German v. German

3 A.2d 849, 125 Conn. 84, 1938 Conn. LEXIS 265
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 7, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 3 A.2d 849 (German v. German) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
German v. German, 3 A.2d 849, 125 Conn. 84, 1938 Conn. LEXIS 265 (Colo. 1938).

Opinion

Maltbie, C. J.

In this action the plaintiff, divorced from the defendant by a decree of a New York court in 1916, is seeking equitable relief to compel payment of alimony awarded her in the divorce proceedings. The defendant has appealed from a decision specifically decreeing that he forthwith pay to her the amount of *86 alimony which had become due under the order of the New York court.

An appeal from a judgment entered in this case upon the plaintiff declining to plead over after a demurrer to the complaint had been sustained has been before us, and we held that our courts had equitable jurisdiction to enforce a decree for alimony made by the courts of another state. German v. German, 122 Conn. 155, 188 Atl. 429. Such a remedy needs no support by proof of an independent equity, but the very nature of the proceedings is sufficient to bring it within the proper field of equitable remedies. A decree granting relief would be “none the less equitable because it is sought in the form of a money payment.” Grand Lodge of Conn. v. Grand Lodge of Mass., 81 Conn. 189, 201, 70 Atl. 617. Like a decree for alimony awarded in a judgment of divorce rendered in a court of this state, the decree ordinarily would be enforced, if payment were not made, by proceedings in contempt. Lyon v. Lyon, 21 Conn. 185. A court sitting in equity may, however, if the specific remedy claimed is inappropriate, render a judgment simply for damages, enforceable as in an action at law by execution. State v. Sunapee Dam Co., 72 N. H. 114, 55 Atl. 899; 1 Pomeroy, Jurisprudence (4th Ed.) p. 374. One of the reasons which may bring about this result would be the fact that the defendant would not be able to perform the act ordered by the court; County of Mobile v. Kimball, 102 U. S. 691, 707; Pomeroy, Op. Cit.; for a court of equity will not make a decree which it has no power to enforce. Morris v. Peckham, 51 Conn. 128, 133.

The defendant claimed that he had no funds in possession or concealed with which to pay the arrears of alimony which were due. The trial court, however, concluded that the defendant was a man of large *87 means, well able to pay his obligations but having his assets so concealed as to make them unavailable to legal process, and that he possessed assets to the value of at least $15,000 which he had concealed by placing them in his wife’s name, in order to put them beyond the reach of legal process and the plaintiff’s claims. While there seems to have been some misconception on the trial as to the precise issues determinative of the right of the plaintiff to specific relief, if these conclusions were properly reached the judgment must stand. On the other hand, they clearly were the basis upon which the trial court proceeded in its decision to grant such relief, and if they were not properly reached the judgment cannot be sustained.

Without going into the details of the finding upon which the trial court reached its conclusion and which would require correction in some other respects than those we shall mention, the court has found these essential facts: The defendant had been employed from 1915 to 1931 with one company, receiving from 1915 to 1923 $5000 a year, thereafter $10,000 a year until about 1928, and $15,000 a year until 1931, and in addition bonuses aggregating in all $25,000. Since 1931 he has not been employed except upon his own farm. Between 1917 and 1922 the defendant purchased five parcels of land in Redding, Connecticut, comprising about fifty-six acres, with buildings thereon, and invested about $15,000 in these lands; title to three parcels was taken in the name of the defendant, to one parcel in the name of his present wife, and to the other in the names of both; and in 1922 he quitclaimed all his interest in the lands to his wife. In 1926 the defendant entered into a trust agreement with a New York bank and deposited insurance policies and other things of value with it; through this trust he maintains $125,000 of insurance on his life and he purchased *88 and. disposed of more than $102,000 of additional insurance; on February 11, 1929, he made another trust agreement with the same bank, depositing insurance policies with a cash value of $3420 and securities with a value of $2600; in 1931 the cash value of the insurance policies in the trust was $7326.25 and of the securities $3700, and until 1931 he paid $300 monthly into this trust. These two trusts were interrelated and the trustee treated them as one. In 1927 the defendant’s present wife also entered into a trust agreement with the same bank and deposited with it more than $20,000 in cash, during the next four years added $10,000, and in 1929 deposited securities costing $3000 or more; this trust is still alive and pays income of not less than $800 which she has never used but allowed to accumulate. She had, before marriage, been employed as a stenographer, earning from $1000 to $5000 a year; she had received $600 on the death of her father but had no property except savings from her salary and this sum; and the trust fund she created consisted of cash and things of value received by her from her husband.

Both the defendant and his present wife testified that the lands were purchased by her and she paid all of the purchase price, except that he testified that he paid $500, although she denied this. The trial court evidently did not believe these witnesses and inferred that the defendant was the real purchaser and owner of the lands. We could not have questioned such a conclusion except for certain statements in the trial court’s memorandum of decision, which we may consult to determine the basis of its action, which were repeated in the finding. In the memorandum it appears that the trial court took judicial notice of a file of another action between the parties which had been brought to the Superior Court in the same county *89 where the present action is pending; that in the file it found a report of a committee appointed, after judgment had been rendered against the defendant and execution had been returned unsatisfied, to examine the defendant as to his property and means of paying the judgment; that in the report the committee stated that the defendant had testified to a fact which was later proved and admitted by him to be untrue; and the trial court, characterizing this as a “deliberate untruth,” took it into consideration as bearing upon the credibility to be accorded the defendant’s testimony. The court had the right to take judicial notice of the file of the earlier case. McCleave v. Flanagan Co., 115 Conn. 36, 38, 160 Atl. 305. But this does not mean that it might use every statement it found in the papers constituting the file with the same effect as though the facts were in evidence before it. It should not have taken into consideration the statement in the report of the committee as to the untrue testimony of the defendant. The effect of untrue statements made by a witness upon his credibility depends upon the extent to which they were consciously false. Craney v. Donovan, 92 Conn. 236, 246, 102 Atl.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Murphy v. Chase Mortgage Company, No. Cv 01-0450257 S (Sep. 16, 2002)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 11723 (Connecticut Superior Court, 2002)
Patrick v. Patrick, No. Fa 89 41733 S (Aug. 15, 1994)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 8161 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1994)
Bardsley v. Bardsley, No. Fa84 0220233 S (Nov. 23, 1992)
1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 10488 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1992)
In re Mark C.
610 A.2d 181 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1992)
In Re Michael A.
552 A.2d 368 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 1989)
Mirto v. Sullivan
422 A.2d 333 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1980)
Brodsky v. Brodsky
216 A.2d 180 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1966)
Gagnon v. Gagnon
183 A.2d 858 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1962)
Krasnow v. Krasnow
99 A.2d 104 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1953)
Koster v. Koster
81 A.2d 355 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1951)
Freeman v. Freeman
17 Conn. Super. Ct. 226 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1951)
Colburn v. Puzio
68 A.2d 136 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1949)
Themper v. Themper
45 A.2d 826 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1946)
De Golyer v. De Golyer
13 Conn. Super. Ct. 339 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1945)
Kline v. Kline
13 Conn. Super. Ct. 262 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1945)
Fox v. Schaeffer
41 A.2d 46 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1944)
Hooker v. Hooker
32 A.2d 68 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1943)
Maitland v. Town of Thompson
27 A.2d 160 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1942)
Farricielli v. Slavin
10 Conn. Super. Ct. 16 (Connecticut Superior Court, 1941)
Farricielli v. Slavin
10 Conn. Supp. 16 (Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 A.2d 849, 125 Conn. 84, 1938 Conn. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/german-v-german-conn-1938.