Schneider-Pecoraro v. Schneider, No. Fa 01 0450087 S (May 7, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 5802
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 7, 2002
DocketNo. FA 01 0450087 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 5802 (Schneider-Pecoraro v. Schneider, No. Fa 01 0450087 S (May 7, 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
Schneider-Pecoraro v. Schneider, No. Fa 01 0450087 S (May 7, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 5802 (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
This limited contested dissolution of marriage action with a return date of May 1, 2001, was heard on March 5, March 6, and April 3, 2002. The parties were married on May 3, 1998, in Madison, Connecticut, there are no minor children issue of the marriage and no minor children have born to the wife since the date of the marriage. Neither party is receiving aid from the state of Connecticut. The marriage between the parties has broken down irretrievably and there is no hope of reconciliation. The court dissolves the marriage on the grounds of irretrievable breakdown.

The plaintiff wife is forty-six years of age and she is a high school graduate. This is her third marriage. She has some minor health problems, but they do not prevent her from working on a full-time basis. She is presently employed as a real estate agent at Beazley Company. The plaintiff, in her updated financial affidavit of April 3, 2002, states her average gross real estate agent income is $384 a week; this amount does not include a commission check she will shortly receive in the amount of $7800. The plaintiff also receives $140 a week from the sale of her interest in a trailer park that she inherited prior to the marriage. The total net income on her updated affidavit is $524 per week.

At the commencement of the trial, and for the previous eight-teen months, the plaintiff was also employed as a home companion for an CT Page 5803 elderly woman. Unfortunately, this woman died during the course of the trial. The plaintiff's net income as a home companion was $442 per week. The court finds the plaintiff continues to have the capacity to earn this companion income.

The house in which the plaintiff lives, located at 151 Goebel Road, Hamden, Connecticut, is owned by a trust that the plaintiff created for the benefit of her children on February 24, 1996. The plaintiff is the trustee. This house was previously owned by the plaintiff and her mother in survivorship; her mother died in March 1991. A certificate of jointly owned property has not been obtained by the plaintiff. The plaintiff's affidavit reflects only one half of the value of the property; however, the court concludes that the entire value of the property is attributable to the trust. The property is unencumbered and has a value of $159,000.

The plaintiff owns a 1997 Ford Explorer, which her son uses, valued at $15,000. In July 2001, the plaintiff provided $17,000 cash to purchase a 1996 Audi that is titled in her brother's name.

The cash used to purchase the Audi was in the possession of the plaintiff on May 31, 2001, the date of a pendente lite hearing regarding alimony. The cash was not shown on the sworn financial affidavit she submitted on that date.

The plaintiff also owns two diamond engagement rings, including the one given to her by the defendant. She values both rings at $10,000. The ring given to the plaintiff by the defendant has been appraised and has a retail replacement value of $13,500. (Defendant's Exhibit T).

The plaintiff owned land in Arizona, acquired prior to the marriage, that she valued on her May 31, 2001, affidavit at $82,000. She sold this land in July 2001 and received $72,000. In violation of automatic court order 1,1 the plaintiff disbursed $20,000 of this money to herself, which she has spent, and gave $50,000 to her son for his college education. The only liquid asset shown on her affidavit is $426 in two bank accounts.

It is undisputed that while the parties were together the defendant made payments, totaling approximately $25,000, for college tuition for the plaintiff's son. The defendant testified he made these payments pursuant to an agreement with the plaintiff under which she would reimburse him for the payments upon the sale of her land in Arizona. The court finds this testimony credible.

The defendant husband is fifty-two years old and he is a high school graduate. This is his third marriage, although his first two marriages CT Page 5804 were with the same woman. The plaintiff has been an excavating contractor since the mid-1970s. In addition to his excavating business, the defendant, in 1996, entered into a partnership to sell modular homes. His average gross income is $800 a week; his net income is $767 a week.

When the parties married, the defendant owned a home in Chester, Connecticut. After the marriage the plaintiff continued to reside in Hamden with her son and the defendant continued to reside at his home in Chester with his daughter. The parties entered into this arrangement so the children could graduate from their respective high schools. On August 25, 2000, the defendant sold his house in Chester and received net proceeds of $129,484. The defendant testified that approximately $70,000 of these proceeds was spent on tuition for the plaintiff's son and living expenses of the parties; the court finds this testimony credible. What is now left of those proceeds, $58,400, is in a bank account under the name of the defendant's son that is shown on the defendant's financial affidavit. The defendant owns a 1995 Jeep which has been in the possession of the plaintiff since the parties separated in April 2001.

While the parties maintained separate houses, they paid for their respective expenses. Problems arose after the parties began living together at the plaintiff's home in Hamden. The plaintiff wanted the proceeds from the sale of the defendant's home to be placed in a joint account. The plaintiff believed that the parties would build a new house, her `dream house', and she was disappointed when this did not happen. The plaintiff also testified that the defendant never gave her money for household expenses. The defendant testified he made adequate provisions to support the household by giving the plaintiff check writing privileges and credit cards. He also believed the plaintiff spent money excessively.

The plaintiff claims the marriage broke down because of a lack of communication between the parties and excessive secrecy on the part of the defendant regarding his business affairs. The defendant claims that the marriage broke down when the plaintiff reneged on the agreement regarding reimbursement of college tuition. Having considered the evidence, the court declines to assess fault against either party for the breakdown of the marriage.

Before addressing the parties' claims for relief, the court is compelled to comment on its assessment of the plaintiff's demeanor, attitude and credibility. The court concludes the plaintiff's expectations in the outcome of this case have overwhelmed her veracity. As noted, the plaintiff's sworn financial affidavit of May 31, 2001 omitted $17,000 cash that was in her possession. The plaintiff's financial affidavit filed on March 5, 2002, indicated weekly income from CT Page 5805 Beazley Company of $116 per week. When questioned about this financial affidavit, she admitted that it was a "stale" affidavit, current only as of the middle of December 2001. On this affidavit the total of the balances for her MBNA, Discover, GE, Exxon Mobile credit cards totaled $8,422. On an "updated" affidavit dated and filed on April 3, 2002, her weekly income from Beazley Company is shown as $384 and the balances of the four credit cards totaled $25,294.

When the court questioned the plaintiff regarding the $17,000 cash, which she testified she kept in a can under her bed, the plaintiff's responses were contradictory and incredible. During the trial the plaintiff admitted that she lied, while under oath, in depositions conducted by the defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 5802, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schneider-pecoraro-v-schneider-no-fa-01-0450087-s-may-7-2002-connsuperct-2002.