Cicio v. Bernasconi

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedMarch 24, 2011
Docket20
StatusPublished

This text of Cicio v. Bernasconi (Cicio v. Bernasconi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cicio v. Bernasconi, (Vt. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

Cicio v. Bernasconi, No. 20-1-09 Oecv (Eaton, J., Mar. 24, 2011)

[The text of this Vermont trial court opinion is unofficial. It has been reformatted from the original. The accuracy of the text and the accompanying data included in the Vermont trial court opinion database is not guaranteed.] STATE OF VERMONT

SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Orange County Docket No. 20-1-09 Oecv

Tonya Cicio Plaintiff

v.

Jay Bernasconi Defendant

Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order

Plaintiff Tonya Cicio seeks partition of real estate she currently owns as a tenant- in-common with her former romantic partner, defendant Jay Bernasconi. For the following reasons, plaintiff is entitled to a judgment of partition stating that she is entitled to a 60% share of the property, while defendant is entitled to a 40% share of the same.

Findings of Fact

The following facts were established by the credible evidence presented at the merits hearing held on December 20, 2010. Ms. Cicio and her former husband bought a home and seven acres located at [address redacted] in Orange, Vermont, in 1986 for the price of $46,000. Ms. Cicio was awarded the home in a final divorce order after she and her former husband were divorced in 1999.

Between 1999 and 2006, Ms. Cicio was responsible for all of the property expenses, including mortgage, taxes, insurance, and maintenance. She worked at a supermarket deli for most of this time, but at some point suffered a work-related wrist injury and received a lump sum award of workers’ compensation benefits. She has not returned to work since the injury.

By 2006, Ms. Cicio was struggling to make ends meet. She admits several late mortgage payments but denies that the home actually went into foreclosure. Nevertheless, she owed $20,229.08 on the mortgage by the end of October 2006 (D. Ex. F), and the house had fallen into disrepair, including most notably a leaking roof and sluggish septic system.

During the fall of 2006, Ms. Cicio decided to marry Mr. Bernasconi, whom she had been dating for eleven years. Because they were planning to move in together at the [address redacted] home, they began making plans to fix up the home and add an extra bedroom for Mr. Bernasconi’s son. Ms. Cicio, however, had a poor credit rating and could not refinance the home on her own. In addition, the bank made clear that it would not approve any new financing on the home until the roof was repaired. For these reasons, the parties determined to fix the roof and to seek new financing using Mr. Bernasconi’s credit rating.

Mr. Bernasconi fixed the roof using $3,500 he borrowed for the purpose. He then sought to refinance the home. He could not do this unless he was on the deed, so the parties arranged for Ms. Cicio to sell the property to herself and Mr. Bernasconi as tenants in common for the contract price of $24,500. Mr. Bernasconi was able to use his good credit rating to obtain financing for this transaction in the amount of $19,600, which, together with $4,202.45 of his own cash, allowed them to pay off the existing mortgage on the home and the closing costs for the transaction. (D. Ex. F). Mr. Bernasconi then supposedly contributed an additional $4,256.52 in cash to Ms. Cicio at the closing in order to reach the purchase price, but she turned around and gave this cash back to him as compensation for the roof repairs. Although this last part of the transaction is rather mysterious to the court, it is evidence that the parties felt as though the roof expenses were settled as between them.

A complication here is that Ms. Cicio asserted at trial that she did not understand that the refinancing would result in Mr. Bernasconi becoming a co-owner of the home. She did not like this because of the inheritance implications for her children and Mr. Bernasconi’s son, and she further claims that she agreed to put him on the deed as an owner of an undivided one-half interest in the property only upon the understanding that this could be changed after closing. Yet no agreements to that effect were reduced to writing, and Ms. Cicio voluntarily signed the deed and the property transfer tax return, both of which clearly indicated that she was transferring a one-half interest in the property to Mr. Bernasconi. Moreover, the credible evidence is that she did this knowingly and voluntarily; she was having trouble making ends meet and needed the financing in order to meet her existing mortgage obligations. She also intended to marry Mr. Bernasconi and needed his credit to obtain funds to fix up the home she intended to share with him. In short, the credible evidence was that this was a voluntary transaction in which she understood the legal ramifications for the property.

As the final step to the refinancing, the parties applied for a line of credit on the home in the amount of $75,000. Again, the line of credit was made possible by Mr. Bernasconi’s credit rating. Of this amount, the parties used approximately $60,189 towards the addition of two bedrooms onto the home and other minor repairs (but they did not replace the leach field). (Def. Ex. B). Other miscellaneous expenses were charged to the line of credit that had nothing to do with the house: $5,250 for eye surgery for defendant’s father, $750 for back rent owed by defendant, and $1,140 for veterinary bills incurred by the need to care for Ms. Cicio’s dog. (Def. Ex. B). Because these miscellaneous expenses were charged to the line of credit, they are debts secured by the property.

Mr. Bernasconi and Ms. Cicio did not marry, but rather experienced a parting of the ways in fall 2007, resulting finally in Mr. Bernasconi’s decision to move out of the home in December 2007. His departure was not the result of a relief-from-abuse order or

2 a changing of the locks; he simply decided that he was not getting along with Ms. Cicio and that it was time to leave. He claims that she drank more than he thought, but this is not credible given that he dated her for nearly eleven years before moving in with her.

Between the time of refinancing and the end of the relationship, Mr. Bernasconi made the monthly payments on the bank loans ($426 per month on the primary loan plus whatever varying amount was due on the line of credit). (P. Ex. 4). He paid a total of $11,843. (D. Ex. A). He has not made any payments since April 2008.

Ms. Cicio cannot afford the payments on her own. After the bank threatened foreclosure for lack of timely payment, her parents generously offered to begin paying the mortgage and the amounts due on the line of credit. It appears that they took out a mortgage on their own home to do this. On behalf of Ms. Cicio, they paid $21,682 between April 2008 and the close of the evidence. (P. Ex. 4).

An appraisal of the home in September 2010 found a fair market value of $170,000. (D. Ex. H). As of December 1, 2010, the mortgage had an outstanding balance of $16,072.16 and the line of credit had an outstanding balance of $72,332.30, for a total debt of $88,404.46. (P. Ex. 1). Total equity in the home is $81,595.54.

The parties presented conflicting evidence about the value of the home at the time Mr. Bernasconi purchased his one-half interest in the home. For the reasons explained below, this value is not material to the decision, but for purposes of argument, the preponderance of the evidence established the value of the home to be $106,500. This figure represents the known present value of the home ($170,000) minus the amount of construction that went into the home between summer 2006 and present ($60,000+/- on the line of credit plus $3,500 for the new roof).

Conclusions of Law

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Cicio v. Bernasconi, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cicio-v-bernasconi-vtsuperct-2011.