Friezo v. Friezo
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Opinions
Opinion
ZARELLA, J.
The defendant, David Friezo, appeals from the judgment of the trial court2 dissolving his marriage to the plaintiff, Victoria Wood Friezo, and issuing certain financial orders following a determination that the parties’ prenuptial agreement was unenforceable. The defendant claims that the trial court improperly: (1) concluded that the parties’ prenuptial agreement was unenforceable; (2) presumed that the parties were entitled to an equal distribution of the marital property; (3) included in the defendant’s income $3,846,029 in management fees and $4,922,645 in performance fees associated with the defendant’s interest in certain hedge funds when no such income existed; (4) concluded that the defendant’s testimony lacked credibility; and (5) awarded the plaintiff $125,000 in attorney’s fees even though she received a substantial lump sum property award. We conclude that the prenuptial agreement was enforceable and, accordingly, reverse the judgment of the trial court.
[169]*169I
FACTS
The trial court made the following specific findings and conclusions. The plaintiff, a citizen of the United Kingdom with a high school education, began working in London, England, for Bankers Trust as a trader’s assistant and personal aide in 1994. “The plaintiff worked under the direction of the defendant3 . . . [and] [t]he parties began dating within one week of the plaintiffs new employment. Six or eight weeks later, the parties became sexually intimate. The plaintiff moved out of her mother’s house two weeks later to live with the defendant in his . . . apartment. . . . The parties maintained their finances separately. The defendant paid the shelter costs but did not provide any cash, credit card or bank account access to the plaintiff. . . . The plaintiff paid her own expenses. Prior to their marriage, the parties never had any conversation about the defendant’s income or assets. The plaintiff never inquired; the defendant never offered any information.4
“The parties traveled together to New York City in December, 1994, and stayed at the defendant’s apartment on 65th Street. They traveled to Florida in January, 1995, where the plaintiff met the defendant’s parents. For the next two years, the plaintiff flew with the defendant frequently on his business and personal trips to the [170]*170United States. ... In the spring of 1996, the plaintiff accompanied the defendant as he looked for a house to buy in Connecticut. The defendant [subsequently] purchased a house ... [in] Westport ....
“The plaintiff continued at Bankers Trust uneventfully for three years. As a trader’s assistant, she entered and recorded stock transactions that the traders had done. As a personal aide to the defendant, she booked his travel to Hong Kong and Tokyo, made hotel and dinner reservations, and helped plan his workday. She did not decide upon the defendant’s meetings, but she did organize them. She was responsible for keeping a log as to the defendant’s whereabouts and appointments. She submitted the defendant’s expense account receipts and bills to Bankers Trust. On at least one occasion, the defendant directed the plaintiff to photocopy certain of the defendant’s financial documents for him to give to his accountant.5 The plaintiff denies that she made any attempt to peruse the documents to determine their content. She did not know the defendant’s income or his net worth. . . .
“In the summer of 1997, the defendant asked the plaintiff to go to the United States to oversee renovations and furnishing of the Westport house. The plaintiff . . . readily agreed to his request . . . [and] took an unpaid leave of absence from the Bankers Trust job. In October, 1997, the plaintiff received notice that her employment at Bankers Trust was terminated because of the extraordinary length of her leave of absence. She continued to look after the renovations at the Westport house. Because her tourist visa allowed her to stay in the United States only ninety days at a time, the plaintiff traveled home to London every three months for a stay of a week before returning to Westport. ... As in Lon[171]*171don, the plaintiff provided all the domestic services and ran personal errands for the defendant. The defendant paid the mortgage and utility expenses at the Westport house. The plaintiff used her savings to pay all her other living expenses. . . .
“In 1998, the plaintiff discovered that she was entering the [United States] on a tourist visa for the last time. The . . . trip to Westport [in the summer of 1998] would be her last unless her immigration status changed. The parties went together to see an immigration lawyer in August, 1998. The plaintiffs marriage to an American citizen would change her immigration status and allow her to stay in the United States. The defendant proposed marriage to the plaintiff on August 20, 1998. The parties needed to marry by the latter part of November, 1998, in order for the plaintiff to remain legally in the United States. Shortly after proposing marriage, the defendant informed the plaintiff that a premarital agreement would be necessary. The plaintiff was not familiar with the concept of a premarital agreement but expressed a willingness to sign one if that is what the defendant wished. The parties set Friday, November 6, 1998, as the wedding date. The plaintiff arranged for a justice of the peace to preside.
“The plaintiff heard nothing more about the possible premarital agreement until Monday, November 2.6 At that time, the defendant informed the plaintiff that the wedding could not take place on November 6 because the premarital agreement was not ready. There was no [172]*172discussion between the parties about possible terms of a premarital agreement. The plaintiff contacted the justice of the peace to set a new wedding date of November 13.7
“Both parties were in New York City at the defendant’s apartment on Thursday evening, November 5, when the defendant handed . . . the plaintiff a facsimile copy of a draft premarital agreement .... He told her to look it over and get it signed.”
The record also reveals the following undisputed facts. The draft agreement consisted of nineteen articles. Article one, entitled “Acknowledgment of Present Situation: Changes in Circumstances,” included the following language: “Each party acknowledges for himself or herself that both parties have substantial assets and that each would be able to adequately support himself or herself.” Articles ten and eleven, entitled “Husband’s Representations”8 and “Wife’s Represent[173]*173ations,”9 respectively, contained nearly identical language describing each party’s assets and liabilities by reference to schedules A and B, and each party’s gross income in 1997, although the spaces provided for the statements of income were not filled in. Articles ten and eleven further provided that each party acknowledged that he or she had examined the assets and liabilities set forth in the schedule of the other party and clearly understood and consented to all of the agreement’s terms. See footnotes 8 and 9 of this opinion. Schedules A and B were attached to the draft agreement but, as in the case of the parties’ incomes, had not yet been filled in.
[174]
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Opinion
ZARELLA, J.
The defendant, David Friezo, appeals from the judgment of the trial court2 dissolving his marriage to the plaintiff, Victoria Wood Friezo, and issuing certain financial orders following a determination that the parties’ prenuptial agreement was unenforceable. The defendant claims that the trial court improperly: (1) concluded that the parties’ prenuptial agreement was unenforceable; (2) presumed that the parties were entitled to an equal distribution of the marital property; (3) included in the defendant’s income $3,846,029 in management fees and $4,922,645 in performance fees associated with the defendant’s interest in certain hedge funds when no such income existed; (4) concluded that the defendant’s testimony lacked credibility; and (5) awarded the plaintiff $125,000 in attorney’s fees even though she received a substantial lump sum property award. We conclude that the prenuptial agreement was enforceable and, accordingly, reverse the judgment of the trial court.
