Champoux v. Porter, No. Cv 98 0057585 S (Dec. 2, 1998)
This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 14573 (Champoux v. Porter, No. Cv 98 0057585 S (Dec. 2, 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.
Opinion
In February 1997, the plaintiff, Andrea Champoux, moved into a residence solely owned by the defendant, Gerald Porter. The parties lived together as a family and shared living expenses. The plaintiff would give her paycheck to the defendant, and he would manage the couple's finances. In May 1997, the couple decided to move to a new residence. The defendant sold their residence, which he had owned for eighteen months, and, on August 22, 1997, the parties jointly purchased a house at 15 Crooked Trail Extension, Woodstock, Connecticut, for $97,500.
The couple paid for the new home using a mortgage loan of $82,875, upon which loan the parties have joint liability. The balance of the purchase price was paid from their joint bank account and using $10,000 which the defendant received from the sale of his former residence.
The couple lived in their new home together for six weeks. At that time the plaintiff moved out, and the parties have remained separated since then.
The plaintiff brought this partition action on January 21, 1998, and the mortgagee was later added as a defendant. On July 2, 1998, court, Booth, J., ordered a sale of the property. On August 29, 1998 the property, subject to the mortgage, was sold at auction to the defendant for $16,000. On September 21, 1998, the court, Sferrazza, J., approved the sale and committee cost of $684.20 and fees of $2,460. The cost of suit were $504. Subtracting the fees and costs from the sale proceeds of $16,000 leaves net proceeds of $12,351.80 to be distributed between the parties.
The plaintiff claims that this amount ought to be divided equally. The defendant contends that he should receive a $10,000 credit for the sum he supplied to purchase the house from the proceeds he acquired from the sale of his former residence. He also argues that the plaintiff should receive a $1,500 credit as compensation for what he estimates she contributed toward the purchase of their jointly owned home. Any remainder after these credits are deducted would then be split equally. The court finds the plaintiff's argument persuasive, and orders that the $12,351.80 be distributed equally, i.e., $6,175.90 to each former owner. CT Page 14575
In Vesce v. Lee,
In the present case, the court finds that no agreement or understanding existed between the parties that each would accrue individual credit for each contribution made to buy and keep the home to be applied to the proceeds resulting from a future sale. Every sum used for these purposes was a gift to the other as a joint owner so that any disparity in amount contributed is immaterial. Hackett v. Hackett,
The defendant points to the Hackett case, supra, as establishing a pertinent exception to the presumption recognized in Vesce, supra. The court disagrees and concludes that the unusual factual circumstances in Hackett, supra, distinguish that case from the present one. In Hackett, supra, the parties divorced, but the decree failed to dispose of a jointly owned residence. One party remained at the residence for ten years before sale and paid all expenses connected with the property including improvement. The trial court found that an agreement or understanding sufficient to rebut the presumption of joint benefit existed between the former spouses. Id., 48. No such agreement or understanding exists in the present case. The court orders that the $12,351.80 be distributed in equal shares of $6,175.90.
Sferrazza, J. CT Page 14576
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1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 14573, 23 Conn. L. Rptr. 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/champoux-v-porter-no-cv-98-0057585-s-dec-2-1998-connsuperct-1998.