Dean v. Dean, No. Fa99 036 47 83 S (Jan. 2, 2001) Ct Page 76

2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 75
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 2, 2001
DocketFA99 036 47 83 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 75 (Dean v. Dean, No. Fa99 036 47 83 S (Jan. 2, 2001) Ct Page 76) 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
Dean v. Dean, No. Fa99 036 47 83 S (Jan. 2, 2001) Ct Page 76, 2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 75 (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[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]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 the court for a dissolution of their marriage of thirteen (13) years. Each is now forty-nine (49) years old and in good health. There are no children. Each party was ably represented by counsel, appeared at trial and testified over numerous days. The court observed their demeanor and evaluated their credibility. Other witnesses were called and numerous exhibits were introduced — virtually all related to financial issues — i.e., business trout and loss statements, business and personal federal tax returns, bank records, etc. Each party submitted a sworn financial affidavit, demands for relief, and post-trial memoranda. The principal issues are the distribution of real and personal property and the extent, if any, of the wife's interest in the husband's business and her request for alimony.1

The parties met and dated briefly in 1972. They remained friends but did not begin again to date until 1983 or 1984, by which time he was living in Ohio in a home he owned and she was living with or nearby her family in New York. They married on April 18, 1987, in Mamaroneck, New York; each was then thirty-five years old and neither had been previously married. The husband was then unemployed but was receiving monies by way of a severance package made available to him when his father's restaurant chain was sold. He was a high school graduate with one and one-half (1 1/2) years of college and he had, by then, had several jobs in the restaurant industry, one of which was at a Columbus, Ohio, restaurant owned by his father's former company, Dean Neat Packing Company. He had also previously worked for the Far Nest Services restaurant chain where he completed their management training program. Mrs. Dean then held an Associate's Degree from the Fashion Institute of Technology and had been employed for tour and one-half (4 1/2) years with Aide Decor in New York as an interior designer. She had also been an allied member of the American Society of Interior Design.

The couple moved into the plaintiff's father's house in New Rochelle after he remarried. They paid no rent; the husband remained unemployed CT Page 77 for the year while there. She and a friend began a design company and she worked there for approximately nine (9) months. When the father's house was sold, they moved to Ohio believing the husband's employment opportunities were better there. Instead, he worked as a waiter/bartender for six (6) months or so, earning $17,506 in 1990 (plaintiff's 35). The plaintiff was unhappy there — primarily because she was separated from family at a time when her sister was experiencing suicidal ideation and her father had disowned both the plaintiff and her sister and because the hope her husband would open his own restaurant in Ohio was not realized. A year or so later, in November of 1990, they moved to Connecticut where they rented a large house in Fairfield for six and one half (6 1/2) years. The plaintiff worked during that time doing residential design for Expressions in Greenwich.

For the first four to five (4-5) years in Connecticut, the husband worked at only two (2) jobs — as a server at Boston Chicken for five to six (5-6) months and as a waiter at Chart House for some four (4) months. In 1991, he earned $7,712 at Chart House while she earned approximately $9,500 from two (2) jobs (plaintiff's 36 — Form 1040). In 1992, he had no employment income while she earned $14, 889 (plaintiff's 37 — Personal Exception Worksheet) from two (2) jobs; her interior design company (Kathy Dean Interior Design), established in 1990,2 generated gross revenue of $117,494. She also did whatever was required to maintain the household. The unrefuted testimony was that she left for work daily at 9:00 a.m. while the defendant remained in bed until 11:00 a.m. or so, having stayed up late most nights. Though happier in this state than she had been in Ohio because she was able to do design work, she nevertheless felt "lonely."

Communications between husband and wife deteriorated and the evidence was that they engaged in sexual relations only "a couple of times" during their first two (2) years in this state. They engaged in couples and individual counseling during that time; the wore encouraged Participation in sex therapy but testified the husband eschewed it. Her complaints during this period and the following years were myriad. She indicated she wanted children; his testimony was he never felt a strong desire to have children. Yet, her asserted desire for children is questionable. She admitted to having strongly negative feelings and fear of both hospitals and labor induced pain. Though she went to a fertility clinic on 1996 and was advised she should undergo certain medical procedures to promote pregnancy, she in fact did not have them. She also admitted to having had multiple abortions, one of which "could" have resulted in the termination of the life of this defendant's child. Ultimately, she came to embrace the possibility of adopting a child — more of which will later here be addressed. The plaintiff testified to coming home from her job daily only to find her unemployed, at-home husband had not attended to even CT Page 78 such tasks as feeding the dogs. She was critical or his personal hygiene, testified he let their medical insurance lapse, and stated he demurred at getting her prompt medical care when she required the same.

In June of 1992, the parties established Dean Restaurant Group, Inc. ("DRG"), a Connecticut corporation. Mr. Dean was President, Treasurer, and the sole shareholder;3 Mrs. Dean was Vice-President and Secretary (plaintiff's 36). While the plaintiff testified she believed she was part owner of that company;4 it is clear she never was. In August of 1992, the company purchased the assets of New England Donut, Inc. (plaintiff's 2)and entered into a lease agreement with Norman Pollock to rent the premises at 580 Post Road, Fairfield, at $2,500 per month triple net. The monthly mortgage is paid by DRG. The couple planned to open a restaurant named "Well Dressed Chicken." The wife arranged for a friend to put together a concept/organizational package and turned to preliminary concept plans but the husband never followed through beyond the leasing of premises because he by then realized his chance of success was optimized by his participation in a franchise program which would dictate operations. He earned no employment income in 1993 or 1994 and she continued to be the family provider.5

By 1995 or 1996, the wife testified he had become abusive to her and that one or more incidents resulted in police coming to the house. No evidence of physical abuse was offered through the plaintiff did offer a taped conversation in which the defendant, allegedly upset with regard to removal of financial documents from the home, was generally out of control, yelling and screaming and uttering gutter language.

Neither party earned any income in 1995; the only sources of income were trust income to Mr. Dean in the amount of $24,084 and cash gifts from his parents at Christmas ($10,000 from his mother and $1,000 from his father). Mrs. Dean's testimony was that she was unable to work that year for medical reasons requiring treatment in New York. She did, however, enroll in a real estate course to increase her employment opportunities and she began work as an independent real estate agent in 1996.

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Bluebook (online)
2001 Conn. Super. Ct. 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dean-v-dean-no-fa99-036-47-83-s-jan-2-2001-ct-page-76-connsuperct-2001.