Adler v. Rosenthal ( 2016 )


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    LAWRENCE H. ADLER v. EDWARD M. ROSENTHAL
    (AC 36593)
    Keller, Mullins and Schaller, Js.
    Argued October 19, 2015—officially released March 15, 2016
    (Appeal from Superior Court, judicial district of
    Harford, Hon. Jerry Wagner, judge trial referee [motion
    to dismiss]; Vacchelli, J. [request to amend
    complaint; judgment].)
    Hugh D.        Hughes,       for     the     appellant-appellee
    (defendant).
    William B. Wynne, with whom, on the brief was
    Heidi Zultowsky, for the appellee-appellant (plaintiff).
    Opinion
    KELLER, J. In this breach of contract action stem-
    ming from an agreement to form a law partnership,
    the defendant, Attorney Edward M. Rosenthal, appeals
    from the judgment of the trial court, following a hearing
    in damages, rendered in favor of the plaintiff, Attorney
    Lawrence H. Adler, and awarding him damages in the
    amount of $42,447.72, plus costs.1 On appeal, the defen-
    dant claims that the court (1) improperly denied his
    motion to dismiss the plaintiff’s action, and (2) improp-
    erly awarded the plaintiff damages for lost profits. The
    plaintiff filed a cross appeal, in which he claims that
    the court erred by (1) not allowing him to amend his
    complaint to include a claim for paralegal time
    expended addressing the defendant’s failure to join
    their contemplated law partnership, (2) failing to award
    him damages for time that he expended addressing
    the defendant’s failure to join their contemplated law
    partnership, and (3) failing to award him damages for
    the cost he incurred by hiring an associate to replace
    the defendant. With respect to the defendant’s appeal,
    we reverse the court’s judgment in part, with respect
    to its award of lost profits, and remand the case to
    that court with direction to vacate that portion of its
    damages award. We affirm the judgment of the trial
    court in all other respects, including with respect to
    the plaintiff’s cross appeal.
    The following facts, as found by the trial court, and
    procedural history inform our review of the present
    appeal. In 2008, the plaintiff left his partnership position
    at a law firm and began to explore the possibility of
    starting his own law firm. In the plaintiff’s efforts to
    start a new firm, he met with the defendant for the first
    time on July 14, 2008. During this meeting, the plaintiff
    proposed to the defendant that they enter into a partner-
    ship to start their own law firm. The defendant indicated
    that he was interested, but he did not formally agree
    to enter into a partnership at that time. In the following
    weeks, the plaintiff and the defendant communicated
    with each other and met several times to discuss the
    new law firm. Additionally, the plaintiff and the defen-
    dant looked for potential office space and discussed
    other matters with each other related to their own prac-
    tices, including expected income, draws, and expenses.
    On July 29, 2008, the plaintiff and the defendant met
    in Bushnell Park in Hartford and signed a one page
    ‘‘Prelim[in]ary Partnership Agreement’’ (preliminary
    agreement) to enter into a partnership in the business
    of practicing law. Pursuant to this preliminary
    agreement, the plaintiff and the defendant agreed to
    join their practices and to form a law firm called Adler
    Rosenthal, LLC, or some similar name. The plaintiff
    would hold an 80 percent interest in the firm, and the
    defendant would hold a 20 percent interest. Each part-
    ner would bring the files of all of his clients to the firm,
    and each partner would retain the files of his respective
    original clients. The plaintiff’s work included mostly
    contingency cases with some hourly work, and the
    defendant’s work included mostly contingency cases,
    as well as representing nursing homes, which he billed
    hourly. In addition to these clients, the defendant would
    contribute office furniture and equipment that he
    already owned, which the new firm would use. The
    defendant would assist the plaintiff with his contin-
    gency work.
    The preliminary agreement provided that the initial
    draws would be paid weekly, with the plaintiff to
    receive $250,000 annually and the defendant to receive
    $110,000 annually. The profits after costs, expenses,
    loan repayments, and initial draws would be divided
    in the first year based upon the plaintiff’s 80 percent
    ownership interest and the defendant’s 20 percent own-
    ership interest. After the first year, profit sharing would
    be determined annually on the basis of the ratio of the
    originated receipts that each partner brought into the
    firm during the prior year, subject to some adjustments.
    The preliminary agreement provided that each partner
    would use good faith and fair dealing with the other
    partner and the firm, and it further provided that each
    partner would use his best efforts to bring in new clients
    and to work adequate hours.
    The preliminary agreement did not provide a start or
    end date, and it did not contain a termination provision.
    Notwithstanding the absence of these provisions, the
    preliminary agreement did provide as follows: ‘‘In the
    event [the defendant] separates from the firm for any
    reason, each partner will retain their own clients
    (assuming the clients agree) and neither partner will
    solicit the other’s clients. [The defendant] will be per-
    mitted to take the property, furniture, computers, etc
    he came to the firm with. Hourly clients will be billed
    by and for the firm until the partner taking the file
    departs. Contingency fee cases will have a lien placed
    on the recovery with the firm to receive the portion of
    the fee received based on the ratio of hours the file is
    worked on while the matter is at the firm as compared
    with the hours worked on the file after departure. The
    lat[t]er portion to go to the departing partner. Each
    paralegal hour will be equal to 1/2 of each attorney hour
    for this computation.’’ The preliminary agreement also
    contained a provision stating that each partner prom-
    ised to enter into a more detailed written partnership
    agreement ‘‘shortly’’ after their partnership com-
    menced.
    On the same day that the plaintiff and the defendant
    signed the preliminary agreement, they both went to
    the Office of the Secretary of the State and filed organi-
    zational documentation for the firm, named Adler and
    Rosenthal, LLC. The defendant and the plaintiff also
    agreed that they would begin the partnership on Sep-
    tember 1, 2008. In preparation for the start date, the
    plaintiff and his wife, who also worked as the plaintiff’s
    business manager, began to take steps to establish the
    new law firm. Specifically, the plaintiff and his wife,
    under the business name of Adler and Rosenthal, LLC,
    met with landlords to discuss potential office space,
    negotiated with payroll, telephone, and insurance com-
    panies, interviewed and negotiated with prospective
    staff members, put an advertisement in the yellow
    pages, set up e-mail accounts and a computer system,
    opened bank accounts, purchased office supplies, and
    arranged for a construction crew to construct an office
    space in East Hartford.
    Two days before the contemplated start date of the
    new firm, on August 30, 2008, the plaintiff arranged for
    movers to go to the defendant’s office in Avon to pick
    up his office equipment and furniture and move it to
    the new firm’s office in East Hartford. On this date, the
    plaintiff called the defendant at his office several times
    to see if he needed assistance with moving his equip-
    ment and furniture. The defendant at first did not
    answer or respond to the plaintiff’s calls. When he
    finally did answer the phone, he told the plaintiff that
    he had decided not to go through with the formation
    of the law partnership of Adler and Rosenthal, LLC. In
    response, the plaintiff told the defendant that he had
    breached their preliminary agreement and that he
    planned to sue the defendant as a result.
    On December 24, 2008, the plaintiff filed an applica-
    tion for a prejudgment remedy, which the trial court,
    Aurigemma, J., denied on March 10, 2009. The plain-
    tiff’s complaint was dated April 17, 2009. On April 23,
    2009, the plaintiff served the defendant with a writ of
    summons and complaint, which were returned to the
    court on April 30, 2009. In the four count complaint,
    the plaintiff pleaded causes of action sounding in breach
    of contract, detrimental reliance, negligent misrepre-
    sentation, and intentional misrepresentation.
    The defendant filed a motion to dismiss the plaintiff’s
    action on May 18, 2009. In his motion, the defendant
    claimed that the plaintiff’s action should be dismissed
    because he failed to comply with General Statutes § 52-
    278j2 by not serving process and returning it to the court
    within thirty days of the court’s denial of the plaintiff’s
    prejudgment remedy application. The defendant also
    argued that the plaintiff had failed to comply with Gen-
    eral Statutes § 52-45a3 in not designating a return date
    on the writ of summons and complaint. Subsequent to
    the defendant’s filing his motion to dismiss, the plaintiff
    twice filed a request for leave to amend his writ of
    summons and complaint to include a proper return
    date.4 The first request was filed on May 19, 2009, to
    which the defendant filed an objection on June 9, 2009.
    The second request was filed on June 12, 2009, and
    the defendant filed an objection on June 19, 2009. On
    September 9, 2009, the trial court, Hon. Jerry Wagner,
    judge trial referee, denied the defendant’s motion to
    dismiss, noting that § 52-278j did not mandate dismissal
    of the action due to the fact that there was no prejudice
    to the defendant by the amendment of the return date.5
    Between 2010 and 2012, the plaintiff filed several
    motions for default against the defendant for his failure
    to plead. Ultimately, on December 19, 2012, the court
    entered a default judgment against the defendant for
    his failure to file an answer to the plaintiff’s complaint,
    as ordered by the court at a dormancy calendar hearing.
