Cottell v. Cottell, No. Fa00 037 10 87 (Aug. 22, 2001)

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 11386
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 22, 2001
DocketNo. FA00 037 10 87
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 11386 (Cottell v. Cottell, No. Fa00 037 10 87 (Aug. 22, 2001)) 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
Cottell v. Cottell, No. Fa00 037 10 87 (Aug. 22, 2001), 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 11386 (Colo. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The parties are before this court for a dissolution of their eighteen (18) year marriage. They are the parents of three (3) children — John, now thirteen (13), Eileen, now eleven (11), and Timothy, now eight (8) years old. The plaintiff wife is forty-two (42) and the defendant husband is forty-four (44); both enjoy good health. The issues for determination are financial and that of property distribution, the couple — to their credit — having agreed on all child related CT Page 11387 issues. Testimony was taken over three (3) days and both parties were effectively represented by counsel. Both parties testified and the court observed their demeanor and evaluated their credibility. Real estate appraisers testified and numerous exhibits, all of which the court has examined, were offered. Each party submitted a sworn financial affidavit and written claims for relief. Each party has successfully completed the Parenting Education Program.

The couple married on April 30, 1983. She is a high school graduate presently employed full-time as a dental assistant and part-time as a receptionist for a real estate agency. Her gross yearly income from both jobs is approximately $25,500; she nets approximately $380 per week. Though capable of employment more financially rewarding, she is presently without the education, skills, or training to find such work — primarily because she and the defendant agreed her primary role was to be that of homemaker and primary caretaker for the family so that he could pursue his career objectives. He has a B.S. from the United States Merchant Marine Academy and is, by training, a professional engineer. For the first four (4) years of the marriage, he was away sailing for approximately half (1/2) the year. In 1987, he began working for the Department of Defense as an Assistant Nuclear Test Engineer at the Portsmouth Naval Shipyard in New Hampshire. Since April of 1994, he has been employed by the City of Bridgeport as Deputy Director of Park Facilities where his yearly salary is approximately $75,000; he is also provided a car for both business and personal use, for which all car expenses are paid. That benefit considered, he earns approximately $80,000 per year. His net weekly salary is $1,123.

The court finds there are three (3) marital properties as follows:

1. 37 Glen Avenue, Midland Park, New Jersey

The husband bought this property a little more than one year before the marriage (but after their engagement to marry) He paid $74,000; there was a first mortgage of $65,000 and a second mortgage of $2,000 from the seller. The down payment came from his savings, and he has paid off the second mortgage. There are two (2) rents on the property. Over the years, the property has been refinanced at least three (3) times; money obtained from those refinances was used to pay off existing mortgages, to purchase other properties, and/or to maintain or improve or repair existing properties. Frequently, marital assets were used to accomplish such undertakings. The husband's testimony was that its CT Page 11388 present value is $268,000 and that the present mortgage balance is $82,230. Equity interest is therefore $185,770. His financial affidavit of August 1, 2001, lists gross weekly income from the property at $358 — or $28,616 yearly. Weekly expenses are stated to be in the same amount though no supporting documentation was offered. The court rejects the suggestion this rental property is not profitable. The mortgage is current.

Vis-a-vis this property, it is relevant to this court that, for the first four (4) years of the marriage when the husband was away sailing for half (1/2) the year, the wife kept the property going. The family lived on the first floor and there was a tenant on the second floor. When purchased, the house required extensive work — i.e., the erection of walls, the moving of support beams, and extensive repairs to the kitchen and bedrooms. While he sailed, the house he left behind was in various — sometimes egregious — states of disrepair and/or construction (He accomplished most of the repairs himself.). Despite living conditions many would not have tolerated, she remained there alone, collected the rent, kept the second floor occupied, arranged for emergency repairs, paid the bills, etc. (He always deposited his paycheck into a joint checking account.). She was then also working through a temporary agency during the periods he sailed.

Though the husband appeared both pleasant and credible, there was testimony persuasive of the fact he never considered this to be a marriage of equals nor a true partnership. Likewise, he has not always been honest in his dealings with the wife nor has he been respectful of her contributions or abilities. He did not deny he had on occasion told her not to "think" because she was not "capable" of thinking. The facts surrounding his ownership of this property are particularly telling. Having purchased the property pre-marriage, he was the sole legal owner. Once married, the wife repeatedly requested she be made a co-owner and her name put on the deed (not unreasonable in view of her contributions and the conditions under which she CT Page 11389 then lived). In response to those repeated requests, he arranged for her a meeting with a lawyer and told her it was to effect co-ownership of the property. In fact, the legal paper signed that day was the mortgage note which she, a seemingly intelligent but obviously too unsophisticated and trusting a woman, signed without reading. Thus, she has no legal interest in the property but is liable on the note. Despite the passing of many years and multiple refinances, she is still not on the mortgage deed (Nor did he even address this fact in his trial testimony.). His failure to remedy this inequity is indicative of a character flaw which taints his otherwise pleasant manner.

The defendant began stateside employment in 1987, and the couple moved to New Hampshire where they bought a home together (The New Jersey property has always been kept and maintained as a two-family rental.). He worked as a nuclear test engineer and she worked part-time as a teacher's aide. The first child was born in 1988 and the second child arrived in 1990. In 1991, while the husband was at work over an hour from home, the house burned down. The wife and two children, both under three (3), were at home but unharmed. The couple next rented a home in Maine (fifteen [15] minutes from the husband's job in New Hampshire) until May of 1992. Their homeowner's policy paid off the mortgage on the New Hampshire house and left them approximately $20,000. There remained the land on which the house was located and a shed untouched by the fire, both of which were sold in 1993 for $22,000. The couple then relocated to Connecticut and purchased the second marital property at issue.

2. 110 Millbrook Terrace, Monroe, Connecticut

Both are legal owners of this property, the marital residence from May of 1992 until the husband moved out in April of 2001. It is a large ranch with four (4) bedrooms and two and one-half (2 1/2) baths. Purchased for $230,000, they took a mortgage for $125,000. The down payment came from some of the proceeds from the New Hampshire property, $10,000 CT Page 11390 from an IRA the husband had before the marriage, and a $10,000 loan from the husband's parents. As had now become the couple's way of financing home improvements, purchasing new furniture, or paying off credit card debt, they have refinanced this home at least three (3) times also.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 11386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottell-v-cottell-no-fa00-037-10-87-aug-22-2001-connsuperct-2001.