Altberg v. Altberg, No. 32 07 71 (Nov. 8, 1996)

1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 9293
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1996
DocketNo. 32 07 71
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 9293 (Altberg v. Altberg, No. 32 07 71 (Nov. 8, 1996)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Altberg v. Altberg, No. 32 07 71 (Nov. 8, 1996), 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 9293 (Colo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This is an action for dissolution of marriage and other relief brought to the judicial district of Danbury. Many of the facts that give rise to this action are not in dispute. The plaintiff, whose maiden name is Virginia L. Muzzy, and the defendant were married on December 28, 1956, in Aztec, New Mexico. The plaintiff has resided continuously in the State of Connecticut for at least twelve months next proceeding the date of the filing of the complaint. The marriage between the parties has broken down irretrievably without any reasonable prospects of reconciliation. There are no minor children issue of the marriage, and the plaintiff does not presently have any minor children. Neither party has received state assistance.

The parties are in dispute as to the cause of the breakdown of the marriage. The court finds that the primary cause of the breakdown of the marriage is the defendant's adulterous involvement with another woman, which has continued up to the date of trial.

The plaintiff was born on October 12, 1939. She was diagnosed with breast cancer in 1991, and had surgery in 1991. She is on medication as a result of her breast cancer and sees her doctor every three months for blood work. She had her gall bladder removed in February of 1993. She has problems with blood pressure being either too high or too low. She also has high cholesterol. Other than for the health conditions described, she is in general good physical health. She obtained her high school equivalency in approximately 1968, after all four children had been born. The plaintiff is employed by the Danbury school system where she has worked for twenty-three years. She is a first grade teacher's aide. She works 182 days per year. Her gross weekly wage is $300.79, and her net wage is $258.90. Her employment includes medical insurance. She also has life insurance through her CT Page 9294 employment in the face amount of $21,000 representing one and one-half times her salary.

The plaintiff had the primary responsibility for raising the children during the marriage.

The plaintiff's financial affidavit shows a liability for attorney's fees in the amount of $1,694.98 as of October 10, 1996. That is the balance due after crediting the plaintiff with $6000 in legal fees that she's paid as of October 10, 1996. The plaintiff would be entitled to social security benefits at a reduced amount at age sixty-two of $395 per month. The social security benefit at her full retirement age of sixty-five and four months would be $545 per month. Her retirement benefit at age seventy would be $765 per month. She would also be entitled to monthly disability benefits of about $480 per month. She is also entitled to survivor benefits when the defendant reaches full retirement age of $495 per month. She has a pension/retirement plan through the City of Danbury. That plan would pay her a monthly benefit at age sixty-five of $1075. It is a defined pension plan.

The defendant was born on August 30, 1933. The defendant has a hearing problem and also suffers from Lupus. The defendant was employed by American National Can Corporation between 1966 and 1995, except for one year. The working conditions at American National Can were noisy, dirty, smoke with pollution in the air and fumes in the air. He was averaging sixty-two to sixty-four hours weekly working there. The working conditions may have affected his hearing. The defendant was ordered to vacate the family home in August of 1995. He resided in Woodbury, Connecticut between August of 1995 and March of 1996. He has resided in Colorado since March of 1996. The defendant suffers from 60 percent deafness in his left ear and 40 percent deafness in his right ear. He also is suffering from depression.

At the present time, the defendant receives social security in the amount of $284 per week and disability income in the amount of $435 per week. The defendant commenced receiving disability income on November 30, 1995. The $435 amounts to 70 percent of the income he was earning while working at American National Can Corporation. In order to be eligible for the disability income, it requires that he also receive social security disability, which he is receiving. He will receive his disability income for a period of five years commencing December CT Page 9295 1, 1995. He has deductions from his disability income for federal taxes of $89 per week, life insurance of $5 per week, and dependency insurance of $1 per week. His financial affidavit of October 9, 1996, shows a deduction of $121 per week for a 401K loan. No such deduction is being made from his disability income. The defendant has the right to withdraw funds from his 401K as a matter of right as of November 30, 1997.

He purchased his 1994 Chevrolet pickup truck on November 5, 1994. He did not tell the plaintiff that he was purchasing that vehicle. The total sale price was $24,995. He received a trade-in allowance for the equity of a vehicle he owned. The equity in that vehicle was $9,362.64. The present value of that pickup is $17,500. Although the defendant's financial affidavit lists the loan balance on the pickup truck as $17,155, the actual loan balance on the pickup truck is approximately $14,000. The loan is being paid off in sixty equal monthly payments of $343 each. He purchased a camp trailer in June or July of 1994, for $8500. The purchase price was financed. He is paying it off at the rate of $165 per month. That debt is not shown on his financial affidavit. His financial affidavit shows the value of the camp trailer as being $2696. That is not accurate. The fair market value of the camper is $6000. The $2696 represents the net equity in the camper. When he purchased the camper, he traded in a boat towards the purchase price. The boat that the defendant traded in towards the camper had been purchased in 1992 for $4500. With improvements and other costs, the total amount spent on the boat was approximately $11,000. The defendant received a $1000 trade-in allowance for the boat towards the camper.

The defendant's financial affidavit shows a liability to CMB MasterCard with a balance of $5500. That is the same MasterCard that is shown on the plaintiff's financial affidavit. The defendant has been making the payments on that MasterCard. He also shows a liability to two separate law firms, one with a balance of $4768 and a second with a balance of $6000. Those are for legal fees he incurred as part of this dissolution action. He has already paid one of those law firms $3500 and the second one, $3000. His financial affidavit shows an equity of $10,000 in a Colorado house. That house has a fair market value of $40,000 and he has a one-fourth interest in that house as a result of an inheritance from his mother. During the calendar year 1995, he received approximately $500 in rental income from that home and will receive approximately $500 rental income from that home for the calendar year 1996, from the estate of his mother. In CT Page 9296 approximately 1993 or 1994, he also received $21,000 as an inheritance from his mother's estate, which he invested in a CMB stock plan. He withdrew $4000 of that amount as a loan to one child, and $3000 as a loan to another child. Both loans have since been repaid. He presently has $55,000 in life insurance. The defendant's financial affidavit shows a personal loan in the amount of $4000. That is a loan from the woman that he is living with.

The defendant has an interest in leases in Western Mineral Rights. He does not receive any income on those leases. The leases, at the present time, do not have any value. The defendant is entitled to a life annuity of $1,075.30 per month at age sixty-five from his pension plan at American National Can.

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Related

Cariseo v. Cariseo
459 A.2d 523 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1983)
Connolly v. Connolly
464 A.2d 837 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 9293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/altberg-v-altberg-no-32-07-71-nov-8-1996-connsuperct-1996.