For decades, Dr. Daniel Kenigsberg considered a wooded parcel in Fairfield, Connecticut, part of his family’s story. Then he received a message from someone he knew as a child: construction crews were building on the land.
When Kenigsberg went to see it for himself, he found something far beyond a small project. A large residential home was rising on property he says he never sold, never transferred, and still believed he owned.
The case has since become a complicated real estate dispute involving a nearly $1.5 million home, allegations of forged documents, and questions about how a property transfer could move forward if the longtime owner says he had no role in it.
A Family Parcel Becomes the Center of a Legal Fight
The Fairfield land traces back to 1953, when Kenigsberg’s parents, Nathaniel and Esther Kenigsberg, purchased about an acre of property. The family built a home on one part of the land, while another section stayed largely wooded and undeveloped for many years.