Simsbury (Simsbury condominium unit)
    and its fair market value. On January 20, 2017, the defen-
    dant filed an informational schedule to the 2016
    accounting, which listed the Simsbury condominium
    unit as having no value.
    Soon thereafter, the plaintiff appealed to the Superior
    Court from the probate order approving the 2016
    accounting (2017 probate appeal). In a revised com-
    plaint filed on May 18, 2017, which became the plaintiff’s
    operative pleading in the 2017 probate appeal, the plain-
    tiff alleged, inter alia, that the 2016 accounting was
    incomplete. The defendant4 subsequently filed an
    answer denying the material allegations set forth in the
    revised complaint.
    On February 5, 2018, during the pendency of the 2017
    probate appeal, the plaintiff commenced a separate civil
    action in the Superior Court against the defendant (2018
    action).5 The plaintiff’s original one count complaint
    filed in the 2018 action was substantively similar to his
    revised complaint filed in the 2017 probate appeal—
    that is, the crux of the allegations in those pleadings
    was that the 2016 accounting was incomplete.
    On March 31, 2018, the 2017 probate appeal and the
    2018 action were consolidated for trial, and they subse-
    quently were transferred to the Complex Litigation
    Docket. In August, 2018, while the 2017 probate appeal
    and the 2018 action were pending, the defendant deliv-
    ered to the plaintiff an updated accounting for the trust
    (2018 accounting).
    On October 26, 2018, the plaintiff filed an amended
    six count complaint in the 2018 action, which became
    his operative complaint therein. In count one, titled
    ‘‘Action to Compel Accounting,’’ the plaintiff alleged
    only that the defendant had delivered to him the 2018
    accounting. The remaining counts included an objec-
    tion to the 2018 accounting, as well as claims asserting
    breach of trust, breach of the implied covenant of good
    faith and fair dealing, breach of fiduciary duty, and
    tortious interference with an expectation of inheri-
    tance. On January 31, 2019, the defendant filed a revised
    answer denying the material allegations of the amended
    complaint, except for his admission to the allegation
    in count one that he had delivered the 2018 accounting
    to the plaintiff. The defendant also asserted various
    special defenses and claimed two setoffs. On February
    19, 2019, the plaintiff filed a reply denying the special
    defenses and the setoffs.
    The 2017 probate appeal and the 2018 action were
    tried to the trial court, Moukawsher, J., on March 26,
    27, and 28, 2019.6 On March 29, 2019, the court issued
    a memorandum of decision rendering judgment in the
    defendant’s favor in each of the matters. On April 17,
    2019, the plaintiff filed a combined motion seeking to
    open the judgments and to reargue, which the court
    denied on April 23, 2019. These consolidated appeals
    followed.7 Additional facts will be set forth as necessary.
    I
    AC 42918
    In AC 42918, the plaintiff appeals from the judgment
    rendered by the trial court in the defendant’s favor in
    the 2018 action. The plaintiff claims that (1) the court
    improperly concluded that he had abandoned counts
    two, three, four, and six of his amended complaint at
    trial, and (2) to the extent that the court adjudicated
    count four of his amended complaint, asserting breach
    of fiduciary duty, in a postappeal articulation, the court
    improperly determined that there was no evidence dem-
    onstrating that the defendant breached a legally recog-
    nized duty owed to the plaintiff. We agree with the
    plaintiff’s first claim of error.8
    The following additional facts are relevant to our
    resolution of this appeal. The plaintiff’s amended com-
    plaint contained the following six counts: (1) demand
    to compel an accounting (count one); (2) breach of
    trust (count two); (3) breach of the implied covenant
    of good faith and fair dealing (count three); (4) breach
    of fiduciary duty (count four); (5) objection to the 2018
    accounting (count five);9 and (6) tortious interference
    with an expectation of inheritance (count six). Count
    one did not assert a claim actually seeking relief; rather,
    the plaintiff alleged only that the defendant had deliv-
    ered the 2018 accounting to him.10 In support of counts
    two, three, four, and six, the plaintiff alleged, inter alia,
    that he had suffered harm as a result of the defendant’s
    failure to provide him with the 2018 accounting until
    more than two years following the trustee’s death.
    Counts three, four, and six also alleged certain ‘‘aggra-
    vating circumstances,’’ including that the defendant
    refused to provide the plaintiff with access to trust
    records. To further support counts two, three, four, and
    six, the plaintiff alleged, either directly or by incorpora-
    tion, that the defendant’s conduct had been ‘‘wilful,
    wanton and carried out with the reckless disregard for
    the interests and rights of the plaintiff, causing damages
    for which the defendant is liable.’’ In count five, the
    plaintiff alleged that the 2018 accounting was ‘‘unsatis-
    factory’’ in a number of ways.
