The record reveals the following procedural history and facts that were found by Judge Colin or are undisputed. The marriage of the parties was dissolved on January 4, 2002, after twenty-seven years of marriage. At the time of the dissolution judgment, the plaintiff was unemployed and had no income. The defendant was employed in the commercial mortgage business and had a net weekly income of $2961.98. The parties entered into a separation agreement, which the trial court, Hon. Dennis Harrigan , judge trial referee, approved and incorporated into the divorce decree. The separation agreement provided in relevant part that, "[c]ommencing January 1, 2002, the [defendant] shall pay during his lifetime to the [plaintiff], as alimony, 33 1/3 [percent] of the first $180,000 of the [defendant's] gross income from his employment and 33 1/3 [percent] of [one half] ... of the income actually received from his limited partnership interest in [various entities] and 25 [percent] of the next $200,000 in earnings and 38
As the result of poor market conditions during the years 2008, 2009 and 2010, the defendant's income was significantly reduced. In 2010, he filed a motion to modify the alimony provision of the divorce decree by reducing the percentage of his income that he was required to pay the plaintiff. After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court, Shay, J., found that there had been a substantial change in circumstances since the time of the divorce decree because the defendant's current net income had decreased to $1373.95 per week, and the plaintiff's net income had increased to $945.15 per week. Judge Shay granted the defendant's motion for modification and ordered that the defendant pay the plaintiff $250 per week until her death or remarriage.
In September, 2011, the plaintiff filed a motion to open and vacate that modification order on the basis of new evidence showing that the defendant's income was actually $8805.63 per week, not $1137.95 as Judge Shay had found. The plaintiff contended that, in light of the cyclical nature of the defendant's business, alimony expressed as a percentage of the defendant's income was more appropriate than a set dollar amount. The defendant agreed that an award based on a percentage of his income was appropriate. After an evidentiary hearing, Judge Shay issued a corrected memorandum of decision, finding that the plaintiff's current net income from employment was $392.09 per week and her investment income was $581 per week, for a total of $973.09 per week, and the defendant's current net income was
In November, 2013, the plaintiff filed a motion to modify the 2012 modification order on the ground that the defendant's earnings in 2012 were more than $293,000, substantially in excess of his earning capacity of $158,420 as found by Judge Shay. In her motion, the plaintiff pointed out that the original alimony provision of the divorce decree had required the defendant to pay the plaintiff a percentage of his income. The defendant objected to the motion on the ground that it would be improper for the court to consider the divorce decree because, when considering a motion for modification of alimony orders pursuant to General Statutes § 46b-86, the trial court's "inquiry is necessarily confined to a comparison between the current conditions and the last court order." Borkowski v. Borkowski ,
After an evidentiary hearing, the trial court, Colin J. , found that the plaintiff had a current net income from employment of $438.
The court then noted that, under Dan , "[w]hen the initial award was not sufficient to fulfill the underlying purpose of the award ... an increase in the supporting spouse's salary, in and of itself, may justify an increase in the award. For example, if the initial alimony award was not sufficient to maintain the standard of living that the supported spouse had enjoyed during the marriage because the award was based on a reduction in the supporting spouse's income due to unemployment or underemployment as a result of an economic downturn, and, after the divorce, the supporting spouse's income returns to its previous level, a modification might well be justified." Dan v. Dan , supra,
On appeal, the defendant contends that the trial court improperly (1) based its conclusion that there had been a significant change in the parties' financial circumstances, warranting a modification of the 2012 modification order, on a comparison of their current circumstances to their circumstances at the time of the divorce decree, instead of their circumstances at the time of the previous 2012 modification order, (2) considered the plaintiff's motion for modification when it was "legally insufficient" on its face, (3) considered certain evidence in support of its conclusion that the 2012 modification order should be modified, and (4) rendered an illegal "lifetime profit sharing order." We reject all of these claims.
We first address the defendant's claim that the trial court improperly considered the parties' financial circumstances
"The power of the trial court to modify the existing order does not, however, include the power to retry issues already decided ... or to allow the parties to use a motion to modify as an appeal. ... Rather, the trial court's discretion includes only the power to adapt the order to some distinct and definite change in the circumstances or conditions of the parties.
"Therefore, although the trial court may consider the same criteria used to determine the initial award without limitation ... in doing so, its inquiry is necessarily confined to a comparison between the current conditions and the last court order. To permit the trial court to reconsider all evidence dating from before the original divorce proceedings, in determining the adjustment of alimony, would be, in effect, to undermine the policy behind the well established rule of limiting proof of the substantial change of circumstances to events occurring subsequent to the latest alimony order-the avoidance of relitigating matters already settled." (Citations
In the present case, the defendant contends that the trial court ignored these principles when it concluded that there had been a substantial change in circumstances, which is "the threshold predicate for the trial court's ability to entertain [the plaintiff's] motion for modification [of alimony] ...." Id., at 737,
The trial court expressly stated that "the defendant's income has increased substantially and the [2012 modification order] is no longer sufficient to fulfill the underlying purpose of the original alimony award ...." (Emphasis added.) It is clear, therefore, that the court believed that the 2012 modification order was sufficient to fulfill the underlying purpose of the original alimony award, to the extent possible under the changed circumstances, at the time that it was rendered. If that was no longer the case, it could only have been because of the change in the parties' financial circumstances since the date of the 2012 modification order , the most significant of which was, by far, the increase in the defendant's income.