    The plaintiff then claimed the matter for a hearing in
    damages, which the court, Vacchelli, J., held over the
    course of two days, July 10, 2013, and October 22, 2013.
    The court heard testimony from the plaintiff and the
    defendant and admitted exhibits into evidence during
    this hearing.
    On February 7, 2014, the court issued a memorandum
    of decision wherein it rendered judgment for the plain-
    tiff upon the default of the defendant on all counts of
    the complaint and awarded the plaintiff damages in the
    amount of $42,447.72, plus costs. The court awarded
    the plaintiff $38,786.93 as damages for lost profits and
    $3678.79 as reliance damages for costs that the plaintiff
    incurred prior to the breach. The latter amount reflected
    costs incurred by the plaintiff in preparation for the
    start of the partnership, which included costs for
    recording with the secretary of the state’s office, print-
    ing stationery, reconfiguring computers, and changing
    domain names. This appeal followed. On March 6, 2014,
    the plaintiff filed a cross appeal. Additional facts will
    be set forth as necessary.
    I
    DEFENDANT’S APPEAL
    A
    Motion to Dismiss
    We first address the defendant’s claim that the court
    improperly denied his motion to dismiss the plaintiff’s
    action. The following additional facts are relevant to
    our resolution of this claim. In the defendant’s May 18,
    2009 motion to dismiss, he argued, as he does now
    on appeal, that the court should have dismissed the
    plaintiff’s civil action because he failed to comply with
    § 52-278j (b) by not serving process and returning it to
    the court within thirty days of the court’s denial of the
    plaintiff’s prejudgment remedy application and, in the
    alternative, because he failed to comply with § 52-45a
    by not designating a return date on the writ of summons.
    The record reflects that the court, Aurigemma, J.,
    denied the plaintiff’s prejudgment remedy application
    on March 10, 2009. The plaintiff then served the defen-
    dant with a writ of summons and complaint in this civil
    action on April 23, 2009, more than thirty days beyond
    the court’s denial of the plaintiff’s prejudgment remedy
    application. The defendant claims that the plaintiff’s
    failure to serve the writ of summons and complaint and
    to file a return with the court within thirty days of the
    date on which his application for prejudgment remedy
    was denied by the court resulted in an effective with-
    drawal of his civil action pursuant to § 52-278j (b). After
    the defendant had filed his motion to dismiss, the plain-
    tiff apparently realized the defects in process due to
    the failure to designate a return date and twice
    requested leave to amend the writ of summons and
    complaint. In the plaintiff’s first request, dated May 19,
    2009, he requested that the court permit him to amend
    the writ of summons and complaint to include a return
    date of June 30, 2009. In his second request, filed June
    12, 2009, he requested that the court permit him to
    amend his process to include a return date of June 16,
    2009, given that this date was inside of the sixty day
    window6 from the date of the original summons, April
    17, 2009.
    The court, Hon. Jerry Wagner, judge trial referee,
    ultimately denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss on
    September 9, 2009. In its order denying the motion, the
    court stated: ‘‘§ 52-278j does not mandate dismissal of
    this action. No prejudice to defendant by amended
    return date.’’
    On appeal, the defendant claims that the court’s
    denial of his motion to dismiss was error because the
    plaintiff’s civil action was a ‘‘nullity,’’ over which the
    court had no subject matter jurisdiction, because he
    violated § 52-278j (b) by failing to serve the defendant
    with the writ of summons and complaint and to return
    it to court within thirty days of the court’s denial of
    the plaintiff’s application for a prejudgment remedy.
    Further, the defendant argues that the court erred by
    denying the defendant’s motion to dismiss because the
    plaintiff’s civil action became a ‘‘nullity’’ once he failed
    to comply with § 52-45a by not designating a return
    date on the writ of summons and complaint that he
    served upon the defendant. The defendant also argues
    that the court erred because, even after the court
    granted the plaintiff’s motion to amend to include a
    return date, the new return date fell outside of the sixty
    day window following the date of the process, which
    violated § 52-48 (b) and rendered the plaintiff’s action
    ‘‘a nullity.’’ In response, the plaintiff argues that the
    record is inadequate for this court to review the issues
    raised pertaining to this claim.7 We conclude that the
    record is adequate for review, and we reject the defen-
    dant’s arguments on this claim.
    We begin our discussion by reviewing the distinctions
    between personal jurisdiction and subject matter juris-
    diction. ‘‘[J]urisdiction of the subject-matter is the
    power [of the court] to hear and determine cases of
    the general class to which the proceedings in question
    belong. . . . A court has subject matter jurisdiction if
    it has the authority to adjudicate a particular type of
    legal controversy. . . . A defect in process, however,
    such as an improperly executed writ, implicates per-
    sonal jurisdiction, rather than subject matter jurisdic-
    tion. . . . [W]hen a particular method of serving
    process is set forth by statute, that method must be
    followed. . . . Unless service of process is made as
    the statute prescribes, the court to which it is returnable
    does not acquire jurisdiction. . . . The jurisdiction that
    is found lacking, however, is jurisdiction over the per-
    son, not the subject matter.’’ (Citations omitted; internal
    quotations marks omitted.) Lostritto v. Community
    Action Agency of New Haven, Inc., 
    269 Conn. 10
    , 31,
    
    848 A.2d 418
     (2004).
    1
    First, we address the defendant’s argument that the
    court’s denial of his motion to dismiss constituted
    reversible error in light of the requirements of § 52-278j
    (b). The court denied the plaintiff’s application for a
    prejudgment remedy on March 10, 2009. The plaintiff
    served the defendant with his signed writ of summons
    and complaint, dated April 17, 2009, on April 23, 2009,
    and it was returned to court on April 30, 2009. The
    defendant argues that the service of process had to be
    accomplished within thirty days of March 10, 2009, or
    the civil action effectively was withdrawn, and any
    action filed after the thirty day period must be dismissed
    for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We disagree.
    Our Supreme Court implicitly has treated a party’s
    alleged noncompliance with § 52-278j as a jurisdictional
    issue that can be raised at any time during the pleadings,
    thereby resembling a challenge to subject matter juris-
    diction. See Baldwin Piano & Organ Co. v. Blake, 
    186 Conn. 295
    , 297–98, 
    441 A.2d 183
     (1982); see also Sam-
    marco v. Kostowski, Superior Court, judicial district of
    Fairfield, Docket No. CV-09-5027402 (August 18, 2010).
    ‘‘In undertaking this review [of a motion to dismiss
    challenging subject matter jurisdiction], we are mindful
    of the well established notion that, in determining
    whether a court has subject matter jurisdiction, every
    presumption favoring jurisdiction should be indulged.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Dayner v. Archdio-
    cese of Hartford, 
    301 Conn. 759
    , 774, 
    23 A.3d 1192
    (2011). ‘‘A determination regarding a trial court’s sub-
    ject matter jurisdiction is a question of law and, there-
    fore, we employ the plenary standard of review and
    decide whether the court’s conclusions are legally and
    logically correct and supported by the facts in the
    record.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v.
    Williamson, 
    155 Conn. App. 215
    , 219, 
    109 A.3d 924
    (2015).
    A party may seek prejudgment relief, such as an
    attachment on property, to secure the anticipated judg-
    ment. General Statutes § 52-278a et seq. That party sub-
    mits a proposed unsigned copy of the writ of summons
    and complaint; General Statutes § 52-278c (a); but the
    civil action is not yet initiated. See Bernhard-Thomas
    Building Systems, LLC v. Dunican, 
    286 Conn. 548
    ,
    560–61, 
    944 A.2d 329
     (2008). It is not until after the
    prejudgment remedy proceeding is completed that the
    applicant serves a signed writ, summons and complaint,
    and returns them to court to officially commence the
    action. See 
    id.,
     555–56, 559. ‘‘[T]he language of the pre-
    judgment remedy statutes, [General Statutes] § 52-278a
    et seq., in several instances . . . makes it clear that
    proceedings for prejudgment remedy applications and
    civil actions are separate and distinct, with a prejudg-
    ment remedy application generally preceding the filing
    of the civil action. . . . [I]n addition to the differences
    regarding the process for initiating these two legal pro-
    ceedings, the purpose of filing a civil action is funda-
    mentally different from the purpose of obtaining a
    prejudgment remedy. A prejudgment remedy applica-
    tion is brought as a prelude to the filing of a civil action,
    and is meant to determine whether security should be
    provided for any judgment ultimately recovered by the
    plaintiff if he or she is successful on the merits of the
    civil action. A civil action, in contrast, resolves the mer-
    its of the parties’ claims, and can be filed irrespective
    of whether the plaintiff was successful in his or her
    prior pursuit of a prejudgment remedy.’’ Id., 560–61.