    At the end of the first day of evidence, the trial court
    notified the parties that, as a matter of procedure, the
    court preferred that they ‘‘get done with the evidence
    and then we have what argument we need to have. In
    other words, I don’t ask the parties to make one hour
    presentations followed by half an hour followed by
    twenty minutes or anything like that. What I prefer is
    a lively exchange, which, in other words, I’ll give the
    parties some idea of what I’m thinking about, and then
    we can have an exchange in which I ask questions and
    make notes and do that to the extent we have to. If
    there are any questions of law that are in dispute, which
    I’m not sure there will be, then that would be the time
    to bring them to my attention. In other words, I don’t
    need posttrial briefs. What I need is a thorough clos-
    ing—closing argument exchange. And if there’s some-
    thing that comes up during closing argument that you
    need more time about or you want to submit something
    about, we just discuss it at the time. I’m not going to
    cut anybody off or prevent them from providing me with
    things that are needed, but I’d much prefer a vigorous
    closing argument to a period of thirty days going by
    where everyone forgets about the case and then we try
    to brief it and then, you know, several months later we
    have argument or something like that. So my intention
    is we go right into argument once—once evidence is
    over. And I don’t mean that entirely literally. Sometimes
    people say, ‘Well, can’t we come back tomorrow or
    something?’ I’m not going to press you instantly to go
    into closing argument. But don’t be thinking so much
    about speech making for closing arguments as an
    exchange. I’m going to give you some ideas of what I’m
    thinking about, and then you can answer my questions
    and tell me where I’ve got it wrong and where you think
    I’ve got it right. And we can go back and forth as long
    as we need to make it productive. So any questions on
    that?’’ Neither party objected to that proposed proce-
    dure.
    On the final day of trial, after the close of evidence,
    the following colloquy occurred:
    ‘‘The Court: Now we have closing arguments to dis-
    cuss. So what I’d suggest is that if the parties want the
    time we can do closing arguments at 2 p.m. If you are
    urgently wishing to end this whole thing by 1 [p.m.] we
    could start closing arguments at 12:30 [p.m.] and get
    them over with. I’ll leave it up to the parties.
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: My understanding was
    there was going to be a lively exchange, you were going
    to give us some issues to think about and then—
    ‘‘The Court: Yeah, I’m going to ask questions and
    we’ll be back and forth.
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: And I’m looking forward
    to that to bring more issues that I can understand and
    look into and then I got the impression that we were
    going to come back a day or two later after that?
    ‘‘The Court: Well, what I indicated about that—no,
    no, no, what I indicated about that is if you wanted
    to come back a day or two from now to do closing
    arguments, which would be the lively exchange I
    described we can do that. I don’t see any reason why
    we shouldn’t do them while you’re here. And I think
    probably to give you enough time you might want to
    wait until 2 [p.m.], but if you don’t want to we can take
    a break . . . and pick it up at 12:30 [p.m.], but I
    wouldn’t want to go less than a half an hour. But I’m
    going to ask questions, such as, I want to make sure I
    understand the universe of things that you’re claiming
    in the case. What is the relief that you’re after and then
    the evidence that supports these things and then that
    tends to lead to the back and forth. [The defendant’s
    counsel] will comment on those things and we’ll go
    back and forth about it. So the question is do you want
    to do [it] at 12:30 [p.m.] or 2 [p.m.]?
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: I’m sort of feeling like
    doing it right now.
    ‘‘The Court: Oh.
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: But what happens if in
    the middle of it there’s a question of law that I hadn’t
    thought of?
    ‘‘The Court: Well, then you’d indicate that to me and
    I can give you time or we’ll do whatever it is.
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: Okay.
    ‘‘The Court: Sometimes what happens is something
    comes up and I can get a quick answer to it, sometimes
    I can’t. But I’m not going to just say times up you don’t
    get to look up this case or something like that. I won’t
    do that to you. But you want to start right now?
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: I’m ready right now.
    ‘‘[The Defendant’s Counsel]: Your Honor, that’s cer-
    tainly fine with the defendant to start now.’’
    After a brief discussion regarding the status of an
    exhibit, counsel for both parties reaffirmed that they
    were prepared to proceed with argument. The court
    then asked the plaintiff’s counsel to specify ‘‘each thing
    that [the plaintiff is] asking for in terms of relief.’’ The
    plaintiff’s counsel identified four items. First, he
    requested that the $50,000 litigation reserve be returned
    to the trust. He argued that, under the common law,
    the defendant was not entitled to those funds unless
    the defendant prevailed in the litigation.11
    Second, the plaintiff’s counsel requested $9225 as
    reimbursement for legal fees that the plaintiff had
    incurred with respect to his portion of certain real prop-
    erty in Vermont that had been left to the plaintiff and
    the trustee by their deceased mother’s trust (Vermont
    property). He argued that the trustee had used funds
    from the trust (that is, the inter vivos trust executed
    by the grantor) to pay fees in developing her portion
    of the Vermont property, such that he was entitled to
    reimbursement for fees that he had expended in relation
    to his portion of the Vermont property.
    Third, the plaintiff’s counsel requested $11,907, which
    represented condominium fees for the Simsbury condo-
    minium unit that the trustee had paid using trust funds.
    He argued that those fees could have been avoided.