[169]*169I
FACTS
The trial court made the following specific findings and conclusions. The plaintiff, a citizen of the United Kingdom with a high school education, began working in London, England, for Bankers Trust as a trader’s assistant and personal aide in 1994. “The plaintiff worked under the direction of the defendant3 . . . [and] [t]he parties began dating within one week of the plaintiffs new employment. Six or eight weeks later, the parties became sexually intimate. The plaintiff moved out of her mother’s house two weeks later to live with the defendant in his . . . apartment. . . . The parties maintained their finances separately. The defendant paid the shelter costs but did not provide any cash, credit card or bank account access to the plaintiff. . . . The plaintiff paid her own expenses. Prior to their marriage, the parties never had any conversation about the defendant’s income or assets. The plaintiff never inquired; the defendant never offered any information.4
“The parties traveled together to New York City in December, 1994, and stayed at the defendant’s apartment on 65th Street. They traveled to Florida in January, 1995, where the plaintiff met the defendant’s parents. For the next two years, the plaintiff flew with the defendant frequently on his business and personal trips to the [170]*170United States. ... In the spring of 1996, the plaintiff accompanied the defendant as he looked for a house to buy in Connecticut. The defendant [subsequently] purchased a house ... [in] Westport ....
“The plaintiff continued at Bankers Trust uneventfully for three years. As a trader’s assistant, she entered and recorded stock transactions that the traders had done. As a personal aide to the defendant, she booked his travel to Hong Kong and Tokyo, made hotel and dinner reservations, and helped plan his workday. She did not decide upon the defendant’s meetings, but she did organize them. She was responsible for keeping a log as to the defendant’s whereabouts and appointments. She submitted the defendant’s expense account receipts and bills to Bankers Trust. On at least one occasion, the defendant directed the plaintiff to photocopy certain of the defendant’s financial documents for him to give to his accountant.5 The plaintiff denies that she made any attempt to peruse the documents to determine their content. She did not know the defendant’s income or his net worth. . . .
“In the summer of 1997, the defendant asked the plaintiff to go to the United States to oversee renovations and furnishing of the Westport house. The plaintiff . . . readily agreed to his request . . . [and] took an unpaid leave of absence from the Bankers Trust job. In October, 1997, the plaintiff received notice that her employment at Bankers Trust was terminated because of the extraordinary length of her leave of absence. She continued to look after the renovations at the Westport house. Because her tourist visa allowed her to stay in the United States only ninety days at a time, the plaintiff traveled home to London every three months for a stay of a week before returning to Westport. ... As in Lon[171]*171don, the plaintiff provided all the domestic services and ran personal errands for the defendant. The defendant paid the mortgage and utility expenses at the Westport house. The plaintiff used her savings to pay all her other living expenses. . . .
“In 1998, the plaintiff discovered that she was entering the [United States] on a tourist visa for the last time. The . . . trip to Westport [in the summer of 1998] would be her last unless her immigration status changed. The parties went together to see an immigration lawyer in August, 1998. The plaintiffs marriage to an American citizen would change her immigration status and allow her to stay in the United States. The defendant proposed marriage to the plaintiff on August 20, 1998. The parties needed to marry by the latter part of November, 1998, in order for the plaintiff to remain legally in the United States. Shortly after proposing marriage, the defendant informed the plaintiff that a premarital agreement would be necessary. The plaintiff was not familiar with the concept of a premarital agreement but expressed a willingness to sign one if that is what the defendant wished. The parties set Friday, November 6, 1998, as the wedding date. The plaintiff arranged for a justice of the peace to preside.
“The plaintiff heard nothing more about the possible premarital agreement until Monday, November 2.6 At that time, the defendant informed the plaintiff that the wedding could not take place on November 6 because the premarital agreement was not ready. There was no [172]*172discussion between the parties about possible terms of a premarital agreement. The plaintiff contacted the justice of the peace to set a new wedding date of November 13.7
“Both parties were in New York City at the defendant’s apartment on Thursday evening, November 5, when the defendant handed . . . the plaintiff a facsimile copy of a draft premarital agreement .... He told her to look it over and get it signed.”
The record also reveals the following undisputed facts. The draft agreement consisted of nineteen articles. Article one, entitled “Acknowledgment of Present Situation: Changes in Circumstances,” included the following language: “Each party acknowledges for himself or herself that both parties have substantial assets and that each would be able to adequately support himself or herself.” Articles ten and eleven, entitled “Husband’s Representations”8 and “Wife’s Represent[173]*173ations,”9 respectively, contained nearly identical language describing each party’s assets and liabilities by reference to schedules A and B, and each party’s gross income in 1997, although the spaces provided for the statements of income were not filled in. Articles ten and eleven further provided that each party acknowledged that he or she had examined the assets and liabilities set forth in the schedule of the other party and clearly understood and consented to all of the agreement’s terms. See footnotes 8 and 9 of this opinion. Schedules A and B were attached to the draft agreement but, as in the case of the parties’ incomes, had not yet been filled in.
[174]*174The plaintiff read the draft agreement over the weekend of November 7 and 8, and made handwritten notes on seven of its twenty-one pages. The notes suggested that she had read the agreement carefully.10 Among the words that she underlined in article six, which concerned waiver and release of her future rights and claims against the defendant,11 were “waives,” “releases,” “rights,” “claims,” “alimony” and “maintenance . . . .” The plaintiff also completed schedule B, noting that she had no liabilities and that her assets consisted of a “checking account” valued at $4000, a “savings account” valued at $11,000, “shares” valued at $4000, and an “endowment” valued at $3000, for a total asset value of $22,000. The plaintiff made no notations or marks on the draft agreement indicating that she had any questions or concerns regarding article ten, article eleven or schedule A.
[175]*175When the defendant handed the draft agreement to the plaintiff on November 5, he also told her that his sister-in-law, Attorney Kristen A. Friezo, could recommend an attorney with whom the plaintiff might wish to consult. The plaintiff, who was on good terms with Kristen Friezo, made an appointment to go to her New York City law firm on Tuesday, November 10.12 Upon the plaintiffs arrival for her appointment, Kristen Friezo introduced her to another associate in the law firm, Attorney Eamonn F. Foley.
Foley first asked the plaintiff to sign a conflict of interest waiver, which she did. The two then met for approximately one-half hour. Because Foley already had a copy of the draft, the plaintiff did not show him her copy.13 When Foley asked the plaintiff if she had any questions, she posed the questions that had come to mind during her weekend review of the draft. Foley stated that her points were well taken and that he would look into them. During the consultation, Foley also made notes on his own copy of the draft and asked the plaintiff to provide him with a list of her assets.
According to the plaintiff, Foley did not show or discuss with her a facsimile copy of the defendant’s assets and liabilities that the defendant’s attorney had sent to him on Friday, November 6, one day after the defendant presented the draft to the plaintiff and suggested that she seek legal advice. The document listed assets with a total value of $6,576,000. These assets included two mutual fund/money market accounts, 2541 shares of common stock in Softime, Inc., the West-[176]*176port property, a Florida property, an automobile, a motorcycle, a boat, a Merrill Lynch employee stock purchase plan, three Bankers Trust employee plans, three Bankers Trust equity participation plans and some United States savings bonds, all of which were identified by account number, where applicable, and valued individually. The only liability indicated was a tax adjustment on the three Bankers Trust equity participation plans. The list of the defendant’s assets and liabilities faxed to Foley on November 6 ultimately was incorporated, without revision, into schedule A of the final agreement.14
In describing her meeting with Foley, the plaintiff testified that Foley did not ask her whether she understood the draft and did not voluntarily explain any portions of the draft that she did not bring up. She admitted, however, that she understood the meaning of a release of rights and claims and that she knew that the purpose of the agreement was to protect the defendant’s assets in the event of a divorce. She also testified that she had not discussed the defendant’s income or assets with Foley at any time during their meeting and that it did not matter to her how much money the defendant made either prior to or following their marriage.