    Contrary to the defendant’s interpretation, the plain
    language of § 52-278j provides for the dismissal or with-
    drawal of an application for a prejudgment remedy
    unless the plaintiff, within thirty days from the date the
    application is granted or denied, serves and returns to
    court the writ of summons and complaint in the civil
    action for which the prejudgment remedy was allowed
    or disallowed. General Statutes § 52-278j (a) and (b).
    Thus, the plaintiff was not required to serve the defen-
    dant with the writ of summons and complaint for his
    civil action and return it to court within thirty days of
    the date on which his application for a prejudgment
    remedy was denied, and his failure to do so did not
    mandate the dismissal of the entire civil action for
    lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Rather, the plaintiff’s
    failure only required the court to consider his applica-
    tion for a prejudgment remedy to be withdrawn.
    In Sharp Electronics Corp. v. Solaire Development,
    LLC, 
    156 Conn. App. 17
    , 27–28, 
    111 A.3d 533
     (2015),
    this court held, inter alia, that for purposes of the thirty
    day limit prescribed in § 52-278j (a), the plaintiff’s appli-
    cation for prejudgment remedy was granted on the date
    on which the court issued a final order specifying
    attachment as the remedy, rather than on the date on
    which the court issued an initial, conditional order lack-
    ing a specified remedy. Due to the fact that—as a result
    of the plaintiff’s alleged noncompliance with § 52-278j
    (a)—the defendant in that case properly sought the
    dismissal of the plaintiff’s prejudgment remedy, and not
    its entire civil action, this court did not address the
    exact issue that confronts us in the present appeal. See
    id., 24. Nevertheless, for purposes of our analysis, it is
    notable that the court stated the following in Sharp
    Electronics Corp.: ‘‘Nothing in the language of § 52-278j
    implicates the jurisdiction of the court to continue to
    hear a civil matter in which a plaintiff has been granted
    a prejudgment remedy but has failed to comply with
    § 52-278j (a). . . . Although failure to comply with § 52-
    278j (a) does not implicate the court’s jurisdiction, and
    therefore falls outside the scope of Practice Book § 10-
    30 and other rules governing motions to dismiss civil
    actions, a motion seeking to dismiss a prejudgment
    remedy is nevertheless an appropriate vehicle with
    which to alert the court of a plaintiff’s failure to comply
    with § 52-278j (a). If a court determines that the plaintiff
    [has not complied with § 52-278j], the court lacks
    authority to do anything but to ‘dismiss’ (in the parlance
    of the statute) the prejudgment remedy.’’ Id., 25.
    In a similar vein, we observe that Connecticut trial
    courts have appropriately discerned the distinction to
    be drawn between a prejudgment remedy and a civil
    action with respect to the application of § 52-278j. See,
    e.g., MacFarlane v. Luongo Construction & Develop-
    ment, LLC, Superior Court, judicial district of New
    Haven, Docket No. CV-12-6028525-S (January 17, 2014)
    (court granted plaintiff’s application for prejudgment
    remedy but plaintiff failed to serve defendant timely
    and, after court granted defendant’s motion to dismiss
    action for failure to comply with § 52-278j (a), court
    responded to plaintiff’s motion to reargue by ‘‘issu[ing]
    another order ruling that plaintiff correctly noted that
    [§] 52-278j requires . . . dismissal of . . . attachment
    and not . . . action’’); Constante v. Pecora, Superior
    Court, judicial district of Fairfield, Docket No. CV-08-
    5017524-S (January 6, 2010) (
    49 Conn. L. Rptr. 134
    , 134,
    136 and n.3) (parties entered into stipulated prejudg-
    ment remedy and court entered order requiring plain-
    tiffs to serve defendants immediately and return
    proposed complaint but, when plaintiffs failed to take
    such action for six months, court granted motion to
    dismiss prejudgment remedy for noncompliance with
    § 52-278j (a) but denied motion to dismiss underlying
    action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction); Outdoor
    Services Landscape Co. v. Custom Lawn & Limb, LLC,
    Superior Court, judicial district of Fairfield, Docket No.
    PJR-CV-06-5003078-S (March 13, 2007) (
    43 Conn. L. Rptr. 19
    , 20, 22) (court denied defendant’s motion to
    dismiss action for noncompliance with § 52-278j (b)
    holding that denial of prejudgment remedy application
    and plaintiff’s subsequent failure to comply with § 52-
    278j (b) did not mandate dismissal of underlying civil
    action); Burgess v. Burgess, Superior Court, judicial
    district of Waterbury, Docket No. CV-04-4000033-S
    (March 28, 2005) (
    39 Conn. L. Rptr. 30
    , 31, 32) (plaintiff
    granted prejudgment remedy but filed process with
    court beyond thirty day deadline and, when defendant
    objected to motion for disclosure of assets on ground
    that plaintiff failed to comply with § 52-278j (a) court
    held: ‘‘Since the thirty-day requirement in which the
    plaintiff had to serve and return to the court the writ,
    summons, and complaint . . . expired . . . before
    the plaintiff filed the mesne process with the court, the
    court lost subject matter jurisdiction over the prejudg-
    ment remedy. The prejudgment remedy is therefore
    dismissed without prejudice. The writ, summons and
    complaint are not [a]ffected by this ruling.’’ [Empha-
    sis added.]).
    On the basis of our review of the statute and the
    aforementioned case law, we conclude that the court
    did not err when it denied the defendant’s motion to
    dismiss on this ground. When the plaintiff failed to serve
    the defendant and to return his civil action to court
    within thirty days after the denial of his application for
    a prejudgment remedy, the only action required of the
    court pursuant to § 52-278j (b) was to consider the
    application, not the civil action, withdrawn. The plain-
    tiff’s civil action was not subject to dismissal under
    the statute.
    2
    We next address the defendant’s second alleged
    ground for dismissal: the plaintiff’s failure to include a
    return date on the writ of summons and his failure, in
    amending the writ of summons and complaint, to
    include a return date that was within two months from
    the date on which the plaintiff had first served the
    defendant.
    ‘‘[A] defendant’s claims concerning service of the
    summons and complaint [or defective process itself]
    implicate personal, rather than subject matter, jurisdic-
    tion.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Morgan v.
    Hartford Hospital, 
    301 Conn. 388
    , 401, 
    21 A.3d 451
    (2011); see also Pedro v. Miller, 
    281 Conn. 112
    , 117, 
    914 A.2d 524
     (2007). Thus, a motion to dismiss that attacks a
    defective return date, for example, implicates personal,
    rather than subject matter, jurisdiction, particularly
    because such a defect is curable. Willamette Manage-
    ment Associates, Inc. v. Palczynski, 
    134 Conn. App. 58
    , 65–66, 
    38 A.3d 1212
     (2012). The interpretation of
    statutory requirements for service of process ‘‘is a ques-
    tion of law over which this court exercises plenary
    review. . . . [R]eview of the trial court’s ultimate legal
    conclusion and resulting [decision to] [deny] [a] motion
    to dismiss will be de novo.’’ (Citation omitted; internal
    quotation marks omitted.) Morgan v. Hartford Hospi-
    tal, supra, 395. Unlike subject matter jurisdiction, per-
    sonal jurisdiction may be created through consent or
    waiver. ‘‘[Practice Book § 10-32] specifically and unam-
    biguously provides that any claim of lack of jurisdiction
    over the person as a result of an insufficiency of service
    of process is waived unless it is raised by a motion to
    dismiss filed within thirty days in the sequence required
    by Practice Book § 10-6 . . . .’’ (Emphasis omitted.)
    Pitchell v. Hartford, 
    247 Conn. 422
    , 433, 
    722 A.2d 797
    (1999). ‘‘Because a challenge to the personal jurisdic-
    tion of the trial court is a question of law, our review
    is plenary. . . . Although the court’s conclusions are
    subject to plenary review, [q]uestions of fact are subject
    to the clearly erroneous standard of review. . . . A
    finding of fact is clearly erroneous when there is no
    evidence in the record to support it . . . or when
    although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing
    court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and
    firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.’’
    (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Myrtle Mews Assn., Inc. v. Bordes, 
    125 Conn. App. 12
    ,
    15, 
    6 A.3d 163
     (2010).
    ‘‘The absence of a return date on the writ, whether
    the fault of a plaintiff or a court clerk, is unforgivable.