    Last, the plaintiff’s counsel requested common-law
    punitive damages in the form of attorney’s fees for
    ‘‘wilful, wanton conduct.’’ In support thereof, the plain-
    tiff’s counsel referenced the portion of count six alleg-
    ing that the defendant had engaged in tortious conduct
    interfering with the plaintiff’s expectation of an inheri-
    tance, which, the plaintiff further alleged, was ‘‘wilful,
    wanton and carried out with the reckless disregard for
    the interests and rights of the plaintiff . . . .’’ The court
    asked the plaintiff’s counsel to confirm that he was
    requesting that the court ‘‘make a finding [awarding
    attorney’s fees as punitive damages] and then hold a
    hearing later on [regarding] the amount if [the court
    made] such a finding,’’ to which counsel replied in the
    affirmative.
    At the close of argument, the plaintiff’s counsel stated
    the following: ‘‘We have spoken about please give us
    an inventory and all the receipts and all the distributions
    [with respect to the trust] for the period from inception
    until . . . death. That’s what we have said. All along
    the way counsel has addressed other issues that we
    may have brought up during the litigation that were not
    presented here at trial. But when we came here to trial
    all we talked about was we needed information about
    [the trust from] inception to death and we didn’t get
    those until about a month ago [in February, 2019],12
    notwithstanding all the demands that we had made.
    And [the defendant] acknowledge[s] that [the] $50,000
    [litigation reserve] was held back. [The trustee] told
    [the defendant] ‘don’t tell [the plaintiff] that I’ve died.’13
    It’s almost like a movie. Those were [the trustee’s] last
    words. And so [the plaintiff] didn’t know that the money
    was there. He didn’t know that he was supposed to be
    the trustee until the money was already gone.14 And
    then after that they refused the records. They refused
    the accountings. We asked for checks. We asked for
    the invoices. There were 4000 pages on [an] . . . elec-
    tronic disc and that’s when all the answers were pro-
    vided and that’s when we pared down our argument to
    the few that we’ve made right now.
    ‘‘Had we received that [electronic] disc, had we
    received those materials back in April, [2016], when I
    initially demanded them, nicely demanded them, none
    of my fees would have been incurred. We would have
    had some of that [$50,000 litigation reserve] sent back.
    None of this would have happened.’’ (Footnotes added.)
    In its memorandum of decision, the court stated that
    the 2017 probate appeal and the 2018 action ‘‘reflect [the
    plaintiff’s] complaints against [the trustee’s] handling
    of the trust. Lest there be confusion, the plaintiff . . .
    asks for four things and four things only: [1] $50,000
    [that] the trust put aside anticipating litigation and has
    fully spent; [2] $9225 in legal fees [the plaintiff] spent
    developing his half of the [Vermont property] . . . left
    to [the plaintiff and the trustee] equally; [3] $11,907 in
    condo fees [the plaintiff] says should have been
    avoided; [and (4) the plaintiff’s] attorney’s fees in this
    litigation.’’ As to the plaintiff’s claim concerning the
    $50,000 litigation reserve, the court concluded that the
    claim failed because the defendant was the prevailing
    party. With respect to the plaintiff’s claim seeking $9225
    as reimbursement for his legal fees in relation to the
    Vermont property, the court concluded, inter alia, that
    the plaintiff’s request for reimbursement was untimely.
    As to the plaintiff’s claim seeking $11,907 in fees relating
    to the Simsbury condominium unit, the court concluded
    that (1) the terms of the trust limited the trustee’s liabil-
    ity to wilful misconduct and (2) the trustee made an
    unassailable ‘‘judgment call’’ to attempt diligently to
    sell the Simsbury condominium unit, but ultimately was
    unsuccessful.15 With respect to the plaintiff’s final claim
    seeking punitive damages, the court concluded that
    ‘‘[the plaintiff] made clear on the record that his only
    claim for attorney’s fees was based upon a claim that
    they should be awarded as punitive damages. [The
    trustee] did nothing wrong. There is no basis for [the
    plaintiff] to recover his [attorney’s] fees.’’ The court
    then rendered judgment for the defendant without refer-
    ence to any specific counts of the plaintiff’s amended
    complaint.
    In his ensuing combined motion to open the judg-
    ments and to reargue, the plaintiff contended in relevant
    part that the court’s memorandum of decision disposed
    of count five, asserting an objection to the 2018 account-
    ing, but failed to address counts two, three, four, or six,
    which, according to the plaintiff, contained allegations
    that the defendant ‘‘wilfully, wantonly and recklessly
    withheld trust information from the plaintiff that, had it
    been presented when originally requested, would have
    avoided litigation altogether.’’ The plaintiff further
    asserted that the court focused its analysis on the trust-
    ee’s conduct while ignoring the plaintiff’s allegations
    against the defendant, notwithstanding that ‘‘this action
    is against the defendant . . . and the causes of action
    against him . . . should be adjudicated . . . .’’ In
    denying the plaintiff’s motion, the court stated in rele-
    vant part that ‘‘the court was not required to make fact
    findings with respect to matters immaterial to the relief
    sought. The other matters raised in the motion were
    immaterial in that regard.’’
