Benevento v. Benevento, No. Fa 99-0432625s (Oct. 24, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14549
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedOctober 24, 2001
DocketNo. FA 99-0432625S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14549 (Benevento v. Benevento, No. Fa 99-0432625s (Oct. 24, 2001)) 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
Benevento v. Benevento, No. Fa 99-0432625s (Oct. 24, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14549 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This an action for dissolution of marriage brought by the plaintiff wife on the grounds of irretrievable breakdown. The defendant has filed a cross-complaint alleging the same grounds. The parties were married in East Haven, Connecticut, on May 26, 1978. They have three children, two of whom are still in their minority. Their oldest child, Vincent Benevento, Jr., is nineteen years old. The two minor children are Sara Marie Benevento, who was born on May 6, 1984, and is seventeen years old; and Andrew Paul Benevento, who was born on December 30, 1987, and is thirteen years old. The court heard evidence on four days in April, July and August of this year. Both parties appeared at trial and testified; and a representative of the plaintiffs employer also testified. The parties also submitted documentary evidence.

The plaintiff has lived continuously in the State of Connecticut since before November 21, 1999. The court has jurisdiction in this matter. The court finds that allegations in the complaint and cross-complaint are true as to the date and place of the marriage, the minor children born issue of the marriage, and neither party nor child of the marriage having CT Page 14550 been the recipient or beneficiary of support or maintenance from the State of Connecticut. The marriage has broken down irretrievably.

The parties have already resolved the questions of custody and visitation of the two minor children, and on April 30, this court adopted the jointly proposed parenting plan as an order of court. It provides for joint custody, the minor children residing with their mother during the school week, their father on weekends, and alternating holidays between the parents. The principal issues for the court now to resolve are the appropriate financial and property orders.

The plaintiff is fifty-three years old. She has a high school education, after which she took some college-level courses but received no advanced degree. She is a licensed practical nurse and has worked in that capacity, either full-time or part-time, for the last twenty-nine years. She currently works as a Holter lab technician at the Hospital of St. Raphael in New Haven. Her employer has classified this position as a part-time hourly job for twenty-four hours a week; she earned $27,000 in that position during 1999. Since last December, when a more highly-paid supervisor retired from her job unit, she has been working almost full time with increased responsibilities and at an increased hourly rate. This year, working more hours at the greater hourly rate, she will earn approximately $50,000 (if she stays at the current compensation level and hours of work.) The hospital has not yet decided whether to refill the vacated position or, if so, the qualifications that would be required. At the time of trial it was thus uncertain whether and when she will be assigned permanently to the increased job responsibilities with greater compensation or return to her previous part-time work for twenty-four hours a week. The plaintiff has many health problems, including asthma, mitral valve prolapse, irritable bowel syndrome, and psychiatric problems. Various physical ailments — such as occasional shortness of breath, heart palpitations, and chest and back pain — limit her employment activities somewhat; since she cannot lift anything weighing more than twenty pounds, she could not carry out many responsibilities required on a nursing floor. She is currently in therapy with a psychologist and taking various psychotropic medications for stress and depression.

The defendant is forty-six years old. He has a bachelor's degree in social work, a masters in general counseling, and has taken but not completed a sixth-year program in marriage and family therapy. He was a state probation officer for twenty-one years. His income before retiring in September 2000 was $70,000 per year in that job. He receives a hazardous duty pension of $2,750 per month. As trial ended, he was unemployed. He worked briefly during the school year 2000-2001 as a teacher at a private school until quitting that job this February. He CT Page 14551 said that he quit this job because it did not meet his expectations and was more difficult than warranted by the income he was receiving for it. He testified that he is now looking for work in the fields of social work, counseling or therapy and claimed that if he found such a job, his starting income would likely be in the $25,000 to $40,000 range. He has minor health problems from stress and bleeding ulcers.

During the early years of the marriage, the wife worked full-time until her first child was born. Three months later, she returned to work on a part-time basis, mostly on weekends, when the husband was responsible for the children. This work pattern — the husband working during the week and wife responsible for the children, and vice-versa on the weekends — continued for the rest of the marriage (and has been incorporated in the parties' parenting plan). The husband used his income to pay the mortgage and most household expenses, while the wife paid for food and medical expenses.

During the marriage, they lived at three different homes, two of which were in East Haven before they moved to the last marital home in Madison, which they sold for $318,500 after the divorce proceedings began. Both parties contributed their funds and labor to the maintenance and appreciation of these properties. By agreement of the parties, they split the $180,000 proceeds from the recent sale of the Madison property. At trial the plaintiff testified she agreed, but had not consented, to equal division of the sale proceeds because she needed funds from the sale of the house to purchase her new condominium. She asked the court to divide the balance of parties' marital property to adjust for what she claimed was an unfair distribution from the sale. The wife purchased a two-bedroom condominium in Madison for $144,500 with her share of the proceeds. She removed the carpeting in the condominium because of her asthma, spent $6,000 to install hardwood floors, had the condo repainted, and bought all new furniture for $3,500. She has a mortgage on it for $75,000, monthly mortgage payments of $775, and equity of $69,000 in the condominium. The husband bought a four-bedroom ranch on an acre in Madison near Hammonasset State Beach for $163,500. He has a mortgage for $100,000, monthly mortgage payments of $897, and equity of $62,500. He testified at trial that the house needs numerous renovations, which his financial affidavit estimated as costing $20,000.

In their testimony at trial, each party blamed the other for the breakdown of their marriage. According to the plaintiff, after she had a complete hysterectomy in 1996, the defendant became distant from her, stopped communicating with her, and started developing outside friends and interests that excluded her. The defendant, on the other hand, said that the plaintiff had always been extremely difficult to get along, is moody and depressed, and that her depression and mood swings worsened CT Page 14552 after the birth of their third child.

The court had an opportunity not only to hear the parties and review the exhibits they submitted but to evaluate their demeanor and credibility. From the totality of evidence presented, the court finds each party's story plausible, credible, and consistent on many points. Both parties, in their own testimony and through their attorney's cross-examination of the other, offered numerous examples of what claimed to be "fault" on the other party's part.

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Related

Schmidt v. Schmidt
429 A.2d 470 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1980)
Bleuer v. Bleuer
755 A.2d 946 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 2000)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 14549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/benevento-v-benevento-no-fa-99-0432625s-oct-24-2001-connsuperct-2001.