    . . . The return date is a necessary component of a
    writ by which a civil action is commenced. . . . Both
    the time within which process must be served after its
    issuance and the time within which the writ must be
    filed with the court after service are determined by
    reference to the return day.’’ (Citations omitted; foot-
    note omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Raynor v. Hickock Realty Corp., 
    61 Conn. App. 234
    ,
    242, 
    763 A.2d 54
     (2000). Nevertheless, ‘‘[§] 52-72 creates
    an avenue to amend defects in the return date. . . .
    [O]ur Supreme Court has held that a remedial statute
    such as § 52-72 should be construed liberally as not
    to preclude jurisdiction merely because of a defective
    return date.’’ (Citation omitted.) Olympia Mortgage
    Corp. v. Klein, 
    61 Conn. App. 305
    , 309, 
    763 A.2d 1055
    (2001). ‘‘[Section] 52-72 . . . provide[s] for amendment
    of otherwise incurable defects that go to the court’s
    jurisdiction. . . . The apparent intent of the legislature
    . . . [is] to prevent the loss of jurisdiction merely
    because of a defective return date.’’ (Internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Id., 308. ‘‘Despite the remedial nature
    of § 52-72 and the fact that the statute is to be liberally
    construed, our Supreme Court has established bound-
    aries to the statute’s reach. . . . A return date may be
    amended but it still must comply with the time limita-
    tions set forth in § 52-48 (b).’’8 (Citation omitted; inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) Ribeiro v. Fasano,
    Ippolito & Lee, P.C., 
    157 Conn. App. 617
    , 621–22, 
    117 A.3d 965
     (2015).
    The second ground raised in the defendant’s motion
    to dismiss sought dismissal of the plaintiff’s civil action
    because of his failure to include a return date on the
    writ of summons and his failure, in amending the writ
    of summons and complaint, to include a return date
    that was within two months from the date on which
    the plaintiff first had served the defendant. The plaintiff
    immediately sought to cure the defective return date
    by filing his first request for leave to amend his writ of
    summons and complaint on May 19, 2009, to designate
    a return date of June 30, 2009. On June 9, 2009, the
    defendant filed an untimely objection to the plaintiff’s
    first request to amend. See Practice Book § 10-60 (a)
    (3). In his objection, the defendant claimed that the
    proposed amendment did not cure the defect in service
    because the return date designated in the amendment,
    June 30, 2009, was not within sixty days of April 17,
    2009, the date on the original, defective writ of summons
    and complaint. See Coppola v. Coppola, 
    243 Conn. 657
    ,
    667 n.12, 
    707 A.2d 281
     (1998); Ribeiro v. Fasano, Ippol-
    ito & Lee, P.C., supra, 
    157 Conn. App. 623
     n.3.
    We decline to decide this issue on its merits because,
    procedurally, it was not properly raised in the trial
    court. The defendant did not object to the plaintiff’s
    first request for leave to amend within fifteen days, as
    required by Practice Book §10-60 (a) (3).9 Accordingly,
    the complaint as amended was deemed to have been
    filed with the consent of the adverse party by operation
    of the rule of practice sixteen days after the filing of
    the request, on June 4, 2009. See Practice Book § 10-
    60 (a) (3). The defendant did not file his objection until
    June 9, 2009, and the court never ruled on it, nor was
    it required to do so, because of the lateness of the filing
    of the objection.
    Once the plaintiff’s first amendment took effect, the
    only option available to the defendant was to file a
    second, amended motion to dismiss to address the
    newly amended writ of summons and complaint in
    order to assert his claim that the amended return date
    still presented a jurisdictional defect.10 He did not do
    so. Subsequently, when the defendant later filed a
    request to revise the complaint on April 20, 2010, with-
    out having filed a subsequent motion to dismiss based
    on his claim that the amended return date still posed
    a jurisdictional defect, he waived any further right to
    pursue dismissal of the action based on insufficiency
    of service of process or lack of personal jurisdiction.
    See Practice Book § 10-32.11 Accordingly, we decline to
    review this waived claim.
    B
    Lost Profits Award
    We next address the defendant’s claim that the trial
    court, Vacchelli, J., upon the conclusion of the hearing
    in damages, improperly awarded lost profits to the
    plaintiff. The defendant’s claim regarding the damages
    awarded for lost profits is in three parts. First, the
    defendant claims that there was no support in the evi-
    dence for the court’s finding that the defendant would
    have contributed $250,000 to the firm’s annual revenue.
    Second, the defendant claims that there was no basis in
    the evidence for the court’s finding that the partnership
    between the parties would have lasted for at least six
    months. Third, the defendant claims that any award
    of lost profits was improper because the preliminary
    agreement, which governed the rights of the parties if
    the defendant separated from the firm, did not provide
    for such an award under the present circumstances, in
    which the defendant did not join the firm.
    Our resolution of the first claim is dispositive with
    respect to the issue of lost profits. Because we conclude
    that the plaintiff failed in his burden of proving what,
    if any, revenue the defendant would have contributed
    to the new firm, we conclude that any award of lost
    profits was improper. Accordingly, we shall not address
    the second and third claims raised with respect to the
    award of lost profits because we need not determine
    whether the court erroneously concluded, in light of
    the preliminary agreement between the parties, that it
    could award lost profits or whether the court erred by
    basing its award on a six month partnership between
    the parties.
    The defendant argues that the court’s finding of lost
    profits was clearly erroneous because profits for the
    firm were not reasonably certain, and, thus, the award
    was based on speculation. In opposition, the plaintiff
    argues that the court’s finding was proper because the
    lost profits were reasonable and foreseeable damages
    that consequently arose from the defendant’s breach.
    Furthermore, the plaintiff argues that the court properly
    awarded lost profits as reliance damages.12 We disagree
    with the plaintiff and conclude that the trial court’s
    finding that he was entitled to lost profits in the amount
    of $38,768.93 is clearly erroneous.
    The following additional procedural history and facts
    are relevant to our resolution of this claim. At the hear-
    ing in damages, the plaintiff affirmatively responded to
    a question as to whether he ‘‘lost income as a result of
    the failure of [Adler and Rosenthal, LLC] and the breach
    of contract.’’ The plaintiff further testified that the
    defendant represented that he would bring $250,000
    in business to the new law firm, which would have
    increased profits accordingly because, under the plain-
    tiff’s rationale, all of the defendant’s expenses would
    have been eliminated if he had joined Adler and Rosen-
    thal, LLC. The plaintiff then testified about his calcula-
    tions regarding lost profits arising from the defendant’s
    breach by analyzing two time periods: one for the time
    period between September 1, 2008, and December 31,
    2008, and the other for the 2009 calendar year.
    For the time period spanning from September 1, 2008,
    to December 31, 2008, the plaintiff testified that based
    upon the defendant’s commitment to bring in $250,000
    to the firm annually, he would have added an additional
    $83,333.33 in firm compensation, thereby increasing the
    firm’s net profits before partner pay from $118,241.60
    to $201,574.93. On the basis of the initial draws set
    forth in the preliminary agreement,13 the plaintiff then
    testified that of this $201,574.93 in net profits, $83,333.33
    would have gone to the plaintiff and $36,666.66 would
    have gone to the defendant, which would have left
    $81,574.94 in profits remaining for the four month time
    period. The plaintiff then testified that, in accordance
    with the 80-20 percentage split in ownership as set forth
    in the preliminary agreement, the plaintiff and the
    defendant would have then divided this profits figure
    such that the plaintiff would have received his 80 per-
    cent share, $65,259.95. The plaintiff compared this fig-
    ure to the amount of net profits that he actually did
    receive during this four month time period, which
    roughly amounted to $34,908.27. Specifically, the plain-
    tiff submitted that the firm that he actually did form in
    the defendant’s absence, Adler Law Group, LLC,
    received $118,241.60 in profits during this four month
    time period. After subtracting $83,333.33 of compensa-
    tion from this figure, the plaintiff asserted that his actual
    profits figure for this time period was $34,908.27.14 The
    plaintiff then subtracted this figure from the $65,259.95
    that he purportedly would have received had the defen-
    dant joined the firm, leaving him with lost profits of
    $30,352.01.
    For the next time period of January to December of
    2009, the plaintiff testified that, in accordance with the
    defendant’s commitment to bring $250,000 annually in
    business to the firm, the firm’s profits would have
    increased from $557,488.88 to $807,488.48. The plaintiff
    then testified that, pursuant to the initial draw provision
    in the preliminary agreement, he would have distributed
    $250,000 to himself, $110,000 to the defendant, and the
    firm would have been left with net profits of $447,488.48
    for the year of 2009. The plaintiff then multiplied this
    net profits figure by 80 percent in accordance with the
    preliminary agreement’s provision on the ownership
    interests, which indicated that he would have received
    $357,990.78 in profits for 2009. The plaintiff then sub-
    tracted this figure from the amount of profit that he
    actually did receive for 2009 in the defendant’s absence,
    $307,488.48, to arrive at his claimed lost profits figure
    of $50,501.52.
