Musolino v. Musolino

997 A.2d 599, 121 Conn. App. 469, 2010 Conn. App. LEXIS 249
CourtConnecticut Appellate Court
DecidedJune 8, 2010
DocketAC 30612
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 997 A.2d 599 (Musolino v. Musolino) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Appellate Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Musolino v. Musolino, 997 A.2d 599, 121 Conn. App. 469, 2010 Conn. App. LEXIS 249 (Colo. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

Opinion

GRUENDEL, J.

The plaintiff, Christine Musolino, appeals from the judgment of the trial court granting *471 her motion for clarification of a support obligation concerning the defendant, Daniel Musolino. The plaintiff claims that the court abused its discretion in so doing. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.

The record discloses the following relevant facts. The parties married in 1987, and two children were bom of the marriage. Following the subsequent breakdown of their marriage, the plaintiff filed a complaint seeking dissolution thereof, and a hearing followed. At that hearing, the plaintiff appeared with counsel; the defendant, incarcerated at that time, was self-represented. On August 5, 1999, the court, Hon. Walter M. Pickett, Jr., judge trial referee, dissolved their marriage, finding that it had broken down irretrievably without attributing fault to either party as to the cause. The court further entered certain orders. Pertinent to this appeal is the following order: “A Visa bill in the amount of $1200 shall be the sole responsibility of the defendant.” Counsel for the plaintiff thereafter prepared a judgment file that included the aforementioned order. 1

Following the defendant’s release from incarceration in 2004, he filed a petition for bankruptcy protection pursuant to chapter 7 of the United States Bankruptcy Code. He informed the plaintiff of that proceeding, in which she was not named as a creditor. The defendant thereafter was granted a discharge in bankruptcy.

More than eight years after the judgment of dissolution entered, the plaintiff on December 26, 2007, filed a motion for contempt concerning, inter aha, the Visa bill order. Before the court acted on that motion, the plaintiff on March 20, 2008, filed a “motion for articulation and/or clarification” in which she alleged that the order in question contained an incorrect figure: “[T]he judgment . . . reads [that the] $1200 Visa bill [is the] *472 sole responsibility] of [the defendant]. ... At the time of the judgment, the bill was $12,000, not $1200. Fortunately, there was only one Visa bill so, of factual necessity, the only issue is whether the [defendant gets the value of the scrivener misplacing a zero. . . . [T]he [defendant has asserted that because the judgment says [$1200], not [$12,000], he is only responsible for the former, not the latter.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) In support thereof, the plaintiff submitted a transcript of the August 5,1999 dissolution proceeding, at which the plaintiff testified that there existed a $12,000 Visa bin.

By order filed November 14, 2008, the court, Roche, J., addressed the December 26, 2007 motion for contempt and the March 20, 2008 “motion for articulation and/or clarification,” which the court termed a “motion to determine certain arrearages/debts that may be owed by the defendant to the plaintiff . . . .” In doing so, the court interpreted the clarification motion as a modification motion without objection from the parties. In that order, the court found that “the credit limitation amount on the subject Visa credit card was $5000 to be split evenly and in equity between the parties ($2500 each), in which the defendant’s share is found to be a domestic support order and, therefore, should not be dischargeable in bankruptcy with the remaining balance of this Visa account the responsibility of the plaintiff. ... No contempt is found against the defendant

The court expounded on that finding in its April 8, 2009 memorandum of decision. It stated in relevant part: “The corud . . . finds that the defendant’s share of the balance on the Visa credit card is a domestic support order and, therefore, is not dischargeable in bankruptcy. . . . Under 11 U.S.C. § 523 (a) (5), a debtor may not discharge a debt to a former spouse that is for a domestic support obligation .... After *473 an application of the five factors from Lewis v. Lewis, [35 Conn. App. 622, 627-28, 646 A.2d 273 (1994)], that are used to distinguish a domestic support obligation from a property settlement in the dissolution action and a careful review of the evidence and facts, this court concludes that the defendant’s obligation to pay the Visa credit card bill is a domestic support obligation. As a result, [that] debt is not dischargeable and the defendant must pay his share of that debt.

“The remaining balance on this credit card account is the responsibility of the plaintiff. Visa obtained a judgment against the plaintiff in the amount of $17,207.56 for the joint credit card held by her and the defendant. The August 5, 1999 dissolution decree ordered that the defendant was to be solely responsible for the Visa bill in the amount of $1200. At the October 3, 2008 motion for contempt hearing, during the cross-examination of the plaintiff, the following colloquy occurred:

“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: Now, with respect to the judgment on the Visa account, were you served with a lawsuit on behalf of Visa in 2004?
“[The Plaintiff]: I don’t recall being—and I saw the proof of service and that it says in hand, but I don’t recall receiving it, and as naive as I was back then, I probably looked at it and in raising my children on my own, I said, thank God I put it in the divorce decree and it’s not my responsibility and I naively set it aside.
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: And did you subsequently receive motions for default from the attorneys that represented Visa?
“[The Plaintiff]: Yes. Occasionally. They didn’t bombard me with anything.
“ [The Defendant’s Counsel]: But you didn’t—in any— you didn’t—
*474 “[The Plaintiff]: Oh, and during the time [the defendant] was in prison full-time, since we are arguing that, I paid $10 a month to the credit card company to try to keep it until he got out so it wouldn’t go into default. I did everything I could so this didn’t happen.
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: But after you were served with a lawsuit you did nothing; is that correct?
“[The Plaintiff]: I’m sorry?
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: After you were served with a lawsuit for the collection of the Visa card, you did nothing; is that correct?
“[The Plaintiff]: I did nothing. No. I did nothing.
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: And you received motions for default.
“[The Plaintiff]: One, maybe.
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: And isn’t it a fact that in 2007, you received a notice for the examination of a judgment debt; isn’t that correct?
“[The Plaintiff]: The reopening, you mean?

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
997 A.2d 599, 121 Conn. App. 469, 2010 Conn. App. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/musolino-v-musolino-connappct-2010.