Brandstetter v. Brandstetter, No. Fa96 0156108 S (Dec. 11, 1998)

1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 14405
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1998
DocketNo. FA96 0156108 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 14405 (Brandstetter v. Brandstetter, No. Fa96 0156108 S (Dec. 11, 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
Brandstetter v. Brandstetter, No. Fa96 0156108 S (Dec. 11, 1998), 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 14405 (Colo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The principle issue in this contested dissolution trial is whether or not voluntary termination by a party from a second job in his chosen field, reducing his earnings, but retaining a full-time position in that same chosen field, invokes the earning capacity rule.

After considering the evidence, the testimony of the parties, and the exhibits, the court finds the following facts:

The parties were married in New Rochelle, New York on March 6, 1982. The plaintiff has resided continuously in the state of Connecticut one year next before the date of this complaint. The parties have not received any assistance from any governmental agency. Two minor children are issue of this marriage, Elizabeth Brandstetter, born September 15, 1982, and Kathleyn Brandstetter, born February 8, 1985. No other minor children have been born to CT Page 14406 the plaintiff since the date of the marriage. The marriage has broken down irretrievably, and there is no hope of reconciliation.

The plaintiff wife is 41 and in good health. The marital home was sold during the pendency of this matter, and she moved to a house that she purchased at 49 Riverside Avenue, Riverside, Connecticut. The two minor children reside with her. She is employed by FLIK International Corporation in Rye Brook, New York as a nutrition specialist and public relations spokesperson. She earns $52,000 dollars annually. She received a B.S. in nutrition from Miami University of Ohio and worked one year at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston as a registered dietician. She enrolled in an MBA program at the University of Chicago and moved to Chicago. She moved back after two months to Boston and took graduate courses at Boston University. While employed at Massachusetts General Hospital she met the defendant. He had received a pulmonary fellowship at Massachusetts General Hospital. She received an MBA from Pace University in 1989.

The defendant husband is 51 and in poor health. He was diagnosed with metastatic colon cancer in 1989. His health has deteriorated. He is currently on the active list for a liver transplant. His health will be addressed further. The defendant is a pulmonary physician employed by Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester in New Rochelle, New York. Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester was formerly known as the New Rochelle Hospital. He was hired as the Assistant Director of Medicine in 1982. Since 1988 he has been the director of the Fifth Pathway Program. He has been the Associate Director of Medicine since 1991. Since 1991 he has been the Chief of the Critical Care Department. He has been the Director of Medical Education since 1993. He was appointed Medical Director of Complementary Health Care in June 1997. He is paid $187,000 per year by Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester.

The defendant received his undergraduate degree from CCNY in 1974 after attending five years of night school. He received his medical degree from Albert Einstein Medical College in 1977 in an accelerated three year program. He interned at the New York Hospital Cornell Medical Center from 1977 to 1979. From 1980 to 1982 he was a pulmonary care resident at Massachusetts General Hospital and since July 1, 1982 has been connected with New Rochelle Hospital, now Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester, in various capacities. CT Page 14407

This is the defendant's second marriage. His first marriage ended in a divorce. He had four children, issue of that marriage, who were 22, 25, 27 and 28 as of the commencement of this trial. At the time of the parties 1982 marriage, his oldest boy lived with the defendant, and his other three children spent weekends with the defendant in the New York area. The plaintiff wished to stay in Boston but acceded to the defendant's wishes to be closer to his four children. The defendant then obtained his current employment. It was the plaintiff's intention to start in the nutrition section of the New Rochelle Hospital. She had difficulties with the her first pregnancy and was not able to commence that job.

The defendant was permitted to have a private practice specializing in pulmonary and critical care medicine in addition to his regular duties at New Rochelle Hospital. "During the term of your employment pursuant to this agreement, you may conduct a private practice so long as such practice does not interfere with your duties and responsibilities hereunder." Exhibit 13. The plaintiff did the billings and ran the financial portion of the defendant's private practice. The defendant's private practice office was at the hospital and consisted of a waiting room and an office. There was no testimony of an examination room. The plaintiff set up the defendant's billing system and accounting system, and kept track of the patients' insurance filings for accounting and tax purposes, as well as calculated and paid the family estimated income taxes. She performed all these services from the inception of his private practice in mid 1982 until the defendant left the marital home in the summer of 1996. For a number of years she was paid $25,000 for this work. From this she made her IRA and Keogh investments. At the commencement of this law suit in December, 1996, the plaintiff no longer was performing those tasks.

The defendant's private practice operated out of an office in the hospital. At all times that he was engaged in private practice, he fulfilled the obligations and duties of the various positions that he held with Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester.

The plaintiff handled all the family income tax returns. She hired a tax attorney in New York City and met with the attorney regularly for tax planning and tax preparation purposes. She was responsible for all the family finances including making and CT Page 14408 recording investments. As a result she was familiar with the defendant's private practice income.

At the time of the marriage the plaintiff owned a car, a diamond necklace from her grandmother and some furniture. She had no debts. The defendant then owned a car, furniture, and had a half interest in a house at 2822 Sampson Avenue, Bronx, New York which he co-owned with his first wife. He had obligations toward his first family.

The parties were able to save and in September of 1983 purchased the marital home at 114 Iron Gate Road, Stamford, Connecticut. The purchase price was $280,000. Some $80,000 to $100,000 cash was paid, and the balance was mortgaged. The cash down payment was saved during the marriage by the parties. At the time of trial the marital home was on the market. During the trial, the house sold and funds were held in escrow. Exhibit 18, the closing statement for the Iron Gate Road house, discloses the gross sales price to be $461,000 and the net sales proceeds to be $372,963.89. Some of these funds were used by the plaintiff to purchase her current house in Riverside.

At the time of trial, the parties had not filed their 1996 income tax returns. Neither party disputes that the gross annual salary earned by the defendant from Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester is $187,000, as set forth in his financial affidavit. The W-2 on their 1994 tax return shows $174,137 salary from the hospital. The 1995 W-2 shows $177,175.

The defendant filed a Schedule C for his private practice in 1994 and 1995. In 1994 his gross disclosed in Schedule C was $230,124 and he netted $201,464 after expenses, prior to taxes. In 1995 his Schedule C discloses $207,000 gross and $174,040 net. These earnings are in addition to his W-2 salary from Sound Shore Medical Center of Westchester.

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Bluebook (online)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 14405, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brandstetter-v-brandstetter-no-fa96-0156108-s-dec-11-1998-connsuperct-1998.