    In the memorandum of decision wherein the court
    awarded the plaintiff lost profits as damages, it stated
    the following: ‘‘With respect to lost profits, the court
    accepts the plaintiff’s financial data and calculations,
    based on the evidence of record of his actual income
    and expenses, in comparison to the expected additional
    income had the defendant joined the practice, minus
    the defendant’s expected salary and share. Based on
    that evidence, the court finds that the absence of the
    defendant from the enterprise during the first calendar
    year (four months) resulted in a loss of reasonably
    expected additional net income to the plaintiff of
    $30,352.01. Accepting the plaintiff’s data and calcula-
    tions over the next full calendar year, the court finds
    the plaintiff’s loss of reasonably expected additional
    net income for that year was $50,501.52. The pro rata
    amount for two months is $8416.92. Adding these two
    subtotals, the court finds that the plaintiff’s loss of rea-
    sonably expected additional net income over the
    allowed six month period was $38,768.93. Accordingly,
    the court awards the plaintiff $38,768.93 as damages
    for lost profits.’’
    We begin our analysis by setting forth the appropriate
    standard of review and applicable principles of law.
    ‘‘The trial court has broad discretion in determining
    damages, and its decision will not be overturned unless
    it is clearly erroneous. . . . [W]here the legal conclu-
    sions of the court are challenged, we must determine
    whether they are legally and logically correct and
    whether they find support in the facts set out in the
    memorandum of decision; where the factual basis of
    the court’s decision is challenged we must determine
    whether the facts set out in the memorandum of deci-
    sion are supported by the evidence or whether, in light
    of the evidence and the pleadings in the whole record,
    those facts are clearly erroneous.’’ (Citation omitted;
    internal quotation marks omitted.) O & G Industries,
    Inc. v. All Phase Enterprises, Inc., 
    112 Conn. App. 511
    ,
    528–29, 
    963 A.2d 676
     (2009). ‘‘A finding of fact is clearly
    erroneous when there is no evidence in the record to
    support it . . . or when although there is evidence to
    support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidence
    is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mis-
    take has been committed.’’ (Internal quotation marks
    omitted.) Gianetti v. Rutkin, 
    142 Conn. App. 641
    , 656,
    
    70 A.3d 104
     (2013).
    ‘‘It . . . is well established that the burden of proving
    damages is on the party claiming them. . . . When
    damages are claimed they are an essential element of
    the plaintiff’s proof and must be proved with reasonable
    certainty.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) FCM
    Group, Inc. v. Miller, 
    300 Conn. 774
    , 804, 
    17 A.3d 40
    (2011); see Carrano v. Yale-New Haven Hospital, 
    279 Conn. 622
    , 646, 
    904 A.2d 149
     (2006); Frillici v. Westport,
    
    264 Conn. 266
    , 283, 
    823 A.2d 1172
     (2003). ‘‘We . . .
    note that there are circumstances in which proof of
    damages may be difficult and that such difficulty is, in
    itself, an insufficient reason for refusing an award once
    the right to damages has been established. . . . Never-
    theless, the court must have evidence by which it can
    calculate the damages, which is not merely subjective or
    speculative . . . but which allows for some objective
    ascertainment of the amount. . . . This certainly does
    not mean that mathematical exactitude is a precondi-
    tion to an award of damages, but we do require that
    the evidence, with such certainty as the nature of the
    particular case may permit, lay a foundation [that] will
    enable the trier to make a fair and reasonable estimate.
    . . . Evidence is considered speculative when there is
    no documentation or detail in support of it and when the
    party relies on subjective opinion.’’ (Citations omitted;
    internal quotation marks omitted.) American Diamond
    Exchange, Inc. v. Alpert, 
    302 Conn. 494
    , 510–11, 
    28 A.3d 976
     (2011). ‘‘A damages theory may be based on
    assumptions as long as those assumptions are reason-
    able in light of the record evidence. . . . The reason-
    ableness of those assumptions is to be determined by
    the trier of fact.’’ (Citation omitted; internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Landmark Investment Group, LLC v.
    Chung Family Realty Partnership, LLC, 
    137 Conn. App. 359
    , 372, 
    48 A.3d 705
    , cert. denied, 
    307 Conn. 916
    ,
    
    54 A.3d 180
     (2012).
    ‘‘[L]ost profits may provide an appropriate measure
    of damages for the destruction of an unestablished
    enterprise, and . . . a flexible approach is best suited
    to ensuring that new businesses are compensated fully
    if they suffer damages as a result of a breach of contract,
    professional malpractice, or similar injuries.’’ Beverly
    Hills Concepts, Inc. v. Schatz & Schatz, Ribicoff &
    Kotkin, 
    247 Conn. 48
    , 67–68, 
    717 A.2d 724
     (1998).
    In reaching its decision to award the plaintiff lost
    profits as damages, the trial court credited the plaintiff’s
    testimony regarding his calculations of the losses that
    Adler Law Group, LLC, incurred as a result of the defen-
    dant’s failure to join the firm. A crucial piece of evidence
    upon which the court relied consisted of the defendant’s
    alleged representation to the plaintiff during the forma-
    tion of the preliminary agreement that he regularly
    brought in $250,000 a year to his own law firm, which
    the court attributed only to earnings derived from the
    defendant’s representation of nursing homes. We con-
    clude that the award of lost profits based on this evi-
    dence was clearly erroneous, as the evidence does not
    support the conclusion that the defendant earned, as
    profit, $250,000 a year from representing nursing
    homes. This finding apparently was adduced through
    the plaintiff’s own testimony as to what the defendant
    had told him when they were discussing their contem-
    plated law partnership. Specifically, the plaintiff testi-
    fied that the defendant had told him that he would bring
    $250,000 in revenue to the firm each year. Initially, the
    plaintiff testified that the defendant had told him that
    this amount of revenue represented billable work. Later,
    the plaintiff testified that this amount represented the
    annual general revenue that the defendant purportedly
    would have brought to Adler and Rosenthal, LLC, had
    he joined it. On cross-examination, the plaintiff later
    admitted that he could not recall what percentage of
    the defendant’s work was based upon contingency fee
    arrangements. The plaintiff further admitted that he
    knew that some of the defendant’s work was work that
    was contingency fee based, yet he did not know what
    the defendant’s actual originated receipts were for the
    years of 2008 and 2009. The defendant later testified
    that only one half of his caseload had been based upon
    his nursing home files and the other half had been based
    upon personal injury files, and that he had made more
    than $250,000 a year in some years and less than
    $250,000 a year in other years.
    The plaintiff testified concerning the defendant’s
    practice, and the defendant also testified concerning
    the same, yet this evidence was insufficient to prove
    that the $250,000 figure accurately reflected what would
    have been the defendant’s contribution, in profit, to the
    contemplated new firm. The plaintiff did not subpoena
    the defendant’s profit and loss statements or tax docu-
    mentation. There was no evidence as to what the defen-
    dant actually made or received as revenue or earned
    as profit, after subtracting losses or expenses, during
    2008 and 2009. Thus, as the plaintiff himself testified,
    his lost profits calculations relied solely upon the inde-
    terminate $250,000 figure that the defendant had
    given him.15
    In Beverly Hills Concepts, Inc. v. Schatz & Schatz,
    Ribicoff & Kotkin, supra, 
    247 Conn. 63
    , 68, 77, our
    Supreme Court held that lost profits for a reasonable
    time period could be an appropriate measure of dam-
    ages for misconduct that causes the failure of an unes-
    tablished business enterprise, but it also held that the
    plaintiff in that case had failed to meet its burden of
    proving lost profits to a reasonable certainty. The plain-
    tiff in Beverly Hills Concepts, Inc., was a failed corpora-
    tion that had been in the business of selling fitness
    equipment and that had sued a law firm for legal mal-
    practice after the firm’s errors had caused the Connecti-
    cut banking commissioner to issue several cease and
    desist orders to the corporation due to its failure to
    register properly as a ‘‘business opportunity’’ pursuant
    to the Connecticut Business Opportunity Investment
    Act, General Statutes (Rev. to 1987) § 36-503 et seq.
    Beverly Hills Concepts, Inc. v. Schatz & Schatz, Ribi-
    coff & Kotkin, supra, 
    247 Conn. 50
    –54. In assessing
    the plaintiff’s claim for lost profits, our Supreme Court
    relied upon the discussion, in the Restatement (Second)
    of Torts, pertaining to the destruction of a new business,
    in which it was noted that courts, in resolving claims
    for lost profits, should analyze numerous factors related
    to the likelihood of the business’ success if it had sur-
    vived. 
