Greenleaf v. Greenleaf, No. Fa 91-0395679s (Apr. 17, 2000)
This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 5085-cx (Greenleaf v. Greenleaf, No. Fa 91-0395679s (Apr. 17, 2000)) 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.
Opinion
The plaintiff filed a motion to modify both child support and alimony by motions dated November 24, 1999. The parties appeared with counsel on March 8, 2000. Prior to the contested alimony hearing, the parties agreed that child support should be modified to the amount of $131.00 per week retroactive to December 11, 1999. The Court ordered said Child Support Modification on March 8, 2000, together with the requirement that the defendant cover the minor child for health insurance through his place of employment. The plaintiff was ordered to pay the first $100. 00 per year for unreimbursed and uncovered health care expenses, with the excess divided for payment as follows: 46% by the plaintiff and 54% by the defendant.
The parties next contested the issue of the modification of alimony. At the hearing the defendant testified that he and the plaintiff had an agreement that he would pay $85.00 per week child support at the time of the dissolution of the marriage. Said agreement was not based on child support guidelines and further no financial information concerning the defendant's earnings, expenses and liabilities were submitted to the Court. The plaintiff, at the present hearing, also failed to submit evidence to the Court as to the income and expenses of the defendant as of the time of the dissolution of marriage. The plaintiff on the record, waived her claim to seek an increase in alimony based on the increase in income of the defendant from the date of the dissolution of marriage in 1991 to the date of the hearing in 2000.
The plaintiff testified and submitted evidence claiming that the Court should reopen and modify the judgment to increase alimony based on her increase in weekly expenses resulting from her move with the minor child from the State of Maine to the State of Arizona. She further argued that at the time of the dissolution of the marriage, although totally disabled for the purposes of social security disability, it was her intention to retrain and return to work to increase her income. She also testified and submitted medical exhibits indicating that she is presently permanently and totally disabled from seeking substantial gainful employment in the future (Plaintiff's Exhibit 1). The defendant claims that the plaintiff has failed to sustain her burden of proof, showing a substantial change in circumstances, permitting the Court to modify alimony from the $1.00 per year as previously ordered as of the date of the dissolution. CT Page 5085-cz
The Court is duty bound to follow Connecticut General Statute §
The Court has reviewed the transcript of the hearing and exhibits submitted at the hearing, together with the financial affidavit of the plaintiff submitted at the time of the dissolution and the financial affidavits submitted at the present hearing. The Court concludes that the plaintiff's living expenses have increased by approximately $225.00 per week since the 1991 orders were entered. Further, her income has not increased from the date of dissolution of the marriage to the present. The Court also finds that the plaintiff intended to retrain and obtain substantial gainful employment subsequent to the date of the divorce. The record contains uncontroverted evidence that the plaintiff returned to school to be reeducated to perform sedentary work in 1993. Her testimony further bears out the fact that she worked for periods of time from 1995 to 1997 when she was advised by her treating physician to stop work in November of 1997 due to lumbar and cervical spondylosis, chronic low back and neck pain and increasing right hip pain as a result of arthritis. Dr. Johnson further opined that she would never return to gainful employment in the future.
Based upon the evidence presented, the Court finds that the plaintiff has sustained her burden of proof of a substantial change in circumstances resulting in a modification of the alimony order. She has proved that she has incurred an increase in household expenses due to factors more than simple inflation based upon financial affidavits and testimony presented. Howat v. Howat,
The Court hereby reopens the judgment and modifies the existing alimony order of $1.00 per year to the sum of $75.00 per week with said order retroactive to December 11, 1999.
Devine, J.
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