In re Luke G.

40 Conn. Supp. 316
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1985
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 40 Conn. Supp. 316 (In re Luke G.) 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
In re Luke G., 40 Conn. Supp. 316 (Colo. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

Brenneman, J.

In this action the plaintiff seeks to terminate the parental rights of the defendant, her former husband and the father of her three sons, alleging all of the nonconsensual grounds set forth in subsection (f) of General Statutes § 45-611 The petition [317]*317was originally filed in the Probate Court while there was pending in the Superior Court the defendant’s motion to restore his rights of visitation which had previously been terminated by order of that court. In connection with this visitation motion, the Superior Court granted the plaintiff’s motion for a psychiatric evaluation of the defendant, to be conducted at his expense. The defendant’s subsequent motion to transfer the termination matter to the Superior Court for Juvenile Matters was granted as a matter of right.

Evidence offered during two days of trial supports the finding of the following facts: Soon after the birth of the parties’ third son, the plaintiff filed for dissolution of the marriage. The defendant filed no appearance, did not appear in court, and judgment was rendered by default. Custody of the children was awarded to the plaintiff with reasonable rights of visitation to the defendant, and title to the defendant’s interest in the parties’ jointly held realty was transferred to the plaintiff. Although the plaintiff was then netting $275 per week as a faculty member at Southern Connecticut State University and although the defendant reported later that he was then unemployed, the plaintiff requested and was awarded $40 per week for the support of each child. After the dissolution, the plaintiff permitted the defendant to remain in the family residence for approximately six months, during which time he shared child care responsibilities as the plaintiff requested.

After leaving the family home, the defendant exercised his unspecified rights of visitation sporadically. Although at trial the plaintiff testified that she questioned the father’s poor judgment and unreliability (e.g., his failing to keep prearranged visitations and his appearing at other times without notice; his driving an unregistered motor vehicle; his taking the children hitchhiking when he had transportation problems; his [318]*318leaving the boys unattended for brief periods), she made no effort to limit his visitation rights but rather complained that he failed to visit as often as he could have done.

Some two years after the dissolution judgment was rendered, the defendant’s financial problems had caused him to fall far in arrears in child support, but there had been no recourse to court by the plaintiff for enforcement of those orders. Seeking to avoid such court proceedings, the defendant promised to pay a large gas bill which had accrued since the dissolution. Although then earning $21,000 a year in her faculty position, the plaintiff had been unable or unwilling to take the necessary steps to ensure that there would be heat for the coming winter. Concerned with his inability to pay the bill soon enough to have the heat restored before an imminent cold spell, the defendant attempted to turn on the gas at the main on the street. With the plaintiff absent from the house, he proceeded to enter the basement and turn on the pilot light. When it failed to light, he concluded that his attempt at the main hydrant had failed. At that point, ordered out of the house by his former mother-in-law, he hastily retreated, neglecting to turn off the pilot light which he believed was not emitting gas. Hours later, it was discovered that the pilot light was on, filling the house with gas which might have ignited if corrective measures had not been taken in time. Two months later, the plaintiff filed a motion to enforce child support and, although she later testified that she never believed that the defendant had intended any harm but had merely acted irresponsibly, she accompanied her motion for contempt with a motion to terminate his visitation rights.

In the first hearing on these motions the defendant appeared without counsel and the matter was continued for him to obtain the services of an attorney. Three days before the continued hearing, the defendant had a hasty [319]*319parking lot conversation with the plaintiffs attorney, in which they agreed on a schedule for repaying the arrearage. The defendant denied that he was aware that two motions had been served on him, and, because the parking lot conversation related only to child support, he believed only that that matter would be before the court on the hearing date. On February 28, 1983, the defendant called the plaintiffs attorney from New York, saying that he could not attend the hearing. The attorney, accompanied by the plaintiff who was present throughout the hearing but who was not asked to testify, represented to the court that the defendant had not only agreed on the arrearage repayment schedule, but also “by agreement, Your Honor, the defendant agrees to have the order of reasonable visitation revoked.” The plaintiff, although aware that the father did not wish to relinquish his visitation rights, sat silently in court and permitted the order terminating such rights to enter. She later explained to the children that the reason their father was no longer visiting was because she had gone to court and testified under oath in order “to protect them from their father.”

The defendant did not learn for some weeks thereafter that he not only was ordered to pay an arrearage of $6500, but was also barred from seeing his children. He subsequently refused to sign the stipulation prepared by the plaintiff’s counsel embodying those orders, and he soon retained counsel for the first time and filed the first of four motions seeking reinstatement of his right of visitation. Further, in addition to those motions, in the year preceding the filing of the termination petition he made other efforts to regain contact with his sons. His attorney made many efforts to contact the plaintiff’s attorney by telephone and by letter, seeking restoration of visitation, and received no response. His attempts to telephone the children [320]*320were rebuffed by the plaintiffs second husband. Risking contempt of the court’s order, he appeared without authorization at the children’s schools on special occasions, such as their birthdays, and on Father’s Day.

In response to his fourth motion for visitation, the court ordered weekly supervised visitation pending a study by the family relations office. This temporary order was subsequently modified, on the recommendation of the family relations officer, to allow visitation once every three weeks, still under supervision, for three hours each visit, pending receipt of the psychiatric evaluation and final resolution of the termination proceeding.

The psychiatric evaluation was eventually completed and admitted as child’s exhibit A. The psychiatrist concluded that while the defendant “[was ] still struggling, to find new ways of coping with his current life situation” and still evidencing signs of impairment, he has shown considerable improvement in recent years. The father had demonstrated his love, interest and concern for his sons, but only a limited capacity to understand why they were reluctant to adhere rigidly to the court-ordered visitation schedule. The psychiatrist predicted that unsupervised visitation might increase the children’s discomfort, but would not present them with any risk of physical harm. He recommended that the defendant “modify his attitude and behavior towards visitation” before changes were made in the current arrangement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 Conn. Supp. 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-luke-g-connsuperct-1985.