    Following the filing of these consolidated appeals,
    pursuant to Practice Book § 66-5, the plaintiff filed a
    motion seeking an articulation of the court’s disposition
    of counts two, three, four, and six. The plaintiff con-
    tended that the memorandum of decision did not
    address any of the alleged actions committed by the
    defendant following the trustee’s death, which formed
    the crux of counts two, three, four, and six.
    On August 23, 2019, the court issued an articulation
    stating that the memorandum of decision ‘‘does not
    address the conduct of the defendant . . . because at
    trial the plaintiff . . . chose to limit the relief he
    claimed to matters that turned only on alleged wrongdo-
    ing by [the trustee]. The only relief item that affected
    [the defendant] at all was a claim that [the defendant]
    shouldn’t have used [the $50,000 litigation reserve] for
    fees in this litigation. About this, [the plaintiff] conceded
    that he would have to win his claims of wrongdoing by
    [the trustee] to win his claim that this money shouldn’t
    have been used. And [the plaintiff] didn’t win. So by
    [the plaintiff’s] own admission, he couldn’t win his claim
    about the fees either.’’
    The court further stated that, ‘‘[e]ven if findings
    should be made regarding conduct not at issue in this
    case, having considered all of the evidence, it is plain
    that [the defendant] committed no breach of any duty
    as [the plaintiff] may have alleged it. The evidence as
    it relates to [the defendant] revealed in substance only
    quibbles over the timing and the completeness of docu-
    ments provided during the course of the dispute. No
    evidence supported claims concerning [the defendant]
    breaching a legally recognized duty. Instead, the evi-
    dence at trial focused on the matters related to the
    [trustee’s] decisions and actions before [the defendant]
    assumed her duties upon her death. [The plaintiff’s]
    only other complaint about [the defendant] appeared
    to be his failure promptly to inform [the plaintiff] that
    [the trustee] had died. But [the plaintiff] never con-
    nected this claim to a duty owed that was breached,
    and which, by virtue of being breached, merited any of
    the relief [the plaintiff] chose to seek at trial.’’
    In summary, the court stated that ‘‘[the defendant’s]
    actions were not in issue at the trial because they were
    unrelated to the claims [the plaintiff] chose to press.
    But even if they were, [the defendant] breached no duty,
    and his actions were disconnected to the actual wrongs
    and relief [the plaintiff] claimed.’’
    The dispositive claim raised by the plaintiff is that
    the court improperly concluded that, on the basis of
    his counsel’s statements during closing argument, he
    had abandoned counts two, three, four, and six at trial.
    The plaintiff maintains that the record reflects that he
    preserved those counts for adjudication by the court.16
    The defendant argues that the court correctly con-
    cluded that the plaintiff had abandoned counts two,
    three, four, and six. We agree with the plaintiff.
    The following standard of review and legal principles
    are applicable here. ‘‘Because . . . the idea of aban-
    donment involves both a factual finding by the trial
    court and a legal determination that an issue is no longer
    before the court, we will treat this claim as one of both
    law and fact. Accordingly, we will accord it plenary
    review.’’ Solek v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    107 Conn. App. 473
    , 479, 
    946 A.2d 239
    , cert. denied, 
    289 Conn. 902
    , 
    957 A.2d 873
     (2008).
    Pursuant to Practice Book § 5-2, ‘‘[a]ny party
    intending to raise any question of law which may be
    the subject of an appeal must either state the question
    distinctly to the judicial authority in a written trial brief
    under Section 5-1 or state the question distinctly to
    the judicial authority on the record before such party’s
    closing argument and within sufficient time to give the
    opposing counsel an opportunity to discuss the ques-
    tion. If the party fails to do this, the judicial authority
    will be under no obligation to decide the question.’’
    Additionally, Practice Book § 64-1 (a) provides in rele-
    vant part that ‘‘[t]he trial court shall state its decision
    either orally or in writing . . . in rendering judgments
    in trials to the court in civil and criminal matters . . . .
    The court’s decision shall encompass its conclusion as
    to each claim of law raised by the parties and the factual
    basis therefor. . . .’’ ‘‘The responsibility of a court is
    to respond to those claims fairly advanced.’’ (Internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Auerbach v. Auerbach, 
    113 Conn. App. 318
    , 334, 
    966 A.2d 292
    , cert. denied, 
    292 Conn. 902
    , 
    971 A.2d 40
     (2009). ‘‘The mere recital of
    . . . claims in a [complaint], without supporting oral
    or written argument, does not adequately place those
    claims before the court for its consideration. This is
    particularly true when counsel has been warned by the
    court . . . that it would consider abandoned any
    claims not advanced by counsel in closing argument.’’
    Solek v. Commissioner of Correction, 
    supra,
     
    107 Conn. App. 480
    –81.
