Condosta v. Condosta

453 A.2d 1128, 142 Vt. 117, 1982 Vt. LEXIS 632
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedNovember 2, 1982
Docket539-81
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 453 A.2d 1128 (Condosta v. Condosta) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Condosta v. Condosta, 453 A.2d 1128, 142 Vt. 117, 1982 Vt. LEXIS 632 (Vt. 1982).

Opinion

Peck, J.

Appeal by plaintiff from an order of Windham Superior Court granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment and the subsequent denial of plaintiff’s motion to vacate the order. We affirm.

This case is the fourth attempt by plaintiff to obtain various forms of relief from what he apparently conceives to be injustices growing out of divorce proceedings between the parties. Defendant here was the plaintiff in the original action. Condosta v. Condosta, 186 Vt. 360, 395 A.2d 345 (1978). See also Condosta v. Condosta, 136 Vt. 630, 388 A.2d 33 (1978) (mem.); Condosta v. Condosta, 139 Vt. 545, 431 A.2d 494 (1981) ; Condosta v. Condosta, 440 U.S. 902 (1979) (an attempted appeal to the United States Supreme Court, dismissed for lack of a federal question). Except for the original divorce action in the Windham Superior Court, plaintiff here, Guido Condosta, instituted the actions, and has represented himself in all of the proceedings to date.

The issues presented for our consideration by this appeal, as we understand them from plaintiff’s submittals, are the following two. First, whether defendant’s contention that plaintiff’s claim to homestead rights was res judicata is cor *120 rect, thus justifying the trial court in granting summary judgment. Second, and, as a practical matter, included within the scope of the first issue, whether a divorce decree dissolves a homestead right as a matter of law.

Addressing the first issue, plaintiff’s argument appears to be that the trial court cannot take judicial notice of the original proceedings to determine res judicata, but must necessarily relitigate the same issues tried out in the earlier case, together with any new factual questions he sees fit to raise. He believes, apparently, that this is the substance of our holding in remanding the matter after his appeal in the second case. Condosta v. Condosta, supra, 139 Vt. 545, 431 A.2d 494. If this is so, he misunderstands the opinion.

In that case, plaintiff sought rescission of that part of the divorce order which awarded the home premises to his former wife free and clear of his marital rights. In reaching its decision granting a motion to dismiss, the court, on its own motion, took judicial notice of the prior pleadings and judgment. This, we held, was error:

The judgment and proceedings in a case other than that on trial, even between the same parties, is not to be taken notice of by the court of its own motion. Hutchins v. George, 92 Vt. 371, 373, 104 A. 108, 109 (1918). Otherwise matters might be considered that a party had no opportunity to meet and explain. Id. A request to take such notice ... is needed.

Id. at 547, 431 A.2d at 495.

On remand, however, the same error was not repeated. Defendant set up the affirmative defense of res judicata and filed a motion for summary judgment in which she requested the court to take judicial notice of the findings and order in the divorce case, and the decisions of this Court and the United States Supreme Court. Clearly the court did so and granted summary judgment, concluding “that as a matter of law any homestead right which Plaintiff may have had in the Guilford premises was disposed of by the final Order in [the original divorce action].” Whatever burden of proof defendant may have incurred in setting up her affirmative defense was satisfied through her request for judicial notice, assuming of *121 course, as in fact we hold, that the “noticed” proceedings were adequate to support the motion for summary judgment.

Plaintiff contends further that the issue of his homestead rights is not yet res judicata because the order in the divorce case is not final. Accordingly, he would have us hold, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment based on that order. This claim in turn is based on an assertion in an affidavit filed following the remand that litigation is pending in the federal court (apparently some kind of an appeal to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals) relating, so he says, “to finality of the divorce action.” This is a naked assertion. The question of law involved in finality is not briefed; no information is given anywhere as to whether the alleged federal litigation is a collateral attack on the divorce judgment, or what court’s judgment is being appealed, who are the parties, no copies of the pleadings are furnished. In short, his briefing and presentation of a record upon which we can act on the issue is wholly inadequate. The burden is on the plaintiff to produce a record which supports his position on the issues raised on appeal. Harrington v. Decker, 134 Vt. 259, 261, 356 A.2d 511, 512 (1976). As far as anything in the record here shows, the judgment in the divorce proceeding is final.

The second issue raised by plaintiff appears to propose the theory that he has a vested or “homestead” right in real estate standing in the name of his former wife, which cannot be taken from him without compensation. He contends further that this issue has never been litigated and, presumably therefore, is not affected by the original judgment order, and secondly, that these rights cannot be taken from him without compensation.

We disagree with plaintiff’s argument. In support of his position he relies on an 1888 case decided by this Court. In fact, however, that case holds a full one hundred and eighty degrees contrary to what plaintiff claims for it. Ross, J., writing for the Court, said:

The object and purpose of the statute in creating the homestead have been fully accomplished so far as the wife and minor children are interested therein, when they legally cease forever thereafter to be a part of the family ... .By the divorce the defendant lost the incohate [sic] *122 right to a homestead in the premises . . . for she could not thereafter, without remarriage, become the widow of the mortgagor [former husband], which relation she must sustain, to have the homestead descend to, and become perfected in her, upon his decease.

Heaton v. Sawyer, 60 Vt. 495, 499-501, 15 A. 166, 168-69 (1888) (emphasis of “widow” appears in the cited case; remaining emphasis added).

The law was at the time of Heaton, and is now, that absent some special provision therein, the final judgment in a divorce proceeding terminates a homestead right.

Plaintiff cites language in Heaton which reads: “By the decree she was given $1,000 in lieu of the rights already acquired in his estate . . . .”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Sheryl Weitz v. Theodore Weitz
2019 VT 35 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2019)
In re Kadoch
528 B.R. 626 (D. Vermont, 2015)
Whippie v. O'Connor
2010 VT 32 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2010)
State v. Sharrow
2008 VT 24 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2008)
In Re Hutchins
306 B.R. 82 (D. Vermont, 2004)
Charter One Bank v. Estate of Spillane
807 A.2d 452 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 2002)
In Re Farrar
219 B.R. 48 (D. Vermont, 1998)
Estate of Girard v. Laird
621 A.2d 1265 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1993)
Milligan v. Milligan
613 A.2d 1281 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1992)
In re J.S.
571 A.2d 658 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1989)
Lynch v. Lynch
522 A.2d 234 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1987)
Condosta v. Grussing
479 A.2d 149 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1984)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
453 A.2d 1128, 142 Vt. 117, 1982 Vt. LEXIS 632, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/condosta-v-condosta-vt-1982.