Bornemann v. Bornemann, No. Fa-94-362821 (Jun. 22, 1998)

1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 7728
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJune 22, 1998
DocketNo. FA-94-362821
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 7728 (Bornemann v. Bornemann, No. Fa-94-362821 (Jun. 22, 1998)) 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
Bornemann v. Bornemann, No. Fa-94-362821 (Jun. 22, 1998), 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 7728 (Colo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION (Re #172, 173, 174, 175, 177)
This matter is before the court post-judgment while an appeal of the trial court decision is pending before the Supreme Court. The date of the dissolution of judgment is July 18, 1996. Subsequent to that date, during the pendency of the appeal, there have been numerous proceedings before the court.

On October 4, 1996, orders were entered (#153) regarding the payment of counsel fees for the appeal.

On that same date, a contested hearing was held regarding the plaintiff's Application for Stay Pending Appeal (#150). Testimony was taken. Financial affidavits were submitted by the parties. The court granted the Application and entered further orders. As necessary hereinafter, those orders shall be detailed.

Subsequent to that hearing, the parties were back before the court on December 19, 1997, regarding Motion for Order (#163). By memorandum of decision, this was denied on January 21, 1998. The CT Page 7729 court ruled that it lacked jurisdiction to enter orders, as urged by both parties, regarding the manner in which to finance and then service the debt to be incurred in the exercise of certain stock options soon expiring. Motion to Enjoin Pendente Lite (#164.55) was heard and denied by the court on March 16, 1998. There, Ms. Bornemann sought an order of the court, inter alia, restricting the utilization of those options that had not been awarded to her but remained with her ex-husband. The evidence before this court, presently, regarding the Amended Motions for Sanctions (#175) discloses that notwithstanding the court orders, Ms. Bornemann, through counsel, continued to lead Merrill Lynch (the broker holding the stock shares) to believe that there was a court order preventing Mr. Bornemann from having access to the stock (exhibit 19). Ultimately that misapprehension was cleared up. However, Mr. Bornemann in that motion claims attorney fees for his efforts to release his stock from a freeze.

The parties appeared before this court for hearing on the motions covered by this memorandum of decisions. Evidence was received and briefs were filed.

On October 4, 1996, when this court granted the plaintiff's motion for stay regarding the alimony order in the final judgment, it also entered other orders. The court ordered (from the bench) that the child support ordered at final judgment was to remain unchanged; and, that the alimony order was stayed when the pendente appeal alimony order was entered in the amount of $575 per week. The court further ordered: "Each party is instructed to give the other party notice of procurement of employment in writing within ten days of receipt of the employment. That will give you time to figure out the circumstance of the employment, and the name of the employer, the job description, you know, basically and the benefits which include the salary, salary plus benefits package. . . . And service counsel through counsel will be adequate, it need not be notice party to party." (pp. 48-49 transcript, October 4, 1996 hearing). At the time these orders were entered Ms. Bornemann was essentially unemployed and Mr. Bornemann was quickly approaching the very end of a severance-type pay from his most recent employment with no new employment at hand.

These orders were entered on October 4, 1996. At that time, Ms. Bornemann told the court she had no job. In regard to her job searching as of October 4, 1996, she reported investigating a part-time job in retail clothing with poor hour availability (p. CT Page 7730 19 transcript October 4, 1996 hearing). As of October 4, 1996, she testified she'd had no job interviews except as assistant field hockey coach at Guilford High School (p. 14). She further testified that she had one scheduled interview on Monday of the coming week with a company" . . . based out of Manhattan with a New Haven subsidiary, they're a commercial real estate firm and I am applying for a position of real estate analyst." (pp. 10-11). Ms. Bornemann had heard of the position through a friend of hers. She was told by friends in Washington, "Oh, by the way there's an organization out of Manhattan that's looking to open up a New Haven office and I contacted this company. I had spoke with them on the telephone. I sent them a resume and they scheduled the interview for this coming Monday at 2:00 in their Manhattan office." (p. 13).

The evidence before the court in the instant hearing discloses a much different picture of what was occurring at or about October 4, 1996. On that Monday following the hearing, Ms. Bornemann was at work at her undisclosed employment with Westport Commercial Realty, Inc.. This firm came to her attention through an ad in a local paper Initially, they paid her $150.00 per week as installments on a flat fee contract. This arrangement lasted until March 23, 1997. Ms. Bornemann was a subcontractor in this employment pursuant to an agreement dated September 23, 1996, almost two weeks before the October 4, 1996 hearing.

Ms. Bornemann would have this court believe that the agreement was backdated because of the principal of Westport's (Mr. Orgel's) tax needs. Further, she assured the court that this was by no means firm employment when she was before the court on October 4, 1996. Ms. Bornemann is not credible. Her answers regarding this issue vacillated and changed as she testified. Perhaps most telling, however, is Mr. Orgel's testimony. His deposition was placed in evidence, by agreement of the parties, in lieu of his appearance before court, as testimony. His testimony does not disclose that the agreement was backdated. Mr. Orgel testified that he and Ms. Bornemann initially talked sometime in mid-September. The $150.00 per week reflected installment payments on a flat fee contract. By letter to Mr. Bornemann's counsel dated April 14, 1997, Mr. Orgel stated, "Ms. Bornemann's services were contracted for a flat fee of $7,500.00 for the period of September 23, 1996 to March 23, 1997. Per our agreement, this is broken down into installments of $150 per week with any remaining balance to be paid by April 30, 1997." (Exhibit 1C). Ms. Bornemann disclosed none of this to the court CT Page 7731 on October 4, 1996. This court finds that Ms. Bornemann lied on October 4, 1996, and, intentionally concealed the information of impending employment with Westport.

She disclosed none of it thereafter to Mr. Bornemann or his counsel until ultimately the information was demanded, after Mr. Bornemann inadvertently learned of the employment through a third party. This failure to disclose the employment information is a violation of the court order of October 4, 1996.

There came a time in early 1997 that Ms. Bornemann's financial arrangement with Westport changed. Her services had become more valuable to Mr. Orgel and so they renegotiated. The result was an agreement where he would pay her 5% of fees he received Ms. Bornemann's 1997 1099 disclosed that she received $34,931.25 from Westport in 1997. Mr. Orgel had disclosed that $4,250 of her flat rate fee was paid 1996. Therefore, $3,250 of the flat fee arrangement was paid in 1997; simple subtraction leads to the conclusion that Ms. Bornemann earned an additional $31,681.25 at Westport from her renegotiated payment arrangements. This was never disclosed by her (or her counsel) to Mr. Bornemann. This is a violation of the court order of October 4, 1996.

Ms. Bornemann left her employment with Westport for her current employment with Campbell Black Partners LLC. Ms. Bornemann is a principal of this entity. She is a real estate financial analyst in this real estate development business. A proposed operating agreement has been drafted by the members.

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Bluebook (online)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 7728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bornemann-v-bornemann-no-fa-94-362821-jun-22-1998-connsuperct-1998.