Wilmot v. Wilmot, No. Fa95 0147844 S (Nov. 27, 1998)

1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 13621
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1998
DocketNo. FA95 0147844 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 13621 (Wilmot v. Wilmot, No. Fa95 0147844 S (Nov. 27, 1998)) 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
Wilmot v. Wilmot, No. Fa95 0147844 S (Nov. 27, 1998), 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 13621 (Colo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
The principle issue in this case is the enforceability of a separation agreement signed by the parties just a few months prior to the filing of this dissolution complaint in a ten year marriage. Although this case took ten trial days, the issues in this case are less complex.

After hearing the evidence and reviewing the exhibits, the court finds the following facts. The parties were married in Norwalk, Connecticut on September 17, 1988. There are no children, issue of the marriage, and no children had been born to the plaintiff since the date of this marriage. The defendant has continuously resided in the state of Connecticut more than one CT Page 13622 year next prior to the date of this complaint. Neither party has received any financial support from any governmental agency. Testimony reveals that the marriage of the parties has broken down irretrievably, and there is no hope of reconciliation.

The plaintiff wife is 39 and in good health. This is her first marriage. She is currently a Florida resident, is employed full-time in a legal career supporting herself. She received her law degree from the University of Miami. She was admitted to the Florida Bar in 1985, while living in Fort Lauderdale. She became a Public Defender in Miami and then worked as in-house counsel for Knight Enterprises, a real estate developer in Boca Raton. She became familiar with legal issues involving shopping centers, general building and construction. She has since become a member of the Connecticut Bar. She was employed as corporate counsel for Woolworth Corporation in New York City. She worked for the defendant as in-house counsel in Norwalk, Connecticut.

The parties met at a fishing tackle store in Florida in December, 1987. The defendant husband lived part-time in Florida on a 50 foot Bertram boat with a tuna tower while retaining his Connecticut residency. They started to see each other socially. The defendant would come to Florida virtually every weekend. The parties would meet at the West Palm Beach Airport and spend the weekend on his boat. The defendant brought the boat back to Connecticut in March, 1988, and the plaintiff then visited the defendant in Connecticut. They became engaged on February 14, 1988. Prior to their September, 1988 marriage, they talked about the defendant moving to Florida, but his business obligations prevented it. The plaintiff moved to Connecticut in June, 1988 and lived with the defendant in his East Norwalk, Connecticut condominium. She left her employment with the Boca Raton developer and became in-house counsel for the defendant's various businesses in Connecticut. She left Connecticut and became a Florida resident on December 1, 1995. She is employed in Florida as a corporate real estate attorney earning $110,000 annually.

During the period the plaintiff was defendant's in-house counsel, she also had her own law practice. The work she did for the defendant involved leases, negotiations with banks and creditors, and negotiating various commercial contracts. As a result, she became aware of each and every business that the defendant was involved in. In October, 1989 she became employed full-time as an attorney for Woolworth Corporation in New York. She worked as a Woolworth attorney until April, 1996. She then CT Page 13623 became a real estate attorney with Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Company for 6 months. She then left that job and returned to Florida where she currently resides. She still did part-time work as defendant's in-house counsel including the sale of residential subdivision lots, the buying out of his former partners and the reorganization of the partnership business, exchanging assets including real property, a major refinance of the Water Street, Norwalk property and the acquisition of a portion of that property by a family trust formed by the defendant. That family trust had been formed by a Bridgeport estate planning attorney with the plaintiff's advice, assistance and document modification skills.

The defendant husband is 52 and in good health. This is his second marriage. His first marriage lasted for twelve years and he has two sons from that marriage. He was divorced in 1981. The two boys lived with the defendant at the time of his second marriage. When the parties married, the plaintiff wife became an active step-mother, helping raise the two boys. The defendant's sons are now 22 and 24. They are both active in the defendant's current business.

The defendant had been working all his life. He served in the Navy for four years, until 1967 and completed high school in the Navy. He then became an apprentice laborer for one year and then an apprentice carpenter for five years, building houses and then later, commercial buildings. He became foreman of a company that manufactured doors and door frames in 1972. In 1973, the business recession caused his unemployment. He started his own business known as Modern Acoustics, which was the firm that he owned at the time of the parties' marriage.

Although his business entities have changed, he is still in the commercial interior construction business. He also is the property manager of 50 Water Street, Norwalk, Connecticut, which is a mixed use waterfront development in South Norwalk.

During the pendency of this matter, the defendant became the father of a two year old daughter by another woman. The court is of the opinion that the defendant's relationship with this other woman, the birth of this child and the defendant's willingness to father a child, was the cause of the plaintiff's efforts to disavow the separation agreement signed by the parties prior to the commencement of this dissolution lawsuit. The plaintiff testified, quite credibly, that her biological clock was ticking CT Page 13624 and that she and the defendant had agreed to have children. She had some conception problems and never did have children. To her consternation the defendant went ahead and fathered a child by another woman.

The parties spent an exhaustive amount of court time offering multiple detailed exhibits and brought boxes and boxes of documents to court every day. In a preliminary matter, this court heard a discovery dispute which involved 64 to 65 boxes of financial and other materials. Virtually every one of the 64 to 65 boxes was presented at trial and was the subject of intense examination by multiple witnesses.

The plaintiff filed the complaint on September 5, 1995. A simple request for dissolution was made by her then attorney who received a $1,000 retainer fee. The parties had already signed a separation agreement on June 20, 1995. No reference was made in the initial complaint of the June 20, 1995 Separation Agreement. A simple answer and a straight forward cross-complaint seeking a dissolution was filed by the defendant's counsel in September, 1995. The matter then waited disposition since the 90 day waiting period had not yet expired. No further pleadings were filed. The plaintiff discovered the birth of the defendant's minor child in February, 1996 and hired another attorney. The plaintiff for the first time, raised issues concerning the validity of the June 20, 1995 Separation Agreement with the defendant's attorney. The defendant thereafter filed an amended cross complaint on April 7, 1998 in three separate counts seeking: (1) A decree dissolving the marriage, (2) A determination by the court of the validity and enforceability of the June 20, 1995 Separation Agreement, and (3) An order of equitable estoppel preventing the plaintiff from disavowing the June 20, 1995 Separation Agreement. The plaintiff denied the allegations.

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McHugh v. McHugh
436 A.2d 8 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1980)
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1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 448-Y (Connecticut Superior Court, 1997)
O'Neill v. O'Neill
536 A.2d 978 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1988)
Tessitore v. Tessitore
623 A.2d 496 (Connecticut Appellate Court, 1993)

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Bluebook (online)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 13621, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmot-v-wilmot-no-fa95-0147844-s-nov-27-1998-connsuperct-1998.