Dinino v. Dinino

11 Conn. Super. Ct. 246, 11 Conn. Supp. 246, 1942 Conn. Super. LEXIS 136
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1942
DocketFile 64811
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 11 Conn. Super. Ct. 246 (Dinino v. Dinino) 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
Dinino v. Dinino, 11 Conn. Super. Ct. 246, 11 Conn. Supp. 246, 1942 Conn. Super. LEXIS 136 (Colo. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

*247 Memorandum of decision on plea in abatement to motion for contempt.

KING, J.

On May 1, 1942, the Superior Court for Hart' ford County granted a decree of divorce to the defendant husband on his cross'complaint, also rendering judgment for him on the plaintiff’s original complaint for a divorce. In this decree custody of the two minor children was awarded to the defendant husband subject to rights of visitation, as more par' ticularly therein set forth, granted the plaintiff wife.

The plaintiff, by motion dated June 10, 1942, seeks to have the defendant adjudged in contempt for failure to obey the provisions of the divorce decree concerning her right of visita' tion. To this motion the defendant has filed a plea in abate' ment on the ground that the Superior Court was without juris' diction to render any decree with respect to the custody of the children because the Probate Court for the District of Hartford, prior to the commencement of any divorce proceed' ings, had removed the plaintiff mother as guardian of the per sons of the two children and had appointed the defendant as sole guardian of their persons.

It is the defendant’s claim that in so far as the Superior Court assumed to exercise jurisdiction over the custody of the minor children it was without power so to do, and that that part of its decree was a nullity for disobedience to which the defendant cannot be held in contempt.

No issue was joined on the facts set forth in the plea in abatement, although it is elementary that good pleading required this. Palmer vs. Reeves, 120 Conn. 405, 411. However, the only matter of fact therein set forth of any consequence was evidenced by a certified copy of the record of the judgment of the Probate Court, admitted in evidence by con' sent of both parties, and the plea was presented and heard on the theory that there was no dispute as to the original binding force of the Probate Decree, and that the facts of the plea in abatement were admitted as on demurrer. The court will treat the issues as treated by the parties, especially since this accords with the rule of Williamson, Ltd. vs. Perry, 111 Conn. 317, 324; Practice Book [1934] §85, p. 41; §103, p. 46.

The claim, made in this court on the hearing of the divorce petition, was, not that there was any prior action pending in the Probate Court involving these children at the commence' *248 ment of these divorce proceedings; but on the contrary, that such an action had terminated prior to the commencement of the divorce proceedings.

This would have been fatal to any plea to the jurisdiction or in abatement, since the real defense sought to be raised was res adjudicata. Tracy vs. New York, N. H. & H. R. Co., 82 Conn. 1, 7; Dettenborn vs. Hartford-National Bank & Trust Co., 121 id. 388, 392. This is an affirmative defense which must be affirmatively pleaded in an answer and the burden of proving it is on the pleader. Practice Book [1934] §104, pp. 46, 47.

The defendant perceived this distinction from the beginning, and does not dispute it now, for the file in the divorce case shows that the plaintiff wife, by amendment to the complaint, asked for custody, and that this defendant then amended his answer to set up the defense of res adjudicata. And the entire original brief was devoted to a claim that the probate decree was res adjudicata of the question of custody.

It is true that the Superior Court awarded the custody of the children to the defendant husband who had not asked for it as far as the pleadings disclose, rather than to the plaintiff wife, yet in a divorce action the statutes (Gen. Stat. [1930] §§5184, 5186) make it permissible for the court to award the custody of minor children in accordance with their welfare, unfettered by any technical rules of pleading. Morrill vs. Morrill, 83 Conn. 479, 489.

From this it follows that when the divorce action was instituted each party was put on notice (regardless of any claim in the pleadings) that a custody award might be made to either party unless the matter had already been passed upon by the Probate Court in such a way as to preclude action by the Superior Court, or, in other words, unless the defendant husband sustained his burden of proving his defense of res adjudicata. It is hardly necessary to point out that this defense of res adjudicata, at least as far as the claims here made were concerned, applied to any attempt on the part' of the Superior Court to deal with the question of custody, whether that involved an award to the plaintiff wife (which in its practical effect would have been wholly inconsistent with the probate decree) or, as actually made, an award to the defendant, which in its practical effect was inconsistent with the *249 probate decree only in so far as the right of visitation ac■corded the plaintiff wife was concerned.

Thus when the defendant, by his special defense of res adjudicata, raised the question of the effect of the prior probate decree on the Superior Court’s right to award the custody to the plaintiff mother, he also necessarily raised the same claim as to the court’s right to award the custody to him. The defense of res adjudicata was thus necessarily put in isssue and passed upon by the Superior Court. Since the mother was given rights of visitation under the decree of the Superior Court which she did not have under the decree of the Court of Probate, the defendant was, to that extent, injured and ag' grieved, as a practical matter, by the Superior Court decree, and, like any other party so affected by a judgment, could have taken an appeal, the gist of which would have been that the Superior Court erred in not finding that the defendant husband had sustained the- burden of proving his defense of res adjudicata. Whether such an appeal would have been successful or not is immaterial. It is enough that it was not taken.

Indeed, the defendant has, with the court’s permission, filed the same brief in this case as it filed in this court in the divorce proceedings. In addition, a foreword or preface was filed, stating that (for the reasons advanced in the divorce proceed' ings) the custody decree of this court was a nullity.

The defendant, in brief and oral argument, although con' ceding that the custody decree of the Superior Court had to be void, as distinguished from merely voidable, in order to be subject to the collateral attack here sought to be made, claimed that under our law the decree was absolutely void, and, so, a nullity not binding on the defendant so as to require him to dignify it by troubling to take an appeal. In other words the defendant claims he could flout the decree qf the Superior Court with impunity, and if any attempt were made to enforce it, file a plea to the jurisdiction and in abatement. The defendant is apparently of the belief that he is following the case of Ferrie vs. Trentini, 111 Conn.

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Related

Bryant v. Bryant, No. 30 76 77 (Mar. 12, 1996)
1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 2458 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1996)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Conn. Super. Ct. 246, 11 Conn. Supp. 246, 1942 Conn. Super. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dinino-v-dinino-connsuperct-1942.