[177]*177The plaintiff did not meet with Foley after November 10, but stated that they most likely had another conversation sometime before she signed the agreement, although she did not recall exactly when.15 Thereafter, Foley faxed his notes regarding the plaintiffs concerns and her list of assets to the defendant’s attorney. The plaintiff did not discuss the agreement with the defendant during this period because he was out of the country on business between Sunday, November 8, and Wednesday, November 11.
On November 12, twenty-four hours before the wedding, the parties met in the offices of the defendant’s attorney and signed the final agreement. The defendant had faxed the agreement in its final form to Foley earlier that day with no schedules attached. The agreement presented to the plaintiff for signature, however, contained all of the financial information absent from the original draft. This included figures indicating the parties’ respective annual incomes and the completed schedules A and B. The plaintiff testified that this was the first time that she had seen a statement of the defendant’s assets and liabilities and a figure representing the defendant’s income.
The trial court determined that the plaintiff had reviewed the final agreement in a separate room for at least twenty minutes prior to its signing, during which time she “looked at” schedule A and the income provisions.16 The agreement in its final form contained most [178]*178of the changes that she had requested during her meeting with Foley two days earlier.17 Thereafter, both parties signed and initialed the agreement and the attached schedules A and B. Foley did not charge the plaintiff for his services but, following the parties’ wedding, the defendant directed the plaintiff to send Foley two bottles of wine as a gesture of gratitude, which the plaintiff did. The defendant paid his own attorney $5000.
The parties married on November 13, 1998. On July 2, 2002, the plaintiff filed for dissolution, claiming an irretrievable breakdown of the marriage. The plaintiff requested equitable distribution of the parties’ assets pursuant to General Statutes § 46b-81, alimony, child support, joint legal custody of the parties’ minor child, physical custody of the minor child and other relief. The defendant filed an answer and a cross complaint, and the trial court heard testimony and received exhibits during a nine day trial in July and August, 2004. Enforceability of the agreement was among the issues to be decided by the court.
In its memorandum of decision dated August 27,2004, the trial court concluded that the parties’ premarital agreement was unenforceable because the plaintiff had met her burden of proving lack of adequate financial disclosure by the defendant and lack of a reasonable opportunity to consult with independent counsel. The [179]*179court determined that the plaintiff did not have sufficient time to examine the agreement and did not have actual knowledge regarding the defendant’s income or the value of his assets. The court also concluded that Foley had not represented her interests properly or provided her with adequate assistance in understanding the agreement’s provisions.18 Thereafter, the court [180]*180relied in part on the net worth of the defendant, as represented in schedule A, in fashioning its financial orders.
II
STANDARD OF REVIEW
The trial court concluded that the parties’ prenuptial agreement was unenforceable because the defendant did not provide the plaintiff with a “fair and reasonable” disclosure of the amount, character and value of his property, financial obligations and income, and because the plaintiff was not afforded a reasonable opportunity to consult with independent counsel. See General Statutes § 46b-36g (a) (3) and (4). In reviewing these conclusions, we first must determine the meaning of “fair and reasonable” disclosure, a matter of statutory interpretation. It is well established that statutory interpretation involves a question of law over which we exercise plenary review. E.g., Parrot v. Guardian Life Ins. Co. of America, 273 Conn. 12, 18, 866 A.2d 1273 (2005). We then must determine whether the trial court properly concluded that the agreement was unenforceable. This requires application of the legal standards described in the statute, namely, “fair and reasonable” financial disclosure and “opportunity to consult with independent counsel,” to the underlying historical facts. General Statutes § 46b-36g (a) (3) and (4). Accordingly, the defendant’s claim that the agreement was enforceable is a mixed question of fact and law also subject to our plenary review. See Copas v. Commissioner of Correc[181]*181tion, 234 Conn. 139, 152-53, 662 A.2d 718 (1995) (“Historical facts constitute a recital of external events and the credibility of their narrators. So-called mixed questions of fact and law, which require the application of a legal standard to the historical-fact determinations, are not facts in this sense. . . . [Such questions require] plenary review by this court unfettered by the clearly erroneous standard.” [Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.]); see also Winchester v. McCue, 91 Conn. App. 721, 726, 882 A.2d 143 (claim that prenuptial agreement was unenforceable because both parties failed to disclose income prior to signing presented “mixed question of law and fact [subject] to . . . plenary review”), cert. denied, 276 Conn. 922, 888 A.2d 91 (2005). When legal conclusions of the trial court are challenged on appeal, “we must decide whether [those] . . . conclusions are legally and logically correct and find support in the facts that appear in the record.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Colon, 272 Conn. 106, 282, 864 A.2d 666 (2004), cert. denied, 546 U.S. 848, 126 S. Ct. 102, 163 L. Ed. 2d 116 (2005).
Ill
“FAIR AND REASONABLE” DISCLOSURE19
The principles that govern statutory construction are well established. “When construing a statute, [o]ur fundamental objective is to ascertain and give effect to the apparent intent of the legislature. ... In other words, we seek to determine, in a reasoned manner, the meaning of the statutory language as applied to the facts of [the] case, including the question of whether the [182]*182language actually does apply. ... In seeking to determine that meaning, General Statutes § l-2z directs us first to consider the text of the statute itself and its relationship to other statutes. If, after examining such text and considering such relationship, the meaning of such text is plain and unambiguous and does not yield absurd or unworkable results, extratextual evidence of the meaning of the statute shall not be considered. . . . When a statute is not plain and unambiguous, we also look for interpretive guidance to the legislative history and circumstances surrounding its enactment, to the legislative policy it was designed to implement, and to its relationship to existing legislation and common law principles governing the same general subject matter . . . .” (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Cogan v. Manhattan Auto Financial Corp., 276 Conn. 1, 7, 882 A.2d 597 (2005).
Prenuptial agreements in Connecticut have been governed since October 1,1995, by the Connecticut Premarital Agreement Act, General Statutes § 46b-36a et seq. General Statutes § 46b-36g (a) provides: “A premarital agreement or amendment shall not be enforceable if the party against whom enforcement is sought proves that: (1) Such party did not execute the agreement voluntarily; or (2) [t]he agreement was unconscionable when it was executed or when enforcement is sought; or (3) [b]efore execution of the agreement, such party was not provided a fair and reasonable disclosure of the amount, character and value of property, financial obligations and income of the other party; or (4) [s]uch party was not afforded a reasonable opportunity to consult with independent counsel.”
Although § 46b-36g does not expressly define “fair and reasonable” financial disclosure, a plain reading of the statute indicates that the term was intended to be understood in the context of the phrase that directly follows, namely, “the amount, character and value of [183]*183property, financial obligations and income of the other party . . . .” General Statutes § 46b-36g (a) (3). Accordingly, “fair and reasonable” disclosure refers to the nature, extent and accuracy of the information to be disclosed, and not to extraneous factors such as the timing of the disclosure.20 This conclusion is consistent with the case law of other jurisdictions that have adopted similar requirements. See, e.g., Randolph v. Randolph, 937 S.W.2d 815, 821 (Tenn. 1996) (“full and fair” financial disclosure refers to requirement that each party reveal extent and nature of assets, liabilities and income to other party prior to execution of agreement). Notably, there is no requirement in the statute that written disclosures be appended to the agreement. In the absence of further guidance as to what constitutes “fair and reasonable” disclosure or how such a disclosure should be made, however, it is necessary to look beyond the statute to extratextual sources, beginning with the legislative history.
