Rose v. Rose, No. Fa 01-0341809 S (Aug. 28, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 11094
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 28, 2002
DocketNo. FA 01-0341809 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 11094 (Rose v. Rose, No. Fa 01-0341809 S (Aug. 28, 2002)) 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
Rose v. Rose, No. Fa 01-0341809 S (Aug. 28, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 11094 (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This decision dissolves the twelve-year marriage of Les and Rajesree Rose. As the parties have previously entered into a court-approved stipulation regarding custody and visitation of their minor children, this memorandum of decision will address financial questions, allocation of marital property and debt, alimony, child support, and payment of counsel fees. The Judicial District of Danbury referred the case to the regional family trial docket for trial of these issues, held on three days in June of this year. Each party testified at trial, as did Sharon Dornfeld, the court-appointed guardian ad litem (GAL) for the two minor children. Both parties also introduced various exhibits into evidence.

I — Findings of Fact1
The court finds that it has jurisdiction over the marriage. One party has resided in Connecticut continually for more than one year prior to the bringing of this action. The parties were married in Queens, New York, on July 10, 1990. Two minor children, Nicholas Rose, born on October 6, 1992, and Tiffany Rose, born on November 27, 1995, are legal issue of the marriage. No other minor children have been born to the wife since the date of the marriage. The parties have not been recipients of state assistance. The marriage between the parties has broken down irretrievably with no reasonable hope of reconciliation.

The parties met during the mid-1980s in Canada, where the defendant was then living with her parents. After they were married, the defendant went to Queens, New York, to live with the plaintiff. They resided there until moving to Danbury in 1999 for what they regarded as a better life for their children. There are two versions, his and hers, of why their marriage has broken down. The plaintiff claims that he had believed they had a happy marriage until his wife unexpectedly left him in December 2000, took a bus back to Canada with their two minor children, and then had him served with Canadian legal process seeking a restraining order CT Page 11095 against him and custody of the two children. He asserts that claims she has made in litigation here and in Canada since their separation have caused the marriage, at least in his mind, to break down. The defendant, on the other hand, testified that she was unhappy throughout the marriage for a variety of reasons that began even before the wedding, when the plaintiff, she claimed, refused to come to Canada for a wedding that they had previously agreed would occur there, and for which her family had already booked a hall and ordered invitations, and insisted that they instead elope in Queens; she testified that she agreed to do so because she was pregnant by him. She further testified that throughout the marriage the plaintiff made it difficult for her to visit her family in Canada, had a drinking problem, spent many evenings away from home drinking with his friends, physically and verbally abused her, and constantly argued with her.

Although the defendant's claims of abuse as the causes of the marital breakdown would, if credited, be a sufficient basis for affecting the court's financial orders, the court does not find most of her account credible. The plaintiff denied the defendant's various accusations of his wrong-doing and the court found his testimony on these matters more credible than hers. Yet her farewell note, written when she fled the marital home in December 2000 with the children, shows a woman very unhappy in her marriage, however unbeknownst to her husband. The plaintiffs work hours in the last years of the marriage kept him away many evenings and his time away from home increased after the move to Danbury because of the longer commute. The defendant was strongly emotionally tied to her family in Canada and evidently missed living there with them. As the court does not find the defendant's claims of physical, verbal and substance abuse credible, it can only conclude that in this marriage, as many others, the parties fell out of love for reasons that cannot be precisely determined.

The plaintiff, who turned 44 years old during the time of trial, is in good health. A high school graduate, he has also completed three years of college-level engineering courses, holds a New York stationery engineering license, and has almost completed a refresher course to prepare him to take the Connecticut examination for a similar license. He is presently employed as an operating engineer by the New York Times Company and earns a base pay and guaranteed overtime of $1,261 per week. He also regularly has the opportunity for additional overtime, from which he earns approximately an additional $167 per week. The plaintiff works on Monday and Tuesday from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m., Wednesday and Thursday from 10 p.m. to 6 a.m. and on Sunday from 4:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. His commute to the City takes him between 75 and 90 minutes during the week, and somewhat less on Sunday. As a union member, he does have some flexibility CT Page 11096 to re-arrange his hours, so that he sometime spends Sundays with the children, but he is also subject to being asked to work extra days or hours.

The defendant was 34 years old at the time of trial and also in good health. She has minimal job skills. A high school graduate, she worked as a billing and data entry clerk until marrying the plaintiff. She did not work during the marriage but by agreement with the plaintiff stayed at home to raise their children until she left him in December 2000. While in Canada during the court proceedings she initiated there, she did volunteer and course work to develop office job skills. In February 2001, the Ontario Court of Justice dismissed the petition she had filed there, assigned temporary custody of the children to the plaintiff, and allowed him to bring them back to Danbury. The defendant also returned to Connecticut and in July obtained a job as a data entry clerk at Special Testing Laboratory in Bethel, where she worked between 30 and 40 hours a week for the next nine months earning $10 an hour. After being laid off there on March 30 of this year, she collected $181 per week in unemployment compensation benefits through the time of trial. She engaged in only minimal efforts to find new employment although in June she did enroll in a job-training course offered by the State Department of Labor that had a possibility of job placement upon completion.

Under the parties' Stipulation as to Custody and Visitation, approved by the Court, Fischer, J., on May 7, 2002, the parties share joint custody but the two minor children live primarily with the plaintiff. The defendant has parenting time Mondays and Tuesdays from 5:30 p.m. to 7:30 p.m., from Friday to Sunday evening two weekends a month, and from Saturday to Sunday evening on another weekend each month. Because of the plaintiffs work and commute schedule, he has hired a distant relative for $150 per week as a live-in nanny to provide care for the children when he cannot care for the children or they are not with their mother.

II — Discussion of Financial Issues
Since the parties have agreed on custody and visitation matters, the issues facing this court concern the relevant financial orders: child support, alimony, classification and distribution of marital property, and allocation of counsel fees. The major assets of the parties are the marital home located at 4 Nancy Drive in Danbury and various deferred compensation plans the plaintiff has through his employment.

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Related

Krafick v. Krafick
663 A.2d 365 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1995)
Miller v. Miller
547 A.2d 922 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1988)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 11094, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rose-v-rose-no-fa-01-0341809-s-aug-28-2002-connsuperct-2002.