Denning v. Denning, No. 10 19 18 (May 6, 1994)

1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 4962
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 6, 1994
DocketNo. 10 19 18
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 4962 (Denning v. Denning, No. 10 19 18 (May 6, 1994)) 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
Denning v. Denning, No. 10 19 18 (May 6, 1994), 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 4962 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] [MEMORANDUM OF DECISION] The plaintiff husband commenced this action for a dissolution of the parties' marriage by complaint returnable November 17, 1992. He alleges that the marriage has broken down irretrievably and seeks alimony, custody of the parties' minor children, support and such other relief as is fair and equitable. The defendant wife admitted in her answer that the marriage had broken down irretrievably. In her cross complaint, she alleges that the marriage had broken down irretrievably and also seeks a dissolution of the marriage, custody of the minor children, support, alimony, an equitable assignment of all or a portion of the plaintiff's estate and other relief. Counsel was appointed to represent the minor children, and the issues of custody and visitation of the minor children were referred to Family Services for study, investigation and recommendation. The parents were represented by counsel throughout the proceedings, including trial.

At the hearing, the parties testified and filed financial affidavits; the mother and children's counsel submitted proposed written claims for relief, and a number of documentary materials were introduced into evidence. These included tax returns, cancelled checks and pension and annuity records. In addition, each party called witnesses, and the CT Page 4963 hearing consumed two trial days. The taking of evidence was concluded on April 6, 1994, and the parties made oral argument. The defendant was granted until April 20, 1994, to file a brief on the issue of her claim for an assignment of a portion of the plaintiff's worker's compensation claim and to also provide information relating to the status of a motion for a deficiency judgment, if any, on the parties' foreclosed home. The plaintiff was granted until May 4, 1994, to file a reply brief; if not filed, then the trial would be deemed completed as of May 4, 1994. From the evidence, the court finds as follows:

The plaintiff husband married the defendant wife, whose birth name was Kathleen Kiss, December 15, 1985, at Willimantic, Connecticut. He has resided continuously in this state for at least one year before the date of the complaint, October 21, 1992. All statutory stays have expired, and the court has jurisdiction. The parties have two minor children, Nicole Denning, born June 6, 1986, and Tyler Denning, born November 10, 1990, who are issue of the marriage. No other minor children were born to the wife since the date of the marriage, and neither party is a recipient of public assistance.

The plaintiff husband is 35 years of age and is a high school graduate.

In December of 1993, he fell from a height of 25 feet on his job and sustained several fractures. At the time of trial, he required crutches to ambulate. He had sustained previous injuries from his iron worker job and had a permanent partial disability before his recent fall. It is unknown at this time what the nature and extent of his additional permanent disabilities, if any, will be.

He also has had a long period of substance abuse, including alcohol and drugs, which apparently ended after an admission of approximately one month's duration in 1988 to Spofford Hall, New Hampshire, a rehabilitation and treatment center. His health is otherwise good; he describes himself as a recovering addict.

He has worked as an iron worker on construction for the past 13 years and is a union member. His work entails risks from working at heights and is both arduous and strenuous. His present hourly rate, as of his last employment, CT Page 4964 is $22 per hour, with an increment when he works as a foreman. During the past seven years, the parties' joint tax returns report his gross income1 as follows: 1987, $33,860; 1988, $46,354; 1989, $55,916; 1990, $58,847; 1991, $50,715; and 1992, $82,120.2 Although neither a tax return nor a W-2 form reporting his 1993 earnings were introduced into evidence, the court gleans from defendant's Exhibit 12 that the plaintiff worked approximately 780 hours during the year, which when multiplied by his hourly rate of $22, results in a gross annual income of about $17,160 for 1993.

He currently receives $478 per week net as total temporary disability workers' compensation benefits.

The wife is thirty years old and is in good health. She also has been a substance abuser, mostly of alcohol, and is a recovering alcoholic. She has undergone detoxification and has recently `slipped' at least twice, briefly. She suffered a number of miscarriages during the marriage.

She has a high school diploma (G.E.D.) and essentially minimal vocational or job skills. She worked for very brief periods as an aerobics instructor and barmaid-waitress. In aerobics, she earned $5 per hour; as a waitress, she earned $200 per week including tips, part time. She hopes to obtain the necessary training and education to become a licensed practical nurse by 1996, although she has not made specific plans to enter the one-year course of study required.

This marriage of about eight and one-half years was troubled almost from the start. The parties were destructive of each other, themselves and, as a consequence, their marriage. They abused alcohol and drugs regularly. As a result of the plaintiff's heavy drug use and his hospitalization, the wife commenced a dissolution in 1988, which was ultimately not pursued.

The parties separated at that time, and then were united until early 1992, when they finally separated, due to the husband's assault of the wife. She sustained injuries as a result and obtained a protective order excluding him from the home; she obtained another protective order in September, 1992.

When the husband obtained a reduction of his court-ordered pendente lite child support and alimony payments in CT Page 4965 early 1993, the wife was no longer able to make the mortgage payments and moved out of the family dwelling.

The husband then moved in and resided there until about December, 1993, and made no mortgage payments whatsoever; neither party made diligent efforts to save the family home from foreclosure, although the wife attempted to sell it.

The wife now lives with her boyfriend in his home, as man and wife. The household includes the two minor children. The husband spent much time throughout the trial castigating the wife for her present intimate relationship and its effects upon the parties' children; at the same time, soon after the parties' early 1992 separation, he began a similar live-in relationship with his present girlfriend, to which the children were also exposed. His relationship, as does the wife's, still continues. The court believes his stance both sanctimonious and hypocritical.

From this evidence, the court finds that the parties' marriage has broken down irretrievably, and further finds that although both parties acted immaturely and inappropriately and must shoulder blame for the destruction of their marriage, a greater share of the responsibility lies at the husband's door.

During the pretrial proceedings, a joint custody order was entered, with principal physical custody of the children to the wife. However, apparently as a result of the events related below, the parties agreed at the outset of the trial that the wife should be awarded sole custody of the minor children; thus, custody was no longer an issue. During a visitation with the husband in 1993 in New Hampshire with his girlfriend and the girlfriend's daughter, the children were exposed to a number of disturbing and tumultuous activities at a motorcyclists' rally.

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Related

McCurdy v. State
630 A.2d 64 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1993)
Roswell v. State
615 A.2d 1063 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1992)

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Bluebook (online)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 4962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denning-v-denning-no-10-19-18-may-6-1994-connsuperct-1994.