    After a careful review of the record, we conclude
    that the plaintiff adequately advanced counts two, three,
    four, and six at trial for the court’s consideration. During
    closing argument, the plaintiff’s counsel identified puni-
    tive damages in the form of attorney’s fees as one of
    the plaintiff’s requests for relief predicated on the defen-
    dant’s alleged ‘‘wilful, wanton conduct . . . .’’ Counts
    two, three, four, and six were supported by allegations
    that the defendant had engaged in ‘‘wilful, wanton’’ con-
    duct. Additionally, at the end of his closing argument,
    the plaintiff’s counsel argued in relevant part that (1)
    at trial ‘‘all we talked about was we needed information
    about [the trust from] inception to death,’’ (2) despite
    the plaintiff’s demands, the defendant refused to supply
    trust records and accountings, (3) the defendant deliv-
    ered to the plaintiff the electronic disc containing trust
    documents in February, 2019; see footnote 12 of this
    opinion; and (4) had the plaintiff been provided with
    the information contained on the electronic disc sooner,
    ‘‘none of [counsel’s] fees would have been incurred,
    [w]e would have had some of the [$50,000 litigation
    reserve] sent back, [and] [n]one of this would have
    happened.’’ Collectively, counsel’s statements implicate
    the allegations pleaded by the plaintiff in support of
    counts two, three, four, and six concerning conduct by
    the defendant.17 Accordingly, we conclude that the court
    incorrectly concluded that the plaintiff had abandoned
    counts two, three, four, and six at trial.
    At this juncture, we must address briefly the court’s
    August 23, 2019 articulation. In the articulation, the
    court (1) reiterated that conduct by the defendant,
    which comprised the core of the allegations in counts
    two, three, four, and six, was not at issue at trial because
    it was ‘‘unrelated to the claims [the plaintiff] chose to
    press,’’ and (2) ‘‘even if’’ the defendant’s actions were
    at issue, the plaintiff failed to demonstrate that the
    defendant had breached any duty owed to the plaintiff.
    The court’s memorandum of decision, its denial of the
    plaintiff’s combined motion to open the judgments and
    to reargue, and its articulation, make apparent that the
    court originally disposed of counts two, three, four, and
    six only on the ground that the plaintiff had abandoned
    them. To the extent that the court, in its articulation,
    addressed the merits of any or all of counts two, three,
    four, and six, the articulation is inconsistent with the
    memorandum of decision and must be disregarded
    because ‘‘[a]n articulation is not an opportunity for a
    trial court to substitute a new decision nor to change
    the reasoning or basis of a prior decision.’’ Koper v.
    Koper, 
    17 Conn. App. 480
    , 484, 
    553 A.2d 1162
     (1989);
    see also Sosin v. Sosin, 
    300 Conn. 205
    , 240, 
    14 A.3d 307
    (2011) (disregarding trial court’s articulation and order
    that were inconsistent with court’s original order, as
    subsequently clarified, regarding interest award); Casi-
    raghi v. Casiraghi, 
    200 Conn. App. 771
    , 785 n.13, 
    241 A.3d 717
     (2020) (trial court could not use articulation
    to set forth findings concerning plaintiff’s ability to pay
    and status of his payment obligations regarding former
    marital home when court admitted that it did not make
    such findings in court’s original contempt decision);
    Pecan v. Madigan, 
    97 Conn. App. 617
    , 623, 
    905 A.2d 710
     (2006) (trial court could not use articulation to state
    that it had stricken counts as legally insufficient when
    court’s original decision reflected that court had
    stricken counts on basis of prior pending action doc-
    trine), cert. denied, 
    281 Conn. 919
    , 
    918 A.2d 271
     (2007);
    Kelly v. Kelly, 
    54 Conn. App. 50
    , 54 n.3, 
    732 A.2d 808
    (1999) (this court was ‘‘constrained to follow’’ trial
    court’s original decision granting motions rather than
    court’s inconsistent articulation denying motions).
    In sum, we conclude that the court committed error
    in concluding that the plaintiff had abandoned counts
    two, three, four, and six at trial. Accordingly, we reverse
    the portion of the court’s judgment rendered on those
    counts and remand the case for a new trial on those
    counts.
    II
    AC 42919
    In AC 42919, the plaintiff appeals from the judgment
    rendered in the defendant’s favor in the 2017 probate
    appeal. The plaintiff claims that the court improperly
    rendered judgment for the defendant notwithstanding
    that the 2017 probate appeal became moot following
    (1) the plaintiff’s receipt of the 2018 accounting and
    (2) the court’s rejection of count five of his amended
    complaint filed in the 2018 action, in which he asserted
    an objection to the 2018 accounting. For the reasons
    that follow, we conclude that the 2017 probate appeal
    was rendered moot during its pendency in the trial
    court, thereby depriving the court of subject matter
    jurisdiction over it and necessitating its dismissal.
