Corcoran v. Corcoran, No. Fa93-00116631 (Sep. 27, 1996)

1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5433
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1996
DocketNo. FA93-00116631
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5433 (Corcoran v. Corcoran, No. Fa93-00116631 (Sep. 27, 1996)) 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
Corcoran v. Corcoran, No. Fa93-00116631 (Sep. 27, 1996), 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5433 (Colo. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This is an action for dissolution of marriage. The plaintiff, Edward Corcoran, and the defendant, Jean Corcoran, were married at Waterbury on August 3, 1985. Therefore, by the date this action was returned to court in August 1993, they had been married eight years. There are no minor children issue of the marriage.

The issues between the parties are what continuing duty, if any, Mr. Corcoran has to support Mrs. Corcoran, and whether a fraudulent transfer of the parties' trucking business occurred, thereby depriving Mrs. Corcoran of any equitable share she might have had in the business. If such a transfer occurred, the further question arises of how to compensate Mrs. Corcoran for the loss of her equitable share by way of appropriate dissolution orders.

In an Answer and Amended Cross-Complaint of December 28, 1993 Mrs. Corcoran alleged in the second count that Mr. Corcoran had fraudulently transferred to a third party all of his right, title and interest in the shares of corporate stock in Corcoran's Transportation, Inc., identified as "the largest single material asset of the parties". At the same time she moved to implead as a third party defendant Jennie Finkle, and that motion was granted (Harrigan, J.) on May 10, 1994. The testimony at trial established, among other things, that Mrs. Finkle and Mr. Corcoran enjoyed a close personal relationship during the period of time crucial to the court's decision in this case, i.e., 1993 and 1994, and that she is now the sole owner of E.J. Corcoran Transportation, Inc., an enterprise engaged in the same business, except for long-hauling, as was Corcoran's Transportation, a business purchased by Mr. and Mrs. CT Page 5433-A Corcoran in 1986. Mr. Corcoran is employed by Mrs. Finkle as the "operations manager" for E.J. Corcoran Transportation, the same title he assumed at Corcoran's Transportation.1 In the third party complaint Mrs. Corcoran alleged that Mrs. Finkle had purchased the stock of Corcoran's Transportation for less than adequate consideration or for valuable consideration other than money with the intent to defraud her and sought the return of the stock certificates allegedly held by Mrs. Finkle and the face value of any stock that she had sold or transferred or rendered otherwise unable to be returned to Mrs. Corcoran.

Chronology

In order to understand the events of 1993 and 1994 which control the court's decision in this matter it is necessary to set forth in greater than usual detail the chronology of the parties' relationships. The romantic relationship of Mr. and Mrs. Corcoran began in 1982, although they were not married until August of 1985. In 1983 the parties established a business known as EJC Transportation, Inc. and worked together in that business.

In 1986, for $156,000, Mr. and Mrs. Corcoran purchased from Mr. Corcoran's mother all of the outstanding stock in Corcoran's Transportation, a trucking company established by Mr. Corcoran's father and for which he had worked for several years. They signed an agreement to pay for the stock in installments and pledged their recently-purchased family home as collateral. By 1988 they had stopped paying on their agreement, and Mr. Corcoran's mother had brought suit against them, attaching the family home.

During this period (1985-1989) the parties had been operating EJC Transportation and borrowing money to keep it afloat. Mrs. Corcoran was an active and equal partner throughout this period. In 1989 they decided to cease the operations of EJC Transportation and to "reopen" Corcoran's Transportation. At this same time the parties separated, and Mr. Corcoran began a divorce action, which was subsequently withdrawn. In early 1990 the parties resumed living together, attempting a reconciliation. Their financial affairs do not seem to have improved, however, because they filed the first of two bankruptcy petitions in 1990 as well, and a foreclosure action on the family home was begun, leading to a judgment in July of 1991. Mrs. Corcoran continued to be an active participant in the CT Page 5433-B business of Corcoran's Transportation.

In February 1993 Mr. Corcoran left Mrs. Corcoran for good, and in that same month met Mrs. Finkle2. During the spring of 1993 their relationship had progressed to the point where they travelled to Florida together on at least one occasion, and Mrs. Finkle travelled to Florida to persuade Mr. Corcoran's mother to drop her lawsuit against the parties and release the attachment on their home. She did so after Mrs. Finkle paid her $20,000. In May 1993 Mr. and Mrs. Corcoran executed a "property settlement" concerning certain terms of a proposed dissolution. According to that agreement (Exhibit P), at the time a dissolution would enter Mrs. Corcoran was to assign her stock in Corcoran's Transportation to Mr. Corcoran, and she would resign as an officer and director of the corporation. In July 1993, however, before this divorce action had been begun, those steps were taken, and they are evidenced by Exhibits R and S.

Within two weeks after Mrs. Corcoran had transferred her interest in the stock of Corcoran's Transportation to him, Mr. Corcoran transferred all his right, title and interest in that stock to Mrs. Finkle. (See Exhibit U) And, on July 22, 1993 Mrs. Finkle purchased all of the stock in EJC Transportation, the trucking business Mr. and Mrs. Corcoran had established in 1983, and entered into a consulting agreement with Mr. Corcoran for him to provide services to EJC Transportation under Mrs. Finkle's direction. (See Exhibit U.) Mr. Corcoran began this action in the next month, August 1993.

While these events were transpiring in 1993, Mrs. Corcoran stopped working for Corcoran's Transportation, and Mrs. Finkle began to appear at the offices of Corcoran's Transportation. By the fall of 1993 she had her own office there. Having replaced Mrs. Corcoran in Mr. Corcoran's affections, Mrs. Finkle had now replaced her in the business. She worked for the company throughout 1994 while Mr. Corcoran continued doing business. It was during this period of time that Mrs. Finkle was impleaded as a third party defendant in this action. During 1994 Mr. Corcoran testified that he borrowed approximately $101,000 from Mrs. Finkle for the operations of Corcoran's Transportation. No documentation of any such transactions was provided to the court, although Mrs. Finkle testified that she loaned sizeable sums of money to the corporation or to Mr. Corcoran during that period.

In March 1994, according to Mr. Corcoran's testimony, the CT Page 5433-C earlier stock transfer from him to Mrs. Finkle was "nullified". Mrs. Finkle never executed any documents transferring her rights in the stock back to Mr. Corcoran, although Mr. Corcoran did repay Mrs. Finkle the $20,000 she had paid his mother in May 1993 for her release of the attachment on the family home and her withdrawal of the action against Mr. and Mrs. Corcoran. (See Exhibit V.)

Mrs. Finkle, a person without any prior experience in the trucking business and while still employed by Corcoran's Transportation, in November 1994 incorporated a trucking company known as E.J. Corcoran Transportation, Inc. In the same month that company was added to Corcoran Transportation's insurance policies. During the succeeding several months Mr. Corcoran began referring business from Corcoran Transportation to E.J. Corcoran Transportation.

In February 1995 Mr. Corcoran testified that he closed down Corcoran's Transportation, although it remains an existing Connecticut corporation. In May Mr. Corcoran went to work for Mrs. Finkle at E.J. Corcoran Transportation.

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Bluebook (online)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 5433, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corcoran-v-corcoran-no-fa93-00116631-sep-27-1996-connsuperct-1996.