During the committee hearings that preceded legislative debate on the proposed bill,21 Edith F. McClure, an attorney who represented the family law section of the Connecticut Bar Association and who was a member of the committee that drafted the act, explained that the committee had been influenced by three things; see generally Conn. Joint Standing Committee Hearings, Judiciary, Pt. 7, 1995 Sess., pp. 2237, 2492-93; the first being a 1980 decision of this court, McHugh v. McHugh, 181 Conn. 482, 436 A.2d 8 (1980), in which we addressed whether a prenuptial agreement was enforceable in a dispute involving the disposition of the family residence. Id., 484-85; see Conn. Joint Standing Committee Hearings, supra, p. 2492. McClure noted that, although McHugh was the principal Connecticut decision on pre[184]*184nuptial agreements, it was limited in scope and did not address many other important issues, such as “assets . . . and liabilities brought into the marriage . . . .” Conn. Joint Standing Committee Hearings, supra, pp. 2492-93. McClure also explained that the committee had relied on the Uniform Premarital Agreement Act (uniform act) in drafting the statute but had departed from certain of the uniform act’s provisions in light of “the Connecticut experience . . . .” Id., p. 2493. For example, the proposed bill “allow[ed] for an individual to contest an agreement if that individual [was] not provided with fair and reasonable financial disclosure and did not waive that right or have independent knowledge.”22 Id. McClure also revealed that the committee had investigated the statutes and judicial decisions of other jurisdictions and that an article by Professor Judith T. Younger; see generally J. Younger, “Perspectives on Antenuptial Agreements,” 40 Rutgers L. Rev. 1059 (1988); had been “particularly helpful in framing recommendations for changes in the [u]niform [a]ct.” Conn. Joint Standing Committee Hearings, supra, p. 2493. In her article, Younger conducted an extensive review of existing law and concluded that, “[i]n every case, disclosure should be enough to give each contracting party a clear idea of the other’s property and resources. The best device for proving disclosure is to [185]*185attach schedules of assets and income to the agreement itself. A mere recital of disclosure in the agreement does not preclude a showing that there was none in fact.” J. Younger, supra, 1080.
The bill initially required the party against whom enforcement is sought to prove not only that he or she was not provided a “fair and reasonable disclosure of the amount, character and value of property, financial obligations and income of the other party,” but that he or she “[d]id not voluntarily and expressly waive, in writing, any right to disclosure of the property, financial obligations and income of the other party beyond the disclosure provided” and “[d]id not have, or reasonably could not have had, an adequate knowledge of the property, financial obligations and income of the other party, and of the legal rights which that party would relinquish under the agreement . . . .” Substitute House Bill No. 6932, § 6 (1995 Sess.). An amendment, however, eliminated the second and third requirements. See Substitute House Bill No. 6932, § 6 (1995 Sess.), as amended by House Amendment Schedule A. The amendment thus made it easier to prove lack of a “fair and reasonable” financial disclosure and demonstrated the legislature’s intent that the disclosure requirement focus on the information to be disclosed rather than on the party to whom disclosure is made.
Although the legislative history is helpful in understanding the drafters’ general intent, it does not provide a definitive answer to the question of what constitutes “fair and reasonable” disclosure. It is therefore necessary to review McHugh,
In McHugh, this court articulated the principle that, because the parties to a prenuptial agreement stand in a relationship of mutual confidence, “[t]he duty of each party to disclose the amount, character, and value of individually owned property, absent the other’s independent knowledge of the same, is an essential prerequisite to a valid antenuptial agreement containing a waiver of property rights. . . . The burden is not on either party to inquire, but on each to inform, for it is only by requiring full disclosure of the amount, character, and value of the parties’ respective assets that courts can ensure intelligent waiver of the statutory rights involved.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) McHugh v. McHugh, supra, 181 Conn. 486-87. McHugh thus makes three significant points. First, the purpose of disclosure is to ensure that each party has sufficient knowledge of the other party’s financial circumstances to understand the nature of the legal rights being waived.24 See id. In other words, a party cannot know what is being waived unless he or she is privy to all of the relevant facts, in particular, [187]*187the financial status of the other party. The term “fair and reasonable” thus refers to the substance of a party’s disclosure rather than to its timing. This principle is consistent with the language of § 46b-36g, as we previously discussed. Second, financial disclosure in Connecticut must be understood as a burden to inform borne solely by the disclosing party. Id. Accordingly, the court’s examination of whether proper disclosure has been made must focus on the actions of the disclosing party rather than on the party to whom disclosure is made. See id. Third, “full” financial disclosure is required in a prenuptial agreement only if the party to whom disclosure is made does not have independent knowledge of the other party’s financial circumstances. See id., 486.
McHugh is the only Connecticut case that has examined, even tangentially, the meaning of fair and reasonable disclosure.25 We therefore turn to the case law of [188]*188other jurisdictions that have enacted similar provisions based on the uniform act. See, e.g., Connecticut National Bank v. Giacomi, 233 Conn. 304, 326, 659 A.2d 1166 (1995) (“we . . . may find guidance in precedent from other states that have adopted . . . relevant provisions of [a] [u]niform [a]ct”); Hill v. Blake, 186 Conn. 404, 408, 441 A.2d 841 (1982) (“[when an] act is a uniform law, decisions from other states are valuable for the interpretation of its provisions”); see also Jacobs v. Healey Ford-Subaru, Inc., 231 Conn. 707, 719-21, 652 A.2d 496 (1995) (considering interpretations of analogous provisions of article nine of Uniform Commercial Code adopted by other states).
Our review of this case law indicates that when a party’s independent knowledge is insufficient and the other party must disclose financial information in a prenuptial agreement, the extent of the required disclosure depends on how the court views the relationship. Courts in the majority of jurisdictions regard the parties as involved in a confidential relationship of mutual trust that demands the exercise of the highest degree of good faith, candor and sincerity in all matters bearing on the proposed agreement. See, e.g., In re Marriage of Drag, 326 Ill. App. 3d 1051, 1056, 762 N.E.2d 1111 (2002); Cannon v. Cannon, 384 Md. 537, 556, 570-71, 865 A.2d 563 (2005); Rosenberg v. Lipnick, 377 Mass. 666, 670, 389 N.E.2d 385 (1979); Wiley v. Iverson, 295 Mont. 511, 517, 985 P.2d 1176 (1999); In re Estate of Hollett, 150 N.H. 39, 42-43, 834 A.2d 348 (2003); Tiryakian v. Tiryakian, 91 N.C. App. 128, 132, 370 S.E.2d 852 (1988); Fletcher v. Fletcher, 68 Ohio St. 3d 464, 466, 628 N.E.2d 1343 (1994); Griffin v. Griffin, 94 P.3d 96, 99-100 (Okla. App. 2004); Randolph v. Randolph, supra, 937 S.W.2d [189]*189821; Carpenter v. Carpenter, 19 Va. App. 147, 152, 449 S.E.2d 502 (1994); Pajak v. Pajak, 182 W. Va. 28, 33, 385 S.E.2d 384 (1989). In these jurisdictions, “[t]he burden is not on either party to inquire, but on each to inform . . . .” Rosenberg v. Lipnick, supra, 670; accord DeLorean v. DeLorean, 211 N.J. Super. 432, 440, 511 A.2d 1257 (1986); see also Denison v. Dawes, 121 Me. 402, 404, 117 A. 314 (1922); Hartz v. Hartz, 248 Md. 47, 56-57, 234 A.2d 865 (1967); In re Estate of Kaufmann, 404 Pa. 131, 136, 171 A.2d 48 (1961).
