Tyc v. Tyc, No. 92-513300 (Jul. 18, 1994)

1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 7461
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1994
DocketNo. 92-513300
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 7461 (Tyc v. Tyc, No. 92-513300 (Jul. 18, 1994)) 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
Tyc v. Tyc, No. 92-513300 (Jul. 18, 1994), 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 7461 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION This is a case brought for a marital dissolution, custody of the minor children issue of the marriage, a division of the marital estate, alimony, and support.

The court finds that the parties married in Encarnacion, Paraguay in South America on February 11, 1981. The court will further find that the plaintiff has resided at least one year next to the date of filing of the complaint in the State of Connecticut. The court will further find that there are two minor children issue of the marriage, Sylvia E. born on October 26, 1981 and Natalie D. born on December 12, 1984. The court will further find that the marriage has broken down irretrievably.

The basic cause for the breakdown of the marriage seems to be excessive drinking on the part of the defendant and abusive behavior on the part of the defendant towards the plaintiff. The wife testified to the fact that the husband frequently came home drunk, and often while drunk was physically and verbally abusive to her. The defendant denies that he drank or that if he drank he did not drink to excess. He put on a friend of his to testify that he never saw the defendant intoxicated. However, the court finds the plaintiff's versions of the incidents which occurred during the course of the marriage were more believable as the plaintiff was a more credible witness than the defendant.

The parties met when the plaintiff applied for employment at a dress manufacturing establishment owned by the defendant. While in Paraguay the plaintiff was trained as a seamstress and at the time of her employment she was a seventeen year old, and the defendant was twenty years her senior. Within three months of her seeking employment with the defendant the parties were married. They remained in Paraguay for a period CT Page 7462 of approximately two years before coming to the United States. There was an incident she testified to and which he evidently admitted of an instance in Paraguay when he lost his temper and struck her. At the time she did not want to leave Paraguay but her claim is that he forced her to leave with him.

The defendant has an interesting background. He was born in Poland and at sometime during his youth he escaped to Germany. From Germany he travelled to South Africa where he obtained employment in the mining industry and where he learned to use explosives during the course of his employment. The defendant evidently had prior relationships because he had a son in Poland and he had a daughter in South Africa. There was no testimony as to whether these were legitimate or illegitimate children though his health certificate lists the current marriage as his third. This was the first marriage for the plaintiff.

At the time the parties left Paraguay to come to the United States he evidently brought with him thirteen or fourteen sewing machines which had been used in his unsuccessful business venture in Paraguay. After arrival in the United States the plaintiff opened up a store as a seamstress at which time she was using about three of the defendant's machines. The store was opened in late 1984 and burned down in 1987. Subsequently the plaintiff started up another business as a seamstress and this store burned down around 1992. The plaintiff claims that during a period of roughly 1984 to 1987 while she was running this business she was contributing all of her money to the support of the family. During a period of time from 1984 until 1988 the defendant procured work as a blaster, originally starting out at about $8.00 an hour and working up to approximately $16.00 an hour until he had his first heart attack in 1988. Out of the money he earned he accumulated in his own name at least $28,000.00 which first shows up in his name as trustee for Natalie D. Tyc, one of the parties children, in November of 1987. On the 30th day of January 1988 the defendant withdrew $28,183.46. On May 5, the money shows up in an account in the name of Joseph Tyc as custodian for his daughter Sylvia Tyc, the other child of the marriage, in another bank and this time in the amount of $25,000.00 which means that the defendant disbursed something in excess of $3,000.00 between the end of January and early May, 1988. The $25,000.00, with interest CT Page 7463 for a total of $25,474.26, was withdrawn by the defendant on August 11, 1988. The money has never been accounted for. As indicated the plaintiff claims that she was the one who supported the house, paid the rent, bought the food, and paid the utilities without any help from the defendant. It would seem that with her minimal income that this could not have been possible without help from the defendant but by the same token the defendant would not have been able to accumulate as much money as he did had he been pulling his full weight at home.

It was in late 1988 that the defendant had his first heart attack. Subsequent to this heart attack, he has worked a total of two jobs for approximately three months each. The plaintiff had a second heart attack on February 5, 1992. In between these heart attacks, as indicated earlier, he worked a total of two jobs for a total period of six months, which was his only income plus some SSI income that he received. He claims that he was limited in the kind of work he could undertake after his first heart attack and that though he secured two jobs, they both let him go when they found out he had experienced a heart attack because of the fear that the employers might have some increased exposure because of his health in the area of workers' compensation. There is a note in the appeal of his attorney on his workers' compensation claim which indicates that in fact he was let go on one of the jobs because he was just too slow in his work and it had nothing to do with his heart attack. It seems that he did receive some training in between the time of the first and second heart attack in some accounting procedure so that he could secure work in a much less strenuous area than he had been doing as a blaster, which was a very strenuous physical job.

This brings us to the major issue which arises as a result of this dissolution and that is how much if any of his workers' compensation benefits become part of the marital estate that can be used for both distribution between the husband and wife and how much can be used as child support for the benefit of the minor children. This seems to be an issue which has never really been decided beyond the superior court level here in the State of Connecticut. The reason that this becomes as important as it does is that his current income is limited and possibly for some time in the future his earnings will be limited to what he receives as part of his disability CT Page 7464 payments from his workers' compensation. It is also important for the purposes of dividing up what is currently being held in payments made to him in the past and whether or not they are assets of the marital estate. The importance here is that the financial affidavits really show no other estate other than the claim for workers' compensation.

There were arguments advanced during the course of the trial that the workers' compensation claim breaks down into two areas. There is compensation for lost wages and medical expenses and then there is compensation for loss of bodily function which compensations are separate and distinct from one another. There didn't seem to be too much dispute as to whether or not the spouse, in this case the wife, was entitled to a share of the lost earnings and medical expenses as received by the defendant. The defendant heartily contested whether or not any compensation received for loss of bodily function was part of the marital estate.

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Bluebook (online)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 7461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyc-v-tyc-no-92-513300-jul-18-1994-connsuperct-1994.