    ‘‘Mootness is a question of justiciability that must be
    determined as a threshold matter because it implicates
    [a] court’s subject matter jurisdiction . . . . Because
    courts are established to resolve actual controversies,
    before a claimed controversy is entitled to a resolution
    on the merits it must be justiciable. . . . Justiciability
    requires (1) that there be an actual controversy between
    or among the parties to the dispute . . . (2) that the
    interests of the parties be adverse . . . (3) that the
    matter in controversy be capable of being adjudicated
    by judicial power . . . and (4) that the determination
    of the controversy will result in practical relief to the
    complainant. . . . A case is considered moot if [the
    trial] court cannot grant . . . any practical relief
    through its disposition of the merits . . . . [I]t is not
    the province of [the] courts to decide moot questions,
    disconnected from the granting of actual relief or from
    the determination of which no practical relief can fol-
    low. . . . When . . . events have occurred that pre-
    clude [the] court from granting any practical relief
    through its disposition of the merits, a case has become
    moot. . . . [B]ecause an issue regarding justiciability
    raises a question of law, our appellate review is ple-
    nary.’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Abel v. Johnson, 
    194 Conn. App. 120
    , 149–50,
    
    220 A.3d 843
     (2019), cert. granted, 
    334 Conn. 917
    , 
    222 A.3d 104
     (2020).
    The following additional facts are relevant to our
    disposition of this appeal. In his revised complaint, the
    plaintiff alleged in relevant part that the 2016 accounting
    was incomplete, and, therefore, he was aggrieved by
    the Probate Court’s order approving the 2016 account-
    ing.18 In August, 2018, while the 2017 probate appeal
    and the 2018 action were pending, the defendant deliv-
    ered the 2018 accounting to the plaintiff. Subsequently,
    the question of whether the defendant’s delivery of the
    2018 accounting to the plaintiff rendered the 2017 pro-
    bate appeal moot was raised before the trial court. In
    his answer to the plaintiff’s revised complaint filed on
    February 25, 2019, in an introductory paragraph, the
    defendant represented that the ‘‘[p]laintiff’s counsel has
    acknowledged that [the 2017 probate appeal] was moot
    in a prior status conference . . . and suggested that
    the plaintiff would be withdrawing the appeal. As such,
    the defendant asserts that the revised complaint . . .
    can and should be withdrawn.’’
    Additionally, during closing argument, the following
    colloquy occurred:
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: So, when the 2018 account-
    [ing] was submitted you may recall that [the defen-
    dant’s] counsel has throughout said the 2017 [probate]
    appeal is mooted by the 2018 account[ing] and I agree.
    But during the pendency of these proceedings I didn’t
    know because you can’t just say, yes, it’s moot and then
    dismiss the case or withdraw the case. There has to be
    some sort of pleading and then some sort of resolution
    from the court.
    ‘‘The Court: Okay. But are you telling me now that
    you consider the [2017] probate appeal, there’s [the
    2017] probate appeal and [the 2018 action] here; are
    you saying now that that should be dismissed as moot?
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: I would rather have it
    remanded back to the [Probate Court] saying because
    the 2018 account[ing] was submitted that 2018 account[-
    ing] is controlling and as a result the [Probate] Court
    should enter as an order provisions in the 2018 account[-
    ing] as that will be handed down after this hearing.
    ‘‘The Court: You’re telling me though that you’re not
    asking me to overturn the 2016 accounting; is that fair,
    because you consider it moot?
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: I just get nervous.
    ‘‘The Court: Well, I’m not sure what you want me to
    do, so at the very least you should tell me, make it clear
    what you’re asking the court to do.
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: I think the effect of these
    proceedings should serve to sustain the [2017 probate]
    appeal so that absolutely [the 2017 probate] appeal, the
    decree of the [Probate] Court is to no effect.
    ‘‘The Court: And is that because you’re asking me to
    find the 2018 accounting is improper?
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: It’s supplanted.
    ‘‘The Court: Because [the 2018 accounting] supplants
    the 2016 [accounting]?
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: Yes.
    ‘‘The Court: And you’re saying that by virtue of the—
    if I find that the 2018 accounting is wrong, then that
    would automatically mean I should overturn the pro-
    bate decision on the 2016 accounting; is that what you’re
    saying and then send the whole thing back? . . .
    ‘‘[The Plaintiff’s Counsel]: I don’t think the 2018
    accounting is wrong. I think that there are a few things
    that need to be tweaked. There need to be things that
    are surcharged, but it complies with statutory require-
    ments. . . . On the other hand, my appeal from the
    [Probate Court order] was [that] it was statutorily insuf-
    ficient . . . .’’
    Following the statements made by the plaintiff’s
    counsel, the defendant’s counsel inquired whether the
    2017 probate appeal had been withdrawn. The court
    responded that the 2017 probate appeal had not been
    withdrawn and that, ‘‘[d]epending on what [the court
    rules], it will have implications and [the court is] going
    to have to sort those out.’’
    In the memorandum of decision, the court first
    rejected the plaintiff’s claim raised in the 2018 action
    challenging the 2018 accounting. The court then stated
    that it was rendering judgment ‘‘for the defendant in
    both cases.’’ The mootness issue was not addressed by
    the court in the memorandum of decision or in the
    court’s postjudgment decisions.