Jurisdictions that treat the parties as involved in an arm’s-length relationship “on the theory that parties who are not yet married are not presumed to share a confidential relationship”; (internal quotation marks omitted) DeLorean v. DeLorean, supra, 211 N.J. Super. 441, quoting In re Marriage of Dawley, 17 Cal. 3d 342, 355, 551 P.2d 323, 131 Cal. Rptr. 3 (1976); impose a duty on each spouse to inquire and investigate the financial condition of the other, and, consequently, the disclosure requirement is less demanding. DeLorean v. DeLorean, supra, 438;26 see, e.g., In re Marriage of Bonds, 24 Cal. 4th 1, 27, 5 P.3d 815, 99 Cal. Rptr. 2d 252 (2000); Eckstein v. Eckstein, 129 App. Div. 2d 552, 553, 514 N.Y.S.2d 47 (1987) . Connecticut regards the parties to a prenuptial agreement as involved in a confidential relationship. See McHugh v. McHugh, supra, 181 Conn. 486-87. Accordingly, we must apply the more stringent standard.
The overwhelming majority of jurisdictions that apply this standard do not require financial disclosure to be exact or precise. See, e.g., Nanini v. Nanini, 166 Ariz. 287, 290, 802 P.2d 438 (App. 1990) (applying Illinois law and concluding that “exact dollar value” of parties’ property need not be shown at time of execution of [190]*190agreement); In re Estate of Lopata, 641 P.2d 952, 955 (Colo. 1982) (“Fair disclosure is not synonymous with detailed disclosure such as a financial statement of net worth and income. The mere fact that detailed disclosure was not made will not necessarily be sufficient to set aside an otherwise properly executed agreement.”); In re Estate of Peterson, 221 Neb. 792, 798, 381 N.W.2d 109 (1986) (“[f]air disclosure contemplates that each spouse should be given information, of a general and approximate nature, concerning the net worth of the other” [internal quotation marks omitted]); Simeone v. Simeone, 525 Pa. 392, 403, 581 A.2d 162 (1990) (“disclosure need not be exact, so long as it is ‘full and fair’ ”); Sanford v. Sanford, 694 N.W.2d 283, 294-95 (S.D. 2005) (“It is sufficient if the prospective spouse can be said to have had adequate knowledge of the nature and extent of the other party’s property. ... It is not necessary ... for a spouse to provide a detailed and exact valuation of his or her net worth .... It is sufficient for a spouse to provide, within the best of his or her abilities, a list of assets and liabilities with approximate valuations. The listing must be sufficiently precise to give the other spouse a reasonable approximation of the magnitude of the other spouse’s net worth.” [Citations omitted; emphasis added; internal quotation marks omitted.]); Randolph v. Randolph, supra, 937 S.W.2d 821 (Although “full and fair” disclosure “need not reveal precisely every asset owned by an individual spouse, at a minimum, full and fair disclosure requires that each contracting party be given a clear idea of the nature, extent, and value of the other party’s property and resources. . . . Though not required, a fairly simple and effective method of proving disclosure is to attach a net worth schedule of assets, liabilities, and income to the agreement itself.” [Citation omitted.]); Wilson v. Moore, 929 S.W.2d 367, 371 (Tenn. App. 1996) (“[I]n the absence of fraud or overreaching, the inadvertent [191]*191failure to disclose an asset or the unintentional undervaluation of an asset will not invalidate a prenuptial agreement as long as the disclosure that was made provides an essentially accurate understanding of the party’s financial holdings. The disclosure will be deemed adequate if it imparts an accurate understanding of the nature and extent of a person’s property interests.”); Pajak v. Pajak, supra, 182 W. Va. 32 (“for a pre-nuptial agreement to be valid, it is not necessary that both parties execute a detailed, written financial statement such as is required by a bank before making a loan”). See generally annot., “Failure to Disclose Extent of Value of Property Owned As Ground for Avoiding Premarital Contract,” 3 A.L.R.5th 394, 413-17, § 2 [a] (1992). We agree with the majority of jurisdictions that a fair and reasonable financial disclosure requires each contracting party to provide the other with a general approximation of their income, assets and liabilities, and that a written schedule appended to the agreement itself, although not absolutely necessary, is the most effective method of satisfying the statutory obligation in most circumstances.
In the present case, the defendant’s disclosure was more than adequate to ensure that the plaintiff would be able to make an intelligent waiver of her statutory rights. See McHugh v. McHugh, supra, 181 Conn. 486-87. Article ten of the agreement provided that the defendant’s gross income from all sources for 1997, excluding capital gains, was $2,300,000. In addition, schedule A set forth a list of the defendant’s assets and liabilities, most of which were valued individually, for a total net worth of $6,576,000. These assets, as we previously noted, included money market accounts, mutual funds, checking accounts, investments, real and personal property, stocks, various employee and equity participation plans, United States savings bonds, and four fre[192]*192quent flier accounts, all identified by account numbers, where applicable.
Moreover, the plaintiff acknowledged in article eleven of the agreement that she had examined the list of assets and liabilities provided in schedule A and clearly understood and consented to all of the agreement’s terms. See footnote 9 of this opinion. Significantly, the plaintiff did not allege at any time during the proceedings, nor did the court conclude, that the defendant’s disclosure was inaccurate or incomplete. Instead, the court, in effect, validated the defendant’s disclosure by relying in part on the statement of net worth provided in schedule A when calculating its financial orders. Thus, the defendant’s disclosure would have been adequate even under the standard employed in New Jersey, which requires that a written list of assets and income be appended to the prenuptial agreement. See DeLorean v. DeLorean, supra, 211 N.J. Super. 438 (“we can ascertain with complete certainty whether there was a full and complete disclosure only by requiring a written list of assets and income [to] be attached to the [ante]nuptial agreement”). We therefore conclude that the defendant’s disclosure was “fair and reasonable” because it provided the plaintiff with an accurate representation, in writing, of his income and financial assets at the time the agreement was executed.