    Id., 65
    . These factors included general business
    conditions and the degree of success of similar enter-
    prises. 
    Id.
     Our Supreme Court further noted that it and
    courts in other jurisdictions had examined numerous
    other factors in determining whether projected lost
    profits were reasonably certain in a particular case,
    including evidence of the following: the plaintiff’s prior
    experiences in the same business, the ‘‘plaintiff’s experi-
    ence in the same enterprise subsequent to the interfer-
    ence,’’16 comparisons between the plaintiff’s experience
    and that of third parties in the same industry, and the
    average experience of participants in the same line of
    business. 
    Id.,
     72–74. Most notably, our Supreme Court
    asserted that these factors must be ‘‘reasonably prov-
    able’’ and that ‘‘[b]ecause of a justifiable doubt as to the
    success of new and untried enterprises, more specific
    evidence of their probable profits is required than when
    the claim is for harm to an established business.’’ (Inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted.) 
    Id., 65
    .
    Our Supreme Court noted that in other cases involv-
    ing claims for lost profits successful plaintiffs had elic-
    ited expert testimony or had presented reliable
    statistical data about the projected profitability of the
    failed business enterprise. See 
    id.,
     74–75; see, e.g., Super
    Valu Stores, Inc. v. Peterson, 
    506 So. 2d 317
    , 331–32
    (Ala. 1987) (upholding lost profits award in breach of
    contract action where plaintiff presented statistical
    evaluation of future profit in support of lost profits
    claim and where defendant had compiled evaluation
    itself and deemed it reliable); Chung v. Kaonohi Center
    Co., 
    62 Haw. 594
    , 606–607, 611, 
    618 P.2d 283
     (1980)
    (upholding lost profits award in breach of contract
    action where plaintiff presented expert testimony of
    real estate and business appraiser that projected failed
    fast-food restaurant’s revenues on basis of similar
    existing business), overruled on other grounds by Fran-
    cis v. Lee Enterprises, Inc., 
    89 Haw. 234
    , 239, 
    971 P.2d 707
     (1999); Fera v. Village Plaza, Inc., 
    396 Mich. 639
    ,
    645–48, 
    242 N.W.2d 372
     (1976) (upholding lost profits
    award in breach of lease action where plaintiffs offered
    testimony of numerous experts in relevant industry
    about lost profits). Although the plaintiff in Beverly
    Hills Concepts, Inc., also presented expert testimony
    about the projected lost profits of the failed fitness
    equipment business, our Supreme Court nevertheless
    deemed the expert’s testimony insufficient to bring the
    evidence out of the realm of speculation, primarily
    because the plaintiff’s expert had no experience in the
    fitness industry and had based his projections on infor-
    mal interviews and articles in the lay press. See Beverly
    Hills Concepts, Inc. v. Schatz & Schatz, Ribicoff &
    Kotkin, supra, 
    247 Conn. 75
    –76.
    In the present case, the plaintiff did not present, to
    a degree of reasonable certainty, expert testimony or
    statistical evidence regarding lost profits that resulted
    from the defendant’s failure to join the law firm. Instead,
    the plaintiff only produced his own law firm’s profit
    and loss statement for the sixteen month time period
    following the defendant’s failure to join the firm. The
    plaintiff supplemented this data with his own testimony
    that the defendant had given him a confident projection,
    orally, that he would bring $250,000 in business to the
    law firm.17 Furthermore, the plaintiff testified that he
    knew of the defendant’s successful track record as a
    plaintiff’s attorney, which thereby justified his confi-
    dence in the defendant’s ability to deliver on his projec-
    tion had he actually joined the firm.
    Despite the facts that the defendant had an estab-
    lished law practice and that he continued to practice
    law after failing to join the plaintiff’s firm, the plaintiff
    failed to submit any of the defendant’s financial state-
    ments into evidence in support of his lost profits claim.
    Although the plaintiff has expertise in the practice of
    law, we conclude that his own testimony about his law
    firm’s finances is insufficient to establish, to a degree
    of reasonable certainty, the amount of profits his firm
    lost as a result of the defendant’s failure to bring his
    business to the firm. At the very least, the plaintiff
    should have attempted to submit evidence of the defen-
    dant’s own profits and losses during the relevant time
    period. This necessity is especially heightened in this
    case because evidence was presented to the court that
    much of the defendant’s work was contingency fee
    based, and the amount and timing of profits fluctuated
    regularly. We therefore conclude that the trial court’s
    finding on lost profits is clearly erroneous.
    The proper remedy in the present situation is to
    remand the case to the trial court with direction to
    vacate the award of lost profits. Although the court
    erred in awarding lost profits, the plaintiff is not entitled
    to further relief in the form of a new hearing related
    to lost profits. As our foregoing analysis demonstrates,
    the plaintiff failed in his burden of proving an entitle-
    ment to any amount of lost profits resulting from the
    defendant’s failure to join the firm. ‘‘It is well established
    that in administrative, civil and criminal cases, when
    the party charged with the burden of proof fails to
    satisfy that burden, it is not entitled to a second ‘bite at
    the apple’ on remand.’’ Shelton v. Statewide Grievance
    Committee, 
    277 Conn. 99
    , 111, 
    890 A.2d 104
     (2006).
    II
    PLAINTIFF’S CROSS APPEAL
    In his cross appeal, the plaintiff claims that the trial
    court erred by not allowing him to amend his com-
    plaint18 to include a claim for damages related to parale-
    gal fees incurred as a result of the defendant’s failure
    to join the firm.19 Next, the plaintiff claims that the court
    erred by not awarding him damages to compensate him
    for the time that he personally expended addressing the
    defendant’s failure to join the firm. Finally, the plaintiff
    claims that the court erred by excluding $80,000 from
    his damages award, which he alleges was a cost that
    he incurred due to his need to hire a new associate to
    replace the defendant. We will address each of these
    claims in turn.
    A
    First, we address the plaintiff’s claim that the court
    improperly denied his request to amend his complaint.
    We disagree.
    The following additional facts are relevant to this
    claim. On July 10, 2013, the first day of the hearing in
    damages, the plaintiff attempted to present evidence
    that he had incurred damages resulting from the time
    that his paralegals and support staff had expended to
    ‘‘deal with the demise of Adler [and] Rosenthal and the
    startup of Adler Law Group, LLC . . . .’’ The plaintiff
    testified that he ‘‘lost monies that [he] could have other-
    wise billed or utilized my staff for while they were
    rectifying the problems created by this incident.’’ The
    defendant objected to the admission of such evidence
    on the ground that, although the plaintiff had alleged
    in his complaint that he was seeking lost billing time
    for himself, he had not alleged that he was seeking lost
    billing time for his staff, including paralegals. The court
    sustained the objection.
    Following the court’s ruling, the plaintiff orally
    requested leave to amend his complaint to include a
    claim for damages arising from lost billing time for the
    plaintiff’s staff. The plaintiff asserted that an interroga-
    tory answer afforded the defendant notice of the claim.
    The defendant objected to the request, arguing that it
    would cause the defendant ‘‘severe prejudice.’’ The
    court, referring to the fact that the case had been pend-
    ing since December, 2008, stated that it was ‘‘late in
    the day to be adding things that weren’t clearly in the
    complaint.’’ The court sustained the defendant’s objec-
    tion to the plaintiff’s oral request to amend the com-
    plaint.
    On July 16, 2013, the plaintiff filed a written request
    for leave to file an amended complaint encompassing a
    claim for lost billing time for staff, including paralegals.
    Therein, the plaintiff represented in relevant part that,
    at the hearing on July 10, 2013, the court had excluded
    evidence regarding the plaintiff’s damages arising from
    lost billing time for his staff, including paralegals,
    because such matters were not pleaded in his com-
    plaint. The plaintiff set forth portions of his affidavit
    of debt of June 5, 2013, that pertained to these claims
    of damages, and suggested that the defendant had
    notice of these claims by virtue of the plaintiff’s much
    earlier discovery responses. He represented that the
    requested amendments would neither delay the trial
    nor prejudice the defendant, and he sought to amend
    his complaint ‘‘to conform to the evidence presented
    at trial.’’
    The defendant filed a timely written objection to the
    plaintiff’s request. Primarily, the defendant argued that
    the court had already denied the request after the
    request was made orally by the defendant during the
    hearing on July 10, 2013, and that the present motion
    was merely an attempt by the plaintiff to relitigate the
    exact same issue. Also, the defendant argued that the
    request was ‘‘years late, made in the midst of trial, and
    would work a substantial prejudice to the defendant.’’
