Friedlander v. Kwartin, No. Cv85-0076515 (Jul. 30, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6454, 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 784
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1991
DocketNo. CV85-0076515
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6454 (Friedlander v. Kwartin, No. Cv85-0076515 (Jul. 30, 1991)) 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
Friedlander v. Kwartin, No. Cv85-0076515 (Jul. 30, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6454, 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 784 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The defendants in this case are Saul Kwartin, an attorney practicing in Stamford, Wofsey, Rosen, Kweskin and Kuriansky, the law firm of which Mr. Kwartin is a partner, and the plaintiff's former wife, Claire Friedlander. The defendants have moved for summary judgment. Practice Book S CT Page 6455 384. The grounds for this motion are: (i) that all the allegations in the complaint have already been the subject of prior litigation and hence are subject to dismissal on grounds of res judicata and collateral estoppel; (ii) that the statute of limitations has expired on all the allegations of the complaint; and (iii) that the complaint does not state a cause of action.

Before turning to the complaint, I believe this current litigation should be analyzed against the background that it will be twenty years next month since these parties were divorced, and almost twenty-three years since the commencement of the dissolution action. In Friedlander v. Friedlander, 5 Conn. App. 1, 2, 496 A.2d 964 (1985), the Appellate Court stated that the case then under consideration was ". . . another chapter in what has become a bitter and protracted marital dissolution dispute." Little did that court have reason to anticipate that since 1985, at least four other lawsuits were commenced in this court.1 According to Mr. Friedlander, and I have no reason to doubt him, twenty-eight separate lawsuits have been generated by the divorce of Henry and Claire Friedlander in 1971. Plaintiff also said that he had been in court on approximately 375 motions and that he had expended nearly 6000 hours of his own time on these various cases.2

A review of the financial affidavits in the original divorce action indicates that the parties were of relatively modest means. Mr. Friedlander was earning about $13,000, and Mrs. Friedlander apparently was not employed outside the home at the time of the divorce. By 1974 she was earning about $8,000 a year. Their only significant asset was a jointly held home on Lolly Lane in Stamford, and the parties indicated that their total equity was somewhere in the $22,000 range at that time. Yet the divorce has spawned an unbelievable amount of litigation, including this case.

The complaint at issue is dated March 11, 1989 and consists of one count containing twenty-eight paragraphs. The plaintiff, Henry Friedlander, who is representing himself pro se, described his complaint as a generic prima facie, common law tort count in his affidavit and documents in opposition to summary judgment.3 The plaintiff indicates that there are three specific causes of action in his complaint. The first he describes as "common law tort, prima facie tort comprising the elements of; intent; lack of justification; and injury or damages." The second tort is called "interference with contract." Reference is to the separation agreement of 1971. The third is characterized as "[t]he tort of the intentional infliction of emotional CT Page 6456 distress." A copy of the March 11, 1989 "substitute complaint" is attached to this decision as Appendix A.

The salient features of this complaint appear to be as follows; (i) that the defendant attorneys for Mrs. Friedlander prepared a judgment of dissolution which contained provisions different from those found in the separation agreement; (ii) that Mrs. Friedlander breached a number of articles of the separation agreement;4 (iii) that one provision of the agreement provided in part that the plaintiff be given "unlimited reasonable access" to the former marital home at 33 Lolly Lane, Stamford, and that Mrs. Friedlander's lawyers "aided" her in violating his rights, and "advised" her to breach the separation agreement; (iv) that the attorney defendants have sought counsel fees contrary to the separation agreement; (v) that Mrs. Friedlander's financial affidavits submitted in the 1968 divorce action and at other times were false; (vi) that all three defendants maliciously "induced" plaintiff's two sons to testify against him; (vii) that the separation agreement and judgment obligate the parties to sell the marital home but that the lawyers "influenced" Mrs. Friedlander not to do so; (viii) that the lawyer defendants have committed "approximately 85 improper or unethical acts" in the litigation between himself and his former wife; and (ix) that all of the above caused him physical and emotional damage, loss of his employment, inability to find other employment, and the expenses and lost time of litigation.

It will be noted that Attorney Kwartin, the law firm of Wofsey, Rosen, Kweskin and Kuriansky, and Mrs. Friedlander are all defendants in this action, but Mrs. Friedlander does not appear in the plaintiff's mind to be a prime defendant. In fact, at one point in oral argument Mr. Friedlander indicated that he would agree to drop Mrs. Friedlander as a defendant if she would then join him in the role of a plaintiff, and if so, he would be willing to share with her some of the money he anticipated recovering from the other defendants.

It is clear that the allegations against Mrs. Friedlander have been the subject of at least two prior lawsuits, CV 77 35570 and CV 80 48326. (See Appendices B and C respectively for the complaints in those two cases.) These cases were consolidated for trial and on April 30, 1985 Judge Emmett issued a thirty-seven page opinion which addressed the issues now pending before this court. She described those two actions in the following words; "[p]laintiff (Henry Friedlander) asserts that defendant (Claire Friedlander) is liable to him for interference with CT Page 6457 his relationship with his children, for both intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress, for wanton and reckless conduct, for vexatious litigation and malicious prosecution and for various breaches of the separation agreement between the parties. . ."

Judge Emmett pointed out, among other things, that the parties had their marriage dissolved on the uncontested calendar; that both parties had lawyers at the time they executed the separation agreement; that Mrs. Friedlander had not alienated the children from their father, but rather that they had a good relationship with Mr. Friedlander; that in the context of a marital breakup there was no cognizable cause of action in this state for intentional or negligent infliction of emotional distress; that there had been no malicious prosecution or vexatious suit by Claire Friedlander; and finally, that Mrs. Friedlander had not committed any breaches of the separation agreement, and accordingly that "defendant has committed no actionable wrongs."5

Judge Emmett's decision discusses the complaint by Mr. Friedlander that the separation agreement and the judgment were different in some respects, and points out that the judge who heard the case decided that certain provisions in the judgment should be amended. There was no appeal from this 1971 judgment. Whether Mrs. Friedlander had breached the separation agreement was heard in both cases. For instance, paragraph 7 of the 1980 case lists some 35 alleged breaches by the defendant including attempts to deny the plaintiff's access to the home. This issue of Mr. Friedlander's access to the former marital residence was also discussed by the Supreme Court in Friedlander v. Friedlander, 191 Conn. 81, 86

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Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 6454, 6 Conn. Super. Ct. 784, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friedlander-v-kwartin-no-cv85-0076515-jul-30-1991-connsuperct-1991.