The trial court determined that the defendant’s disclosure failed to comply with § 46b-36g because the plaintiff lacked sufficient financial experience to understand the information disclosed. This conclusion is incompatible with McHugh and the statute’s legislative history. When the burden is on each party to inform, as established in McHugh, the test for adequate disclosure need not take into account or depend on the capacity of the receiving party to understand or digest the information received. To adopt such a test would place an additional burden on each party to assess the intelligence and [193]*193financial experience of the other, a subjective determination simply not contemplated in the statute or in the case law of this or other jurisdictions. Accordingly, although the plaintiffs financial inexperience may be relevant in assessing, for example, whether the agreement was substantively fair; see, e.g., Banks v. Evans, 347 Ark. 383, 388-89, 64 S.W.3d 746 (2002); unconscionable; see, e.g., Mallen v. Mallen, 280 Ga. 43, 47, 622 S.E.2d 812 (2005); or voluntary; see, e.g., DeLorean v. DeLorean, supra, 211 N.J. Super. 436; it is not relevant in determining whether the parties made a “fair and reasonable” disclosure of their respective financial circumstances. The subsequent legislative history of the statute, which included the removal of a provision that would have required the party against whom enforcement is sought to prove that he or she did not have adequate knowledge of the other party’s financial status, supports this conclusion. The plaintiffs financial experience, or alleged lack thereof, thus has no bearing on whether the defendant made a fair and reasonable disclosure of his financial circumstances.
IV
VOLUNTARY EXECUTION OF THE AGREEMENT
The trial court further concluded that the defendant had failed to comply with the disclosure requirement because the plaintiff had insufficient time to review the final agreement and the disclosures contained therein. We treat this issue separately because such a conclusion is lacking in legal support and reflects a misunderstanding of the law. It is well established that the amount of time available to review a prenuptial agreement is relevant in assessing whether the agreement was voluntary or signed under duress, but not in determining whether the patties made a “fair and reasonable” disclosure of their financial circumstances. See, e.g., 41 Am. Jur. 2d 102, Husband and Wife § 101 [194]*194(2005) (“[c]ourts have . . . recognized that under the heightened scrutiny afforded to prenuptial agreements, the timing of the agreement is of paramount importance in assessing whether it was voluntary” [emphasis added]); 2 A. Lindey & L. Parley, Separation Agreements and Antenuptial Contracts (2d Ed. 2006) § 110.65 [2], p. 110-54 (“[t]he most common circumstances raised as creating the duress [are] where the party attacking the agreement was given it to sign just before the wedding”); see also In re Marriage of Bonds, supra, 24 Cal. 4th 32 (agreement voluntary despite temporal proximity of wedding and execution of agreement); Hjortaas v. McCabe, 656 So. 2d 168, 170 (Fla. App.) (timing indicated signing of agreement not voluntary and product of duress), review denied, 662 So. 2d 342 (Fla. 1995); In re Marriage of Maifield, No. 03-0326, 2004 WL 61108, *2 (Iowa App. January 14, 2004) (agreement not voluntary when presented to wife on eve of wedding); Howell v. Landry, 96 N.C. App. 516, 528-29, 386 S.E.2d 610 (1989) (brevity of time to consider agreement, by itself, was insufficient to establish duress), review denied, 326 N.C. 482, 392 S.E.2d 90 (1990). The Connecticut legislature, like many other jurisdictions, expressly adopted this principle when it included an entirely separate provision in the statute providing that an agreement shall not be enforceable if the party against whom enforcement is sought establishes that he or she did not execute the agreement voluntarily. General Statutes § 46b-36g (a) (1). If the legislature had intended that the timing of a party’s disclosure be considered in determining whether that disclosure was fair and reasonable, there would have been no reason to make involuntary execution of the agreement a separate and distinct ground for invalidation. Consequently, whether the plaintiff had sufficient time to review and evaluate the defendant’s financial disclosure reveals nothing about whether the disclosure was fair and reasonable.
[195]*195We nevertheless consider the disclosure’s timing because the trial court’s memorandum of decision reasonably can be construed as concluding that the agreement was unenforceable because it was not executed by the plaintiff knowingly and voluntarily. We begin with the decision of the trial court. In reaching its conclusion, the court found that “the plaintiff did not have any financial disclosure prior to the meeting in the offices of the defendant’s attorneys when she executed the premarital agreement.” We disagree.
The trial court disregarded a crucial piece of evidence in the record pertaining to this issue, namely, the copy of schedule A listing the defendant’s assets and liabilities that was faxed to Foley by the defendant’s attorney six days before the agreement was executed. Although there is no evidence in the record as to why Foley did not show this information to the plaintiff during their meeting on November 10, the same trial judge observed in Dornemann v. Dornemann, 48 Conn. Sup. 502, 850 A.2d 273 (2004), with respect to a claim alleging insufficient financial disclosure, that “[t]he knowledge and admissions of an attorney are imputed to his client”; (internal quotation marks omitted) id., 511, quoting Lafayette Bank & Trust Co. v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 177 Conn. 137, 140, 411 A.2d 937 (1979); and, therefore, the plaintiff in that case, who had not seen the relevant financial documents, possessed “the imputed knowledge of her attorney as to the defendant’s finances . . . .” Dornemann v. Dornemann, supra, 511; see also Lebowitz v. McPike, 157 Conn. 235, 242, 253 A.2d 1 (1968); Sweeney v. Pratt, 70 Conn. 274, 282, 39 A. 182 (1898). Consequently, in the present case, as in Dornemann, the plaintiff possessed the imputed knowledge of her attorney regarding the contents of schedule A before she executed the agreement.
There appear to be only two reasons why the trial court did not make a factual finding regarding Foley’s [196]*196prior knowledge of schedule A, these being the court’s expressed conviction that Foley was “incredibly incompetent in his representation of the plaintiff or he was not, in fact, representing her at all.” We believe that the latter is the more likely explanation because incompetence is an insufficient reason to avoid imputing knowledge to the plaintiff, who could have sought appropriate legal redress by filing a malpractice claim against Foley but did not do so. Moreover, various statements in the trial court’s opinion suggest that the court regarded Foley’s conduct as rising to the level of fraud. At different times in its analysis, the court stated that (1) the plaintiff “did not know that she was being set up,” (2) the attorneys at Foley’s law firm had “a clear conflict of interest” in their representation of the plaintiff, even though the plaintiff executed documents waiving any conflict of interest, (3) the plaintiff “did not have the sophistication to realize what was going on,” and (4) “the most telling indication of Foley’s true loyalties and obligations in connection with his lack of advice to the plaintiff was his failure to secure any retainer agreement, exact a consultation fee or tender any bill for services.” The court’s conclusions regarding fraud, however, are not supported by facts that meet the clear and convincing standard of proof required in cases involving charges of fraud and ethical violations by attorneys. E.g., Black v. Goodwin, Loomis & Britton, Inc., 239 Conn. 144, 163, 681 A.2d 293 (1996) (“the appropriate standard of proof for the party who seeks to prevail in a civil fraud action is clear and convincing evidence”); Weiss v. Statewide Grievance Committee, 227 Conn. 802, 812, 633 A.2d 282 (1993) (“in a grievance proceeding, the standard of proof applicable in determining whether an attorney has violated the Code of Professional Responsibility is clear- and convincing evidence”).
To the extent that the court’s determination of misconduct represents a finding that the defendant perpe[197]*197trated a fraud on the plaintiff, that finding clearly was improper. Because the plaintiff did not plead a defense of fraud in response to the defendant’s cross petition to enforce the prenuptial agreement, she would not be entitled to a judgment premised on that defense even if the evidence had supported such a defense, which clearly it did not. See, e.g., Travelers Ins. Co. v. Namerow, 257 Conn. 812, 825, 778 A.2d 168 (2001) (fraud is affirmative defense that must be pleaded); DeLucia v. Valente, 83 Conn. 107, 109, 75 A. 150 (1910) (“[t]he fact that the court heard evidence upon the question of fraud, considered it, and made a finding in relation to this subject, did not give the appellant the right to rely upon the special defense which had not been pleaded”).