    The plaintiff claims that the court improperly ren-
    dered judgment in the defendant’s favor because the
    2017 probate appeal became moot following (1) the
    plaintiff’s receipt of the 2018 accounting in August, 2018,
    and (2) the court’s disposition of his objection to the
    2018 accounting, as asserted in count five of his
    amended complaint filed in the 2018 action, on March
    29, 2019. We agree with the plaintiff that the 2017 pro-
    bate appeal was moot at the time of judgment; however,
    we disagree with the plaintiff insofar as he contends
    that the 2017 probate appeal was not moot until the
    resolution of the 2018 action on March 29, 2019. We
    conclude, instead, that the 2017 probate appeal became
    moot during its pendency in August, 2018,19 when the
    plaintiff received the 2018 accounting.20
    During closing argument before the trial court, the
    plaintiff’s counsel expressly represented that the plain-
    tiff’s receipt of the 2018 accounting mooted the 2017
    probate appeal. The plaintiff repeated that representa-
    tion in his combined motion to open the judgments and
    to reargue by asserting that, ‘‘[u]ltimately, [he] prevailed
    on appeal, when the full-term accounting was presented
    by the defendant . . . in August, 2018. . . . [The
    court’s judgment in the 2017 probate appeal] overlooks
    that midlitigation the plaintiff received what he’d
    sought on appeal.’’ (Emphasis added.) Moreover, in his
    principal appellate brief, the plaintiff acknowledges that
    the 2018 accounting satisfied the relief that he sought
    in the 2017 probate appeal, and in his reply brief, he
    represents that ‘‘the 2017 probate appeal was [filed] for
    the sole purpose of compelling a full-term accounting
    . . . .’’ (Emphasis added.)
    In addition, during closing argument, the plaintiff
    requested that the trial court sustain the 2017 probate
    appeal and remand the matter to the Probate Court for
    additional proceedings. In his principal appellate brief,
    however, the plaintiff requests as relief that we reverse
    the judgment rendered in the 2017 probate appeal and
    remand the case to the trial court ‘‘with instruction that
    the [2017 probate] appeal is no longer justiciable and
    is to be withdrawn or dismissed . . . .’’ We construe
    the plaintiff’s statements as abandoning any claim that
    the trial court could afford him practical relief in the
    form of sustaining the 2017 probate appeal in his favor
    and taking any additional action in conjunction there-
    with.
    In light of the plaintiff’s representations before the
    trial court, as maintained on appeal, we conclude that
    the plaintiff’s receipt of the 2018 accounting in August,
    2018, satisfied the relief that he was pursuing in the
    2017 probate appeal. Following the plaintiff’s receipt
    of the 2018 accounting, there was no practical relief
    that the court could have granted him, thereby depriving
    the court of subject matter jurisdiction over the 2017
    probate appeal. We further conclude that the court’s
    lack of subject matter jurisdiction necessitated a judg-
    ment of dismissal rather than a judgment on the merits
    for the defendant, and, therefore, the form of the judg-
    ment is improper.21 See Gershon v. Back, 
    201 Conn. App. 225
    , 244, 
    242 A.3d 481
     (2020) (‘‘[w]henever a court
    finds that it has no jurisdiction, it must dismiss the
    case’’ (internal quotation marks omitted)).
    The judgment in Docket No. AC 42918 is reversed
    only as to counts two, three, four, and six of the plain-
    tiff’s amended complaint in the 2018 action and the
    case is remanded for a new trial on those counts; the
    judgment is affirmed in all other respects; the form of
    the judgment in Docket No. AC 42919 is improper, the
    judgment is reversed and the case is remanded with
    direction to render judgment dismissing the 2017 pro-
    bate appeal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    In the two matters underlying these consolidated appeals, Kenneth Bou-
    dreau was named as a defendant (1) in his capacity as the executor of the
    trustee’s estate, (2) in his capacity as the legal representative of the trustee,
    and/or (3) in his personal capacity. See footnotes 4 and 5 of this opinion.
    Several other individuals were named as defendants in one or both of the
    underlying matters, but none of those other defendants is participating in
    these consolidated appeals as the plaintiff did not pursue any claims against
    them. For the sake of simplicity, we will refer in this opinion to Kenneth
    Boudreau in his collective capacities as the defendant.
    2
    In July, 2016, the plaintiff filed an action in the Superior Court demanding
    that the trustee provide him with an accounting of the trust. See Kemon v.
    Boudreau, Superior Court, judicial district of Hartford, Docket No. CV-16-
    6069772-S. On October 7, 2016, the plaintiff withdrew that action after having
    learned that the trustee had died prior to service of process.
    3
    During trial, Attorney Kearns testified that, upon his recommendation,
    the trustee decided to set aside the $50,000 litigation reserve.
    4
    In the 2017 probate appeal, the defendant was named as a party only in
    his capacity as the executor of the trustee’s estate.
    5
    In the plaintiff’s original complaint filed in the 2018 action, the defendant
    was named as a party only in his capacity as the executor of the trustee’s
    estate. The plaintiff subsequently moved to cite in the defendant, both in
    his personal capacity and in his capacity as legal representative of the
    trustee, which the court, Budzik, J., granted on October 3, 2018.
    6
    With respect to the 2017 probate appeal, we observe that ‘‘[a]n appeal
    from a Probate Court to the Superior Court is not an ordinary civil action.