    The defendant argued that until the hearing on July 10,
    2013, he lacked notice that the plaintiff sought damages
    of such nature and that he did not have an opportunity
    to properly defend against and conduct discovery with
    respect to such damage claims. The defendant repre-
    sented that the plaintiff had not provided ‘‘any kind of
    written verification’’ with respect to these claims of
    damages in discovery. (Emphasis omitted.) Addition-
    ally, he rebuffed the plaintiff’s suggestion that he had
    afforded the defendant notice of the claim by means
    of an affidavit of debt filed on June 5, 2013, which the
    defendant characterized as ‘‘on the eve of trial.’’ By
    means of electronic notice, the court sustained the
    defendant’s objection to the request to amend.
    ‘‘A trial court’s ruling on a motion of a party to amend
    its complaint will be disturbed only on the showing of
    a clear abuse of discretion. . . . Whether to allow an
    amendment is a matter left to the sound discretion of
    the trial court. [An appellate] court will not disturb a
    trial court’s ruling on a proposed amendment unless
    there has been a clear abuse of that discretion. . . .
    ‘‘A trial court may allow, in its discretion, an amend-
    ment to pleadings before, during, or after trial to con-
    form to the proof. . . . Factors to be considered in
    passing on a motion to amend are the length of the
    delay, fairness to the opposing parties and the negli-
    gence, if any, of the party offering the amendment. . . .
    The essential tests are whether the ruling of the court
    will work an injustice to either the plaintiff or the defen-
    dant and whether the granting of the motion will unduly
    delay a trial.’’ (Citations omitted; internal quotation
    marks omitted.) Franc v. Bethel Holding Co., 
    73 Conn. App. 114
    , 132, 
    807 A.2d 519
    , cert. granted on other
    grounds, 
    262 Conn. 923
    , 
    812 A.2d 864
     (2002) (appeal
    withdrawn October 21, 2003); see also Practice Book
    § 10-60 (providing that party may amend pleadings or
    other parts of record or proceedings).
    In the present case, it is not in dispute that the plaintiff
    sought to amend his complaint, not prior to or on the
    very eve of trial, but during the trial itself. The plaintiff
    did not demonstrate that he had put the defendant on
    notice of the substance of the claims at issue at a point
    in time at which the defendant could have adequately
    prepared to defend against them. The requests to amend
    the complaint at issue were made more than four years
    after the plaintiff had commenced this action. Although
    the plaintiff argued that he sought to amend his com-
    plaint to conform to the evidence presented at trial, the
    record reflects that, following the defendant’s objection
    to evidence of lost billing time for the plaintiff’s staff,
    the court disallowed such evidence. The court denied
    the defendant’s oral request to amend at the hearing in
    damages on July 10, 2013; his written motion seeking
    leave to amend merely was an attempt to relitigate that
    ruling. In light of the evidence considered by the court,
    the lateness of the plaintiff’s request made during the
    trial, and the likelihood that an amendment would have
    caused significant prejudice to the defendant, we con-
    clude that the court’s ruling did not reflect an abuse of
    its discretion.
    B
    Next, we address the plaintiff’s claim that the court
    erred by not awarding damages to compensate him for
    the time that he spent in addressing the defendant’s
    failure to join his firm. In opposition, the defendant
    argues that the court’s finding in this regard is not
    clearly erroneous. We agree with the defendant.
    We reiterate that ‘‘[t]he trial court has broad discre-
    tion in determining damages. . . . The determination
    of damages involves a question of fact that will not be
    overturned unless it is clearly erroneous. . . . In a case
    tried before a court, the trial judge is the sole arbiter
    of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be
    given specific testimony. . . . On appeal, we will give
    the evidence the most favorable reasonable construc-
    tion in support of the verdict to which it is entitled.
    . . . A finding is clearly erroneous when although there
    is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the
    entire evidence is left with the definite and firm convic-
    tion that a mistake has been committed.’’ (Citations
    omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Beverly
    Hills Concepts, Inc. v. Schatz & Schatz, Ribicoff &
    Kotkin, supra, 
    247 Conn. 68
    –69.
    In the present case, the trial court rendered its find-
    ings concerning a damages award on the basis of numer-
    ous exhibits and two days of testimony. The plaintiff
    testified at length about the amount of time that he
    allegedly spent working to address the needs of his firm
    as a result of the defendant’s failure to join it. The
    plaintiff, the court noted, testified that he personally
    spent approximately seventy-five hours informing cli-
    ents and vendors about the firm change caused by the
    defendant’s failure to join as promised and in correcting
    erroneous payments to the nonexistent Adler and
    Rosenthal, LLC. The court, however, declined to award
    the plaintiff compensation for his personal time in the
    total amount of $28,125 that he was claiming because
    he provided no time sheets or other evidence justifying
    an award to that extent. The court therefore ruled that
    there was no sufficient factual predicate for the award
    requested, and it refused to speculate as to the time
    that the plaintiff actually spent on those matters. See
    
    id., 69
    . The court was in the best position to assess the
    credibility of the evidence submitted at trial and to
    make findings of fact based upon this assessment. On
    the basis of our review of the record, we conclude that
    the court’s findings regarding the time that the plaintiff
    spent in addressing the defendant’s failure to join the
    firm were not clearly erroneous.
    C
    Lastly, we address the plaintiff’s claim on cross
    appeal that the court erred by excluding from its dam-
    age award an additional $80,000 cost that the plaintiff
    claimed to have incurred as a result of his hiring an
    associate attorney at his firm to replace the defendant.
    In its memorandum of decision, the court stated that
    the $80,000 amount ‘‘was a savings over the defendant’s
    expected minimum $110,000 yearly draw.’’ As a result,
    the court found in the memorandum of decision that
    ‘‘[t]he plaintiff experienced no financial loss’’ in that
    regard and it accordingly refused to award damages on
    that claim.
    The clearly erroneous standard of review applies to
    this claim, given that it pertains to the court’s determina-
    tion of damages. 
    Id., 68
    . The plaintiff presented testi-
    mony and exhibits regarding his hiring of an associate
    attorney at his firm after the partnership with the defen-
    dant did not occur. In its determination of damages,
    the court assessed this evidence, and it determined that
    the plaintiff’s hiring of a new associate did not result
    in harm to the plaintiff because the new associate’s
    salary was less than the salary that would have been
    paid to the defendant. Moreover, we observe that there
    was no persuasive evidence that the plaintiff’s hiring
    of the new associate was done for the primary purpose
    of ‘‘replac[ing]’’ the defendant, given that the defendant
    never actually joined the firm and accordingly added
    nothing to the plaintiff’s caseload, which required the
    attention of a new associate regardless of the defen-
    dant’s actions. In this regard, the court observed that
    one of the reasons why the defendant did not join the
    firm was that, apart from his work with his own clients,
    he was concerned about the ‘‘many new files he would
    be assigned to by the plaintiff.’’ Thus, we conclude that
    the court’s decision not to award the plaintiff the cost
    of hiring a new associate was not clearly erroneous.
    The judgment is reversed only with respect to the
    court’s award of $38,786.93 for lost profits, and the case
    is remanded to the trial court with direction to vacate
    that award; the judgment is affirmed in all other
    respects, including as to the plaintiff’s cross appeal.
    In this opinion the other judges concurred.
    1
    We note that in the trial court proceedings, the parties were self-repre-
    sented and represented by counsel. On appeal, both parties were represented
    by counsel at oral argument.
    2
    General Statutes § 52-278j provides in relevant part: ‘‘(a) If an application
    for a prejudgment remedy is granted but the plaintiff, within thirty days
    thereof, does not serve and return to court the writ, summons and complaint
    for which the prejudgment remedy was allowed, the court shall dismiss the
    prejudgment remedy.
    ‘‘(b) If an application for a prejudgment remedy is denied and the plaintiff,
    within thirty days thereof, does not serve and return to court the writ of
    summons and complaint for which the prejudgment remedy was requested
    . . . the court shall order the application to be considered as having been
    withdrawn. . . .’’
    3
    General Statutes § 52-45a provides: ‘‘Civil actions shall be commenced
    by legal process consisting of a writ of summons or attachment, describing
    the parties, the court to which it is returnable, the return day, the date and
    place for the filing of an appearance and information required by the Office
    of the Chief Court Administrator. The writ shall be accompanied by the
    plaintiff’s complaint. The writ may run into any judicial district and shall
    be signed by a commissioner of the Superior Court or a judge or clerk of
    the court to which it is returnable.’’