Insofar as the trial court found that Foley had perpetrated a fraud on the plaintiff, that finding, too, lacks evidentiary support. Indeed, there was no evidence presented at trial to indicate that Foley knew the defendant, or even that he had conspired with him, or with anyone else, for that matter, to perpetrate a fraud on the plaintiff. Nor was there any evidence that Kristen Friezo discussed the prenuptial agreement with Foley or attempted to influence him in any way on behalf of the defendant. The only reasonable inference that can be drawn from the evidence is that Foley agreed to represent the plaintiff as a professional courtesy to his colleague, Kristen Friezo, who, apparently, thought that she was doing a favor for the plaintiff.27
The trial court’s principal factual findings on the issue of fraud were that Foley worked in the same law firm [198]*198as Kristen Friezo, did not explain to the plaintiff terminology or provisions in the draft that she herself did not bring to his attention, did not ask the plaintiff if she understood specific provisions in the draft, did not meet with or talk to the plaintiff after their meeting on November 10, did not review with the plaintiff the final revisions to the draft or the defendant’s financial disclosure and did not secure a retainer agreement, obtain a consultation fee or tender a bill for his services. Although most of these findings might suggest incompetence, which would support a claim of malpractice, none suggests fraud. In addition, the trial court’s finding that Foley did not talk to the plaintiff after their meeting is not supported by the plaintiffs own testimony, in which she stated that she probably had spoken to Foley after their meeting and before she signed the agreement but could not recall when. Finally, insofar as the court may have relied on nonpayment for services as a reason to find that Foley was disloyal to the plaintiff, there is no evidence in the record even remotely suggesting that Foley rendered his services to the plaintiff because he was working secretly for the defendant and intended to subvert her case. Accordingly, the trial court’s omission of a finding that Foley had knowledge of schedule A when he met with the plaintiff, apparently on the ground that he had engaged in fraud even though the record lacks clear and convincing evidence of fraud, severely undermines its subsequent conclusion that the plaintiff did not have sufficient time in which to review the agreement and the information contained therein regarding the defendant’s financial circumstances.
Even if Foley’s knowledge of schedule A is not imputed to the plaintiff, the record establishes, unequivocally, that the plaintiff had actual knowledge of the defendant’s financial circumstances when she signed the agreement. The plaintiff conceded that she had “looked at” the entire document, including schedule A [199]*199and the income provisions, prior to its execution. In addition, the trial court noted the defendant’s testimony that his attorney had telephoned Foley while the parties were meeting to sign the agreement and that Foley had acknowledged receipt of the final draft and approved of the plaintiffs execution thereof. To the extent that the plaintiff may not have read the financial disclosure provisions carefully, perhaps it was because, by her own admission, she had no interest in discussing financial matters with the defendant during the time that they lived together prior to the marriage and it did not matter to her how much money the defendant had at the time they were married. Moreover, the plaintiff testified that, during the meeting she attended to sign the final agreement, she was in a hurry to get to a hair appointment. That being the case, her claim that she did not have sufficient time to review the defendant’s financial disclosure lacks merit.
The trial court’s conclusion that the plaintiff had insufficient time to digest and understand the disclosure on the day she signed the agreement is also unsupportable because it is the party’s responsibility to delay the signing of an agreement that is not understood. See, e.g., Simeone v. Simeone, supra, 525 Pa. 400 (“[c]ontracting parties are normally bound by their agreements, without regard to whether the terms thereof were read and fully understood and irrespective of whether the agreements embodied reasonable or good bargains”); Standard Venetian Blind Co. v. American Empire Ins. Co., 503 Pa. 300, 305, 469 A.2d 563 (1983) (failure to read contract does not warrant “avoidance, modification or nullification” of its provisions). In the present case, the plaintiff had the opportunity to read the agreement carefully and has not claimed duress. In fact, the trial court specifically observed that there was “no sign” of duress.28 If the plaintiff felt she did not have sufficient [200]*200time to understand the agreement’s terms, she could have rescheduled the wedding, which did not involve extensive planning, for a later date. A formal wedding ceremony to which families and friends would be invited was scheduled for the following July. The only other persons expected to attend the November ceremony were the justice of the peace and his wife, and the plaintiff testified that the wedding could have been rescheduled for any date prior to the end of November without jeopardizing her immigration status. The date had been postponed at least once before, and another delay would not have resulted in embarrassment or humiliation. Thus, the plaintiff could have declined to sign the agreement and requested additional time to review it. The plaintiff should not now be allowed to claim that the agreement is unenforceable and take advantage of her failure to seek a delay in its signing when she easily could have obtained the additional time she claims was needed to review the income and disclosure provisions. For all of the foregoing reasons, we cannot subscribe to the trial court’s conclusion that the plaintiff had insufficient time to review the defendant’s financial disclosure.
Insofar as the trial court concludes that the plaintiff lacked the financial experience necessary to understand the agreement and thus did not sign it knowingly; see, e.g., In re Marriage of Gonzalez, 561 N.W.2d 94, 97 (Iowa App. 1997) (prenuptial agreement invalid for lack of knowing and voluntary waiver because wife did not understand agreement); we also disagree. The notion that the plaintiff was financially unsophisticated merely because she possessed no more than a high school education, was not familiar with Connecticut law on marriage and divorce and did not discuss financial issues with the defendant prior to their marriage [201]*201is unsupported by the record. The fact that the plaintiff did not have a college degree conveys nothing about her ability to understand the agreement. The record indicates that, during her employment as a trader’s assistant with Bankers Trust, the plaintiffs work provided her with extensive exposure to financial matters, including entering and recording stock transactions on a daily basis, submitting the defendant’s expense account, receipts and bills to the company and photocopying some of his personal financial records to give to his accountant.
The record also indicates that the plaintiff demonstrated excellent judgment in conducting her personal financial affairs. She saved significant portions of her salary and was responsible for all of her own expenses, excluding housing and utilities, while living with the defendant. She had established separate savings and checking accounts, owned 580 shares of stock, invested $3000 in an endowment policy and had incurred no debt. Her total net worth was $22,000 at the time of the marriage. It is therefore clear that the plaintiff knew how to save, invest and manage her own money.
Additionally, we do not believe that parties require a detailed understanding of Connecticut law on marriage and divorce to validly waive their statutory rights in a prenuptial agreement, nor is it necessary to have a college degree in order to understand the concept of net worth. In the present case, the plaintiff herself applied the practical financial skills that she had acquired as a working woman when she filled out schedule B, apparently without assistance. The plaintiff thus knew exactly what the schedules were intended to describe and was aware that the defendant would be completing schedule A in similar fashion. Moreover, the plaintiff testified that she understood the meaning of a “release” of rights and claims and that she knew that the purpose of the agreement was to protect the defendant’s assets [202]*202in the event of a divorce. She had reviewed the draft given to her by the defendant and made notes and marks on seven of its pages, thus indicating that she had read the document carefully and understood the marked provisions well enough to ask her attorney about specific items several days later, including the underlined language in article six regarding the release and waiver of her rights and claims to alimony and maintenance. Furthermore, she had the advice of counsel and used her meeting with Foley to seek answers to her questions. Foley, in turn, passed her comments on to the defendant’s attorney and obtained most of the revisions she had requested. It simply defies reason to conclude that the plaintiff was so lacking in financial experience that she did not understand the rights she was waiving or the defendant’s financial disclosure.
