Churchward v. Churchward

42 A.2d 659, 132 Conn. 72, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 163
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 3, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 42 A.2d 659 (Churchward v. Churchward) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Churchward v. Churchward, 42 A.2d 659, 132 Conn. 72, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 163 (Colo. 1945).

Opinion

Jennings, J.

The plaintiff claims reimbursement for sums spent by her for the support of herself and two daughters of the parties after the defendant left his family without fault on her part. The defendant claims to have made provision for the support of the family at the time of the separation. The finding, as corrected, is as follows: Plaintiff and defendant are *74 husband and wife. They have two daughters, Josephine, born July 11, 1920, and Mary Joan, born July 24, 1931. The family lived together in a house in New Haven until March 9, 1943. It stood in the name of the plaintiff. The parties separated on the date mentioned for an unassigned cause. No fault or misconduct on the part of the plaintiff was charged. Thereafter, the plaintiff continued to occupy the premises with her two daughters.

In 1921, the defendant engaged in a welding business in New Haven financed by money borrowed by both parties. He got into financial difficulty in February, 1922. The parties then orally agreed to continue the business as a partnership known as Churchward and Company. The plaintiff furnished $3000 in cash and gave all of her time to the assistance of her husband in the conduct of the business from 1922 to 1931, when her second daughter was born. She also invested further sums in the business in an unspecified amount. The profits were relatively small and, in 1942, there was a loss of about $22,000. This was converted in 1943 into a profit of about the same amount.

In 1936, the defendant and Myron A. Farnham formed a corporation called the Churchward Engineering Company to manufacture an electric holder invented by the defendant. The defendant contributed his patents, and Mr. Farnham $2000. No further capital contributions have ever been made and the plaintiff has never contributed anything thereto by way of money or services. The company changed its form of organization from a corporation to a partnership in 1941. The defendant and Mr. Farnham were sole and equal partners. The profits were small until 1941 when they were over $54,000. In 1942, they were nearly $150,000, and in 1943, over $176,000.

Late in 1942, the parties were in accord that their *75 interests would be best served if the defendant transferred to the plaintiff his interest in the partnership known as Churchward Engineering Company and the plaintiff transferred to him her interest in Church-ward and Company. Preliminary papers were drawn by defendant’s counsel and submitted to the plaintiff on November 16, 1942, but she, on advice of her counsel, refused to execute them on the ground that they appeared to be separation papers. At no time during these discussions was there any talk of separation nor did the plaintiff have any idea that the defendant contemplated leaving her. The plaintiff withdrew at that time a balance of $3900 belonging to the defendant from a checking account standing in the joint names of the parties and redeposited it in her own name. The defendant left home on November 16 for unspecified reasons. On November 25, 1942, the arrangements for the transfer of interests referred to were carried out. The various contracts were carefully drawn in legal form and contained no reference to the reasons actuating the parties. The plaintiff got the defendant’s interest in the Churchward Engineering Company, $5000 of the undistributed profits of that company to which the defendant was entitled, and an agreement to be saved harmless from any liability on account of Churchward and Company, particularly on account of notes amounting to $8500 which she had indorsed. She and Parnham formed a new partnership to manage the Engineering Company. On her part she agreed not to interfere in the affairs of Churchward and Company and transferred to the defendant her interest therein. Between this time and the time of trial in April, 1944, she had an income of nearly $100,000, almost all of it from the profits of the Churchward Engineering Company. Nearly $72,000 of this amount was spent in income taxes.

*76 The defendant returned home for Thanksgiving dinner the day after the execution of the papers and remained there until March 9, 1943, when he left and has since declined to comply with the requests of the plaintiff that he return. Since November 25, 1942, he has paid her $200 as a Christmas present, $600 for board and $2000 under order of the court. She spent $11,665- on ordinary living expenses from March 9, 1943, to the time of trial, on which sum she credited the defendant with payments of $3100. Included in this sum of $11,665 are $1300 which she paid for a fur coat, $900 for a car for her daughter Josephine and $372 for jewelry, also for Josephine. The latter lived at home without paying board though engaged in business for herself.

Among the circumstances which led to the making of the adjustments of November 25, 1942, were (a) the fact that the defendant did not want the plaintiff to have anything to do with Churchward and Company; (b) the fact that Churchward and Company had shortly before secured new contracts of so large an amount that it became necessary to get larger premises; and (c) the desire of the parties to separate the ownership of the two companies in order that the large profits which would in the future be received from the Churchward Engineering Company should not be jeopardized by the defendant’s hazardous new war ventures in Churchward and Company. The trial court also found as a fact that “A material purpose of the adjustment of November, 1942 was to provide the plaintiff with independent means for her support and that of her children if they were to remain with her.” The defendant did not testify in his own behalf.

The argument on appeal centered largely around the finding last quoted, which was disputed. The evidence does not support it. No one so testified. The parties *77 dealt at arm’s length through attorneys and none of the numerous agreements in evidence refer to the matter. They show that the plaintiff traded her interest in Churchward and Company for the defendant’s interest in the Churchward Engineering Company. The fact that this exchange was financially advantageous to the plaintiff is insufficient, without more, to justify the inference that it was for the purpose of securing the plaintiff’s future support and that of the minor child. The fact that no separation was contemplated, at least by the plaintiff, at the time of the execution of the contracts militates against any such inference, as does the fact that there was no mention of support in the agreement. Adams v. Turner, 73 Conn. 38, 45, 46 Atl. 247. The questioned finding cannot stand.

The trial court concluded that the relations of the parties were not harmonious, that the plaintiff knew that the property arrangements in November, 1942, were intended to give her an assured and independent income, that the defendant furnished the plaintiff with adequate means of support to the time of trial and that it was justified in examining and determining the real nature of the adjustments made.

There are three bases of recovery when a creditor sues a husband for goods furnished a wife: an express promise on his part to pay; the right at common law to recover for necessaries; the right conferred by General Statutes, Cum. Sup.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 A.2d 659, 132 Conn. 72, 1945 Conn. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/churchward-v-churchward-conn-1945.