    4
    Practice Book § 10-60 states in relevant part that ‘‘a party may amend
    his or her pleadings or other parts of the record or proceedings at any time
    . . . [b]y filing a request for leave to file such amendment, with the amend-
    ment appended, after service upon each party as provided by Sections 10-
    12 through 10-17, and with proof of service endorsed thereon. If no objection
    thereto has been filed by any party within fifteen days from the date of the
    filing of said request, the amendment shall be deemed to have been filed
    by consent of the adverse party.’’
    5
    Our review of the record reveals that the court never issued any order
    regarding the defendant’s objections to either of the plaintiff’s two requests
    to amend the return date on the writ of summons and complaint. In his brief,
    however, the defendant states that ‘‘[t]he trial court granted an amendment to
    the return date pursuant to . . . § 52-72’’ based on the plaintiff’s first request
    to amend, but this did not cure the deficiency because the return date on
    the amendment permitted by the court was more than sixty days after
    service of the original writ of summons and complaint. See General Statutes
    § 52-48 (b) (providing that return date must be made no later than two
    months after date of process).
    6
    In making his request, the plaintiff cited General Statutes § 52-48 (b),
    which provides: ‘‘All process shall be made returnable not later than two
    months after the date of the process and shall designate the place where
    court is to be held.’’
    7
    Specifically, the plaintiff argues the following in his brief: ‘‘Most notably,
    all of the issues with reference to the motion to dismiss were extensively
    addressed by the lower court by way of briefs and oral argument. There is
    no written decision of the court’s denial of the defendant’s motion to dismiss.
    The defendant never requested a motion for articulation of the decision
    denying his motion to dismiss. There is no sufficient record for this court
    to review as this issue was not raised at trial. The defendant never filed a
    notice of intent to appeal Judge Wagner’s decision . . . although . . . Prac-
    tice Book § 62-5 provided the proper avenue for redress of the denial.
    Therefore, the record is not adequate to permit [this court] to review the
    issues raised. . . . Pursuant to . . . Practice Book §§ 66-5 and 66-6, the
    defendant could have taken action to perfect the record for review of the
    denial of his motion to dismiss, yet he chose otherwise.’’ The plaintiff also
    noted in his argument to this court that the trial court made no mention of
    the defendant’s motion to dismiss in its memorandum of decision following
    the hearing in damages. Despite these arguments, we disagree with the
    plaintiff that the record is inadequate to review this claim and, therefore,
    we reach its merits.
    8
    See footnote 6 of this opinion.
    9
    Practice Book § 10-60 (a) (3) provides in relevant part: ‘‘(a) Except as
    provided in Section 10-66, a party may amend his or her pleadings or other
    parts of the record or proceedings at any time subsequent to that stated in
    the preceding section in the following manner . . . (3) By filing a request
    for leave to file such amendment, with the amendment appended, after
    service upon each party as provided by Sections 10-12 through 10-17, and
    with proof of service endorsed thereon. If no objection thereto has been
    filed by any party within fifteen days from the date of the filing of said
    request, the amendment shall be deemed to have been filed by consent of
    the adverse party. . . .’’
    10
    Practice Book § 10-61 provides: ‘‘When any pleading is amended the
    adverse party may plead thereto within the time provided by Section 10-8
    or, if the adverse party has already pleaded, alter the pleading, if desired,
    within ten days after such amendment or such other time as the rules of
    practice, or the judicial authority, may prescribe, and thereafter pleadings
    shall advance in the time provided by that section. If the adverse party fails
    to plead further, pleadings already filed by the adverse party shall be regarded
    as applicable so far as possible to the amended pleading.’’
    11
    Practice Book § 10-32 provides: ‘‘Any claim of lack of jurisdiction over
    the person or improper venue or insufficiency of process or insufficiency
    of service of process is waived if not raised by a motion to dismiss filed in
    the sequence provided in Sections 10-6 and 10-7 and within the time provided
    by Section 10-30.’’ Practice Book 10-6 prescribes the following order of
    pleadings: the plaintiff’s complaint, the defendant’s motion to dismiss the
    complaint, the defendant’s request to revise the complaint, the defendant’s
    motion to strike the complaint, the defendant’s answer including any special
    defenses to the complaint, the plaintiff’s request to revise the defendant’s
    answer, the plaintiff’s motion to strike the defendant’s answer, the plaintiff’s
    reply to any special defenses. Practice Book § 10-7 provides: ‘‘In all cases,
    when the judicial authority does not otherwise order, the filing of any
    pleading provided for by [Practice Book § 10-6] will waive the right to file
    any pleading which might have been filed in due order and which precedes
    it in the order of pleading provided in that section.’’
    12
    We agree with the defendant that lost profits resulting from a breach of
    contract must be proven with reasonable certainty. See Gianetti v. Norwalk
    Hospital, 
    304 Conn. 754
    , 758, 781, 
    43 A.3d 567
     (2012). To the extent that
    the plaintiff argues otherwise, we disagree with the plaintiff.
    Moreover, we disagree with the plaintiff’s argument that lost profits prop-
    erly were awarded as reliance damages. The case cited by the plaintiff to
    support this argument, ATACS Corp. v. Trans World Communications, Inc.,
    
    155 F.3d 659
    , 669 (3d Cir. 1998), does not equate lost profits damages with
    reliance damages. Instead, the court in that case suggested that reliance
    damages may be awarded to protect an injured party’s reliance interest when
    a court cannot measure lost profits, permitting the recovery of expenditures
    made in anticipation of performance under the contract. 
    Id.
     The issue of
    reliance damages in the present case, which represented office start up
    expenditures incurred by the plaintiff in anticipation of performance, was
    separate and distinct from the issue of lost profits, the latter representing
    a measure of damages that the plaintiff would have realized if the contract
    had been performed in full. See Chila v. Stuart, 
    81 Conn. App. 458
    , 466,
    
    840 A.2d 1176
    , cert. denied, 
    268 Conn. 917
    , 
    847 A.2d 311
     (2004).
    13
    Specifically, the preliminary agreement provided: ‘‘The initial draws will
    be paid [bi]weekly as money is available, with [the plaintiff] to receive
    $250,000 annually and [the defendant] to receive $110,000 annually.’’
    14
    We observe that the dollar amounts used in the plaintiff’s lost profits
    calculations, as submitted by him through his testimony, slightly conflict
    with the dollar amounts submitted in his affidavit of debt, as well as with
    the dollar amounts stated in the trial court’s memorandum of decision. It
    appears as though the trial court, within its discretion, relied upon the dollar
    amounts submitted in the plaintiff’s affidavit of debt.
    15
    While cross-examining the defendant, the plaintiff tried to elicit testi-
    mony about the defendant’s own profits and losses during 2008 and 2009, but
    he was unsuccessful in doing so because, in the absence of documentation to
    refresh his memory, the defendant could not recall what his profits and
    losses were for those years.
    16
    For this factor, our Supreme Court cited cases from other jurisdictions,
    including: El Fredo Pizza, Inc. v. Roto-Flex Oven Co., 
    199 Neb. 697
    , 708,
    711, 
    261 N.W.2d 358
     (1978) (evidence of increased profits after defendant’s
    defective oven was replaced amounted to reasonably certain evidence of
    lost profits); Gaudy v. Seaman, 
    188 Pa. Super. 475
    , 478, 479–80, 
    149 A.2d 523
     (1959) (evidence of plaintiff’s success at different location after moving
    from previous location as result of defendant’s breach of lease amounted
    to reasonably certain lost profits); and Cook Associates, Inc. v. Warnick,
    
    664 P.2d 1161
    , 1165–66 (Utah 1983) (evidence comparing plaintiff’s profits
    and losses between two of its plants in different states, where one suffered
    from defendant’s breach and other did not, amounted to reasonably certain
    lost profits). Thus, we observe that these cases involve facts that differ
    materially from the facts of the present case, insofar as the defendants in
    those cases actually had been working with the plaintiffs such that they
    involved joint business track records, as opposed to this case, in which the
    parties never had worked together.
    17
    We nevertheless observe that the defendant testified that there had been
    years in the past during which he had brought in more than $250,000 in
    revenue for his own practice, as well as other years during which he had
    brought in less than that amount.
    18
    Pursuant to Practice Book § 10-60 (a) (3), the plaintiff filed a written
    request for leave to amend his complaint on July 16, 2013. On October 22,
    2013, the court, in a written order, denied the plaintiff’s request.
    19
    Specifically, the plaintiff claims that, after the defendant failed to join
    the firm, paralegals and other members of the support staff working at the
    plaintiff’s firm were forced to expend time doing the following: (1) filing
    new appearances in the numerous matters in which the firm previously had
    filed appearances for Adler and Rosenthal, LLC; (2) addressing clients’
    concerns regarding the defendant’s failure to join the firm; and (3) changing
    logos, letterhead, envelopes, and other customized materials bearing the
    name of Adler and Rosenthal, LLC.