At least one jurisdiction has explicitly noted that the time has come for paternalistic presumptions and protections to be discarded. See Simeone v. Simeone, supra, 525 Pa. 399 (presumption that women not knowledgeable enough to understand nature of contracts they enter is no longer valid). The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania stated more than one decade ago that “[sjociety has advanced ... to the point where women are no longer regarded as the ‘weaker’ party in marriage, or in society generally. Indeed, the stereotype that women serve as homemakers while men work as breadwinners is no longer viable. Quite often today both spouses are income earners. Nor is there viability in the presumption that women are uninformed, uneducated, and readily subject to unfair advantage in marital agreements. Indeed, women nowadays quite often have substantial education, financial awareness, income, and assets.
“Accordingly . . . [paternalistic presumptions and protections that arose to shelter women from the inferiorities and incapacities which they were perceived as [203]*203having in earlier times have, appropriately, been discarded. ... It would be inconsistent, therefore, to perpetuate the standards governing prenuptial agreements that . . . [reflect] a paternalistic approach that is now insupportable.” (Citations omitted.) Id.
In the present case, the trial court ignores facts in the record that portray the plaintiff, a woman who supported herself for several years by working in a business involving sophisticated financial transactions, as knowledgeable, experienced and even savvy in practical financial matters, and thus able to understand, interpret and ask intelligent questions about the prenuptial agreement if she had so desired. In fact, her written notations on the draft agreement indicate that she had a sharp and inquiring mind. Accordingly, in considering the record in its totality, we conclude that it does not support the conclusion that the plaintiff was so lacking in financial experience or sophistication that she did not execute the agreement knowingly and voluntarily.
V
INDEPENDENT COUNSEL
The trial court concluded that the plaintiff was not afforded a reasonable opportunity to consult with independent counsel as required by § 46b-36g (a) (4). The court based this conclusion on findings that the plaintiff had been “set up” and that her “execution of documents waiving any claim to [a] conflict of interest [did] not alter the fact that the attorneys of [Kristen Friezo’s law firm] did have a clear conflict of interest.” The trial court further found that “Foley was either incredibly incompetent in his representation of the plaintiff or he was not, in fact, representing her at all.” The court added that “[t]he plaintiff did not have the sophistication to realize what was going on” and that “the most telling indication of Foley’s true loyalties and obligations in connection with his lack of advice to the plain[204]*204tiff was his failure to secure any retainer agreement, exact a consultation fee, or tender any bill for services.” The court thus concluded that the plaintiff “did not have the benefit of independent legal counsel nor a reasonable opportunity to secure such representation.” We disagree with the trial court’s conclusions because they are premised on a misunderstanding of the statutory requirement.
General Statutes § 46b-36g (a) (4) specifically provides that the party against whom enforcement of the prenuptial agreement is sought must prove that “[s]uch party was not afforded a reasonable opportunity to consult with independent counsel.” The operative terms for the purpose of this analysis are “reasonable opportunity” and “independent counsel.” Although this court has not yet had occasion to construe § 46b-36g (a) (4), appellate courts that have interpreted identical statutory language invariably have held, consistent with the plain statutory wording, that a “reasonable opportunity to consult with independent counsel” means simply that the party against whom enforcement is sought must have had sufficient time before the marriage to consult with an attorney other than the attorney representing the party’s future spouse.
With respect to whether the plaintiff had a “reasonable opportunity” to consult with legal counsel, there is no requirement that a party actually seek or obtain the advice of counsel, only that he or she be afforded a reasonable opportunity to do so. See, e.g., Cannon v. Cannon, supra, 384 Md. 578 (upholding prenuptial agreement when wife had several days to review agreement and, therefore, sufficient time to consult counsel had she been so inclined); id. (“[i]t was enough for [the husband] to demonstrate that [the wife] had the opportunity to seek counsel and that she was not discouraged to do so”); Black v. Powers, 48 Va. App. 113, 141, 628 S.E.2d 546 (2006) (“the fact that [the wife] [205]*205may have failed to seek independent legal advice does not negate her opportunity to do so”); Pajak v. Pajak, supra, 182 W. Va. 32-33 (“although advice of independent counsel at the time parties enter into a pre-nuptial agreement helps demonstrate that there has been no fraud, duress or misrepresentation, and that the agreement was entered into knowledgeably and voluntarily, such independent advice of counsel is not a prerequisite to enforceability when the terms of the agreement are understandable to a reasonably intelligent adult and both parties have had the opportunity to consult with independent counsel” [emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted]). In the present case, not only did the plaintiff have a reasonable opportunity to consult with legal counsel, she did, in fact, do so. The defendant did not surprise the plaintiff with a prenuptial agreement the day before the wedding, thus precluding her, for all practical purposes, from obtaining the advice of counsel but, rather, informed the plaintiff that he wanted her to sign an agreement shortly after he proposed marriage on August 20, 1998, more than two months in advance of the anticipated ceremony. Moreover, the plaintiff subsequently contacted Kristen Friezo, who introduced her to Foley. We therefore conclude that the plaintiff had a “reasonable opportunity” to consult with independent counsel as that term is used in § 46b-36g (a) (4).
With respect to whether Foley was in fact “independent” of the defendant, there is absolutely nothing in the record, other than the trial court’s conclusory allegations of fraudulent misconduct; see part III of this opinion; to suggest that Foley was not independent. The fact that Foley’s colleague, Kristen Friezo, was the defendant’s sister-in-law is insufficient to support the trial court’s conclusion that Foley was not independent from the defendant within the meaning of § 46b-36g (a) (4). Rule 1.8 (i) of the Rules of Professional Conduct [206]*206provides that “[a] lawyer related to another lawyer as parent, child, sibling or spouse shall not represent a client in a representation directly adverse to a person who the lawyer knows is represented by the other lawyer except upon consent by the client after consultation regarding the relationship.” Moreover, the commentary to rule 1.8 (i) expressly provides that the disqualification identified therein “is personal and is not imputed to members of firms with whom the lawyers are associated.” Rules of Professional Conduct 1.8 (i), commentary. Thus, under our rules governing the conduct of attorneys, Foley was not barred from representing the plaintiff. Moreover, even if he were prohibited from representing her, the trial court failed to explain why the waiver that the plaintiff signed was ineffective, and the record is devoid of facts to support a finding that the plaintiffs waiver, even if necessary, was invalid. For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the trial court’s decision to invalidate the parties’ prenuptial agreement under § 46b-36g (a) (3) and (4) cannot stand, and that the agreement must be enforced and the assets distributed according to its terms.29
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings according to law.
In this opinion SULLIVAN, C. J., and BORDEN, KATZ, PALMER and VERTEFEUILLE, Js., concurred.
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