Lanfer v. Lanfer, No. Fa89 0104300 S (Mar. 8, 1991)

1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 2335
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1991
DocketNo. FA89 0104300 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 2335 (Lanfer v. Lanfer, No. Fa89 0104300 S (Mar. 8, 1991)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lanfer v. Lanfer, No. Fa89 0104300 S (Mar. 8, 1991), 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 2335 (Colo. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This is an action for dissolution brought by the plaintiff wife against the defendant husband. The parties were married in New Britain, Connecticut on September 16, 1972. They have both resided continuously in the state of Connecticut for at least one year next before the date of the institution of this action. There are three minor children issue of this marriage, to wit: Stefan Shreiver Lanfer born February 25, 1975, Peter Thacher Lanfer born September 29, 1976 and Nathaniel CT Page 2336 Denison Lanfer born November 16th, 1979. There are no other minor children issue of this marriage.

Neither the plaintiff nor the defendant is now nor have they in the past received any assistance from the Connecticut Department of Human Resources.

The marriage has broken down irretrievably with no hope of reconciliation. While the defendant, in his claims for relief, states that the plaintiff is the cause of the breakdown of the marriage, the testimony of the defendant was that the plaintiff was a good mother and supportive of him and it was lack of compatibility which he thought was the cause of the divorce. The plaintiff cited a lack of emotional support from her husband and his preoccupation with sports, particularly playing tennis five to six nights a week. In fact, she said this was a relationship which did not work for a marriage of some 18 years.

The parties separated in September of 1989 when, after a short period when the defendant left the home, he returned and the plaintiff then rented a condominium. She testified she would sleep at the condominium but returned to the house every day to care for the children.

Complicating the marital situation was the presence of the plaintiff's mother who came to live with them in 1979. At that time she loaned them $60,000.00 which they needed to buy the house and to which all three of them moved along with the children at Three Gregory Road in Cos Cob. The parties agreed on the arrangement to have the plaintiff's mother live with them. While the plaintiff's mother contributed services such as baby sitting, her presence may also have contributed to the tension in the home.

In 1985 the Gregory Road house was sold and the money received from that was placed by the defendant in a trust called the Alpine Trust. The parties then moved into the defendant's mother's home which they rented. This home is actually owned by a trust in which the defendant has a third beneficial residual interest along with his two sisters. His mother is the income beneficiary of the trust. The defendant valued this trust for purposes of obtaining a loan from People's Bank in 1989 at $550,000.00. (See exhibit D.)

For one year after the plaintiff had left the home, plaintiff's mother continued to live in the home which the defendant was occupying. However, during the summer of 1990, the defendant, without notifying her, advertised the house for rent so that he could go on a bicycle trip of six weeks with his CT Page 2337 oldest son. The plaintiff's mother then moved out of what is known as the Binney Lane house and moved in with the plaintiff who had since rented a three bedroom house so that she could have her mother and her youngest son live with her.

There is no dispute with respect to custody since both parties have agreed that the youngest son shall be in the physical custody of the plaintiff and the two older boys shall be in the physical custody of the defendant and that both parties shall have joint custody of all three children with visitation also agreed upon as will be set forth in the court's orders.

The major problem is, of course, the distribution of assets and the determination of alimony and support. The defendant gave one financial picture to the People's Bank in exhibit D in 1989, around the time that the parties separated, when he was seeking to buy a $3,000,000.00 building and finance it in part by a $300,000.00 loan from the bank. He obtained the loan by mortgaging the house in which he was living which belonged to the trust known as the SPL Trust. To do that, he had to obtain the consent of his two sisters and his mother, which he was able to do. It should be noted that the defendant is not only the beneficiary of the trust but also the manager and trustee of the trust. In addition to his trust interest, he also has another trust called the Alpine Trust part of which is in his wife's name but which he conducted as if it were his alone and which he values at $179,000.00 in his financial affidavit. He also has 62 shares of New England Dairy, 34 of which he states are in trust and 83 and a half shares of Protein Corporation. The total value of both sets of shares he declares to be $89,600.00.

There are also Keoghs and IRAs in the amount of $65,376.00, again, according to his affidavit. While the defendant lists expenses of some $2,546.87 which is more than his stated weekly income of $2,307.69, he includes in his expenses offices and business expenses while, at the same time, stating that his "net weekly income" is $2,307.69.

While the defendant claims not to be able to pay the rent or taxes or even the alimony and support order against him without obtaining the income from the Alpine Fund, it is noteworthy that he was able to buy a $3,000,000.00 building called the Fike Dairy and, at that time, stated his net worth to be over $2,000,000.00. (Exhibit D.) Moreover, he lives in the house owned by the trust which has an apartment over the driveway for which a tenant pays $1,400.00 a month rent. He claims he cannot pay the rent due the trust of some $34,000.00 a year although the tenant is paying almost half of it. In CT Page 2338 addition, since he is one of the beneficial remaindermen of the trust, he is in effect paying the rent to himself in part. Further, since he manages the trust and has already been able to obtain a $300,000.00 loan from the bank using the house as security, it would seem that this asset is available to him to meet his needs. His other assets also could have been used except for the Alpine Trust which the court ordered him not to use to pay some of his obligations, particularly the rent and the taxes.

In addition, at the present time he has not paid his wife's taxes which he was ordered to pay by Judge Ryan of some $4,000.00. She has advanced that money in order to keep from having penalties assessed against her.

The defendant's occupation is that of a financial consultant, and the evidence disclosed a number of tax forms, 1099's, indicating some of the sources of his income, see exhibit H, 1 through 10, which total $87,531.41. In addition, he had received income from the Alpine Fund and the New England Dairy in 1989. While he now claims not to have received any in 1990, these are still his assets. He apparently attempted to insure his assets against his wife's obtaining them by hypothecating the stock in New England Dairy with the Robo Bank as security for a loan, presumably for the purchase of the Fike Dairy.

Moreover, the evidence did establish that the defendant spent his money on sports and vacations and, in fact, in this past year in which he claims his income has been reduced, he took a six week bicycle tour with his son in addition to other ski weekends.

The plaintiff, on the other hand, has been working 20 hours a week at $13.00 an hour at the Pace Marketing System. She graduated from Trinity in 1971, a little over a year before she married the defendant. The plaintiff worked only before the birth of the first child and did not work until the separation except for giving occasional voice lessons. However, she did run the house and take care of the children. The defendant described her as supportive of him and a good mother.

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Related

Hartford National Bank & Trust Co. v. Birge
266 A.2d 373 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1970)

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Bluebook (online)
1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 2335, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lanfer-v-lanfer-no-fa89-0104300-s-mar-8-1991-connsuperct-1991.