Thе defendant raises three claims of error in this appeal from the judgment dissolving his marriage to the plaintiff. He claims that the trial court erred in its distribution of the marital assets, in refusing to disqualify itself bеcause of a conflict of interest, and in awarding counsel fees to the plaintiff to defend this appeal.
The following facts are undisputed. The parties were married in 1977. Shortly аfter their marriage, they purchased a house in Watertown for $65,000. The house, which was placed in both names upon purchase, stood solely in the name of the plaintiff at the time оf this action. The parties paid for the house with a down payment of $5000, which came from the proceeds of the sale of a house owned by the defendant prior to the marriage, and $15,000, which was loaned to them by the plaintiffs parents. The balance of the purchase price was financed through a first mortgage. Before the parties separated, the plaintiff signed a second mortgage to her father for the $15,000 loan.
At the time of trial, the plaintiff was twenty-five years old and worked as a sales manager at a manufacturing comрany owned by her father. Her net salary was approximately $280 per week. The defendant, a self-employed roofer, earned a net income of about $300
In bringing this action, the plaintiff made no claim for alimony. Nor did she claim any interest in the defendant’s business, rental properties, antique, coin or other collections, or furniture which she had not alrеady removed from the Watertown residence.
At trial, the plaintiff testified that she had been continuously employed throughout the marriage and that she used her earnings to pay for food, short vacations and household expenses. Because of the seasonal nature of the defendant’s business, she saved what remained for times “when things were slow.” The defendant testified that he contributed approximately $30,000 of his own money toward the improvement of the Watertown property and that, being a roofer, he did a substantial amount of work on the prоperty himself. He also testified that he paid the mortgage, utilities, insurance and taxes on that property.
In rendering its judgment of dissolution, the trial court ordered that the Watertown property was to be sold, and from the net proceeds the defendant was to receive $7500 with the balance going to the plaintiff. The defendant, who was living in the house, was to be responsiblе for paying the first mortgage, taxes, insurance and utilities until the premises were sold. Except for a pool table and an antique clock, all the remaining personal propеrty, including motor vehicles, was to go to the defendant.
The defendant’s first claim of error, which concerns the distribution of assets, focuses primarily on the distribution of the proceeds from the sale of the Water-town residence. The defendant argues that the award of $7500 from the proceeds of the sale was unreasona
Although the court is obligated to basе its award upon and be guided by the statutory criteria established in General Statutes § 46b-81; Weiman v. Weiman,
“The power to act equitably is the keystone to the court’s ability to fashion relief in the infinite variety of circumstances which arise out of the dissolution оf marriage.” Pasquariello v. Pasquariello,
The defendant next argues that the trial judge should have disqualified herself because a law firm with which she had once bеen associated had, at an earlier time, represented the plaintiffs father. This fact was brought to the attention of the parties by the trial judge soon after the trial commenсed. The defendant’s trial counsel did not seek the judge’s disqualification and, in fact, stated that he had no objection to her presiding over the trial.
No question was raised as to this matter until after judgment was rendered and this appeal was pending. At a post-trial hearing on a motion by the defendant to open the judgment, based in part upon the judge’s failure to disqualify herself, the trial judge amplified upon her earlier statement. She stated that she had never met the plaintiff until trial; that other members of her law firm, and not herself, had represented the plaintiff’s father; and that the representation had occurred about fifteen years earlier. She denied the motion to open the judgment, finding no merit in the disqualification claim or the other grounds rаised by the defendant.
The disqualification of judges is addressed in General Statutes § 51-39. That statute provides, in pertinent part: “(a) Except as provided in this section, a judge is disqualified to act ... if he may receive a direct pecuniary benefit by the determination of any proceeding before him. . . . (c) When any judge is disqualified to act in any proceeding before him, he may аct if the parties thereto consent in open court.” The
The interest in the potential outcome of a case that will disqualify a judge must be a present one. It must be direct, certain and immediate, аnd not one which may have formerly existed. 46 Am. Jur. 2d, Judges §§ 99, 100. General Statutes § 51-39 (a) requires disqualification if the judge may receive “direct pecuniary benefit” by the determination of the procеeding. Since the representation in this case involved the plaintiffs father and had occurred approximately fifteen years prior to trial, we see no infraction of Genеral Statutes § 51-39 (a).
Furthermore, even assuming that the facts were otherwise, General Statutes § 51-39 (c) allows a judge who is disqualified, to act in a proceeding with the parties’ consent. As we have noted, the trial court gave the parties ample opportunity, early in the proceeding, to object to her presiding over the trial. Although the parties, on the record, did not expressly agree that she could preside, the defense counsel never sought her disqualification. By failing to object or raise the disqualification issue, the conduct of the defendant “can be construed as the functional equivalent of ‘consent in open court’ . . . .” Timm v. Timm,
The allowance of counsel fees, and if so in what amount, falls within the sound discretion of the trial court. Anderson v. Anderson,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Because the defendant did nоt amend this appeal to include a challenge to the denial of his motion to open, we need not address the question of whether the court’s action on that motion was correct.