    . . . When entertaining an appeal from an order or decree of a Probate
    Court, the Superior Court takes the place of and sits as the court of probate.
    . . . In ruling on a probate appeal, the Superior Court exercises the powers,
    not of a constitutional court of general or common law jurisdiction, but of
    a Probate Court. . . . When, as here, no record was made of the Probate
    Court proceedings, the absence of a record requires a trial de novo.’’ (Citation
    omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Silverstein v. Laschever, 
    113 Conn. App. 404
    , 409, 
    970 A.2d 123
     (2009).
    7
    On May 9, 2019, the plaintiff filed separate appeals from the respective
    judgments rendered in the 2017 probate appeal and in the 2018 action. These
    appeals were consolidated on June 25, 2019.
    8
    As we explain later in part I of this opinion, the court could not use its
    articulation to address the merits of the plaintiff’s claims that the court, in
    its memorandum of decision, had deemed to have been abandoned. Thus,
    our conclusion that the court improperly concluded that the plaintiff had
    abandoned counts two, three, four, and six of his amended complaint at
    trial is dispositive of the plaintiff’s appeal in AC 42918.
    9
    Because count five is not at issue on appeal, we limit our discussion of
    the allegations in support of that count. See footnote 16 of this opinion.
    10
    In his principal appellate brief, the plaintiff states that his receipt of
    the 2018 accounting ‘‘dispensed with count [one].’’
    11
    Initially, as an alternative argument, the plaintiff’s counsel argued that
    the terms of the trust barred the expenditure of the $50,000 litigation reserve.
    Subsequently, the plaintiff’s counsel appeared to abandon that alternative
    argument. The court then asked the plaintiff’s counsel to confirm that he
    had ‘‘one argument here. . . . [T]he claim here is not that the [trust] instru-
    ment wouldn’t allow it. The claim is that the trustee must prevail in order to
    get fees; is that correct?’’ The plaintiff’s counsel responded in the affirmative.
    12
    During trial, the plaintiff testified that, in February, 2019, in response
    to discovery requests, the defendant delivered to the plaintiff an electronic
    disc with thousands of ‘‘trust documents.’’ The electronic disc was entered
    into the record as a full exhibit.
    13
    During trial, the defendant testified that, shortly before the trustee’s
    death on May 1, 2016, the trustee instructed him not to inform the plaintiff
    of her death. The plaintiff testified that he did not learn of the trustee’s
    death until August, 2016, in connection with the civil action that he had
    filed against the trustee in July, 2016. See footnote 2 of this opinion.
    14
    Section 4.1 of the trust provided in relevant part that, if the trustee
    failed ‘‘to qualify, [was] unable to act or cease[d] to serve for any reason,’’
    then the plaintiff would be appointed as the successor trustee. During trial,
    the plaintiff testified that he had filed an application with the Probate Court
    to be appointed as the successor trustee, but he elected not to pursue the
    application.
    15
    As the court found, ‘‘[a]fter eighteen months of trying [the trustee] gave
    up and turned the [Simsbury condominium unit] in for nothing to the condo
    association.’’
    16
    The plaintiff is not appealing from the portion of the judgment disposing
    of count five in the defendant’s favor.
    17
    Additionally, we note that the evidence produced at trial was not limited
    to actions taken by the trustee prior to her death, but included the defendant’s
    conduct following the trustee’s death.
    18
    As relief, the plaintiff sought (1) ‘‘such relief as is proper,’’ (2) ‘‘[a]n
    accounting of [t]rust activity, from its inception to date,’’ (3) ‘‘[j]udgment
    for amounts found due under such accounting,’’ (4) damages, (5) prejudg-
    ment and postjudgment interest, and (6) any other legal or equitable relief
    available. On August 2, 2017, the defendant filed a motion to strike the
    claims for relief numbered two through five, which the court, Shapiro, J.,
    granted on April 3, 2018. The granting of the defendant’s motion to strike
    is not at issue on appeal.
    19
    The 2018 accounting is dated August 6, 2018. An e-mail admitted into
    evidence at trial in conjunction with the 2018 accounting reflects that the
    2018 accounting was delivered to the plaintiff’s counsel via e-mail on August
    9, 2018. During trial, the plaintiff testified that he received the 2018 account-
    ing in August, 2018, without specifying a date. The precise date in August,
    2018, on which the plaintiff received the 2018 accounting is not relevant to
    our analysis.
    20
    The plaintiff also claims that, in rendering judgment for the defendant
    in the 2017 probate appeal, the court applied the wrong reasoning because
    it relied exclusively on its rationale disposing of the 2018 action in adjudicat-
    ing the 2017 probate appeal. We need not address this additional claim in
    light of our conclusion that the 2017 probate appeal was rendered moot
    during its pendency.
    21
    In his appellate brief, the defendant argues that the court properly
    rendered judgment in his favor in the 2017 probate appeal; however, the
    defendant does not address the effect of the plaintiff’s receipt of the 2018
    accounting during the pendency of the 2017 probate appeal on the justiciabil-
    ity of that appeal.