Finally, to the extent that the defendant contends that, after Judge Shay issued the 2012 modification
II
We next address the defendant's claim that the plaintiff's motion for modification was "legally insufficient" on its face because it alleged only that the defendant's income had significantly increased and did not allege that the 2012 modification order was insufficient to fulfill the underlying purpose of the original alimony award or that there were other exceptional circumstances justifying a modification, as required by Dan . We disagree.
In support of this claim, the defendant points out that this court held in Dan that an increase in income, standing alone, does not justify a modification of an alimony award unless "the initial award was not sufficient to fulfill the underlying
III
We next address the defendant's claim that, even if the plaintiff's motion for modification was legally sufficient, the trial court improperly considered certain evidence to support its conclusion that the purpose of the original alimony award was "to address the fluctuating nature of the defendant's income and to have the plaintiff share in that income [from employment] ...." Specifically, the defendant contends that (1) the trial court should not have considered extrinsic evidence of the parties' intent when they entered into the separation agreement without first finding that the agreement was ambiguous; see Parisi v. Parisi ,
As we have indicated, this court held in Dan that the trial court should consider the purpose of the original alimony award when determining whether an increase in the supporting spouse's income, standing alone, justifies a modification. See Dan v. Dan , supra,
The defendant also claims that the trial court improperly took judicial notice of certain items in the court file, specifically, the plaintiff's 2002 financial affidavit. It is well established, however, that "[t]he trial court has the power to take judicial notice of court files of other actions between the same parties." In re Mark C. ,
IV
Finally, we address the defendant's claim that "[t]he trial court entered an impermissible lifetime profit sharing order based on its finding that the 'underlying purpose of the original alimony award [was] ... to have the plaintiff share in [the defendant's] fluctuating income [from employment],' rather than to meet her needs." We disagree.
As a preliminary matter, we note that, inasmuch as the trial court was bound by the purpose of the original alimony award when determining whether a modification was justified; see Dan v. Dan , supra,
This court concluded in Dan v. Dan , supra,
The defendant points out, however, that this court in Dan presumed that the alimony award in that case, which was based on a voluntary agreement between
As we have explained, however, the plaintiff in Dan made no claim that the purpose of the alimony award was to allow her to share the defendant's standard of living after the divorce, but claimed only that she was no longer able to enjoy the standard of living that she had enjoyed during the marriage. See footnote 7 of this opinion. Moreover, the plaintiff in Dan was not attempting to reinstate the provision of the original alimony award that required the defendant to pay her a percentage of his bonus income, which was the provision that allowed the plaintiff's income to track the defendant's income after the divorce, at least to some extent. See id., at 4-5,
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
Notes
The defendant appealed to the Appellate Court and we transferred the appeal to this court pursuant to General Statutes § 51-199 (c) and Practice Book § 65-1.
Hereinafter, all references to the trial court are to Judge Colin unless otherwise indicated.
Indeed, in light of the fact that the trial court expressly noted that the plaintiff's net weekly income at the time of the 2012 modification order was $973, we find it improbable that the court mistakenly believed that the plaintiff's income had increased from the date of the 2012 modification order.
As we have indicated, the trial court found that the defendant's weekly net income had increased from $2163 at the time of the 2012 modification order to $6765 in 2015 and that the plaintiff's net weekly income at the time of the 2012 modification order was $973 and was $763.54 in 2015.
We address the defendant's claim that the trial court in the present case improperly considered certain evidence to determine the purpose of the original alimony award in part III of this opinion.
We have concluded in part I of this opinion that the trial court properly considered the purpose of the original alimony award when it modified the 2012 modification order.
This court observed in Dan that, "[h]istorically, alimony was based [on] the continuing duty of a divorced husband to support an abandoned wife and should be sufficient to provide her with the kind of living [that] she might have enjoyed but for the breach of the marriage contract by the [husband]." (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Dan v. Dan , supra,
As we have indicated, the trial court also included a cap on alimony payments in the modification order that is the subject of this appeal, a cap that was one half of the amount provided for in the original alimony award.
We emphasize, however, that we continue to believe that the trial courts should not, in the absence of good reasons, depart from the general rule that the purpose of alimony is to allow the supported spouse to continue to enjoy the standard of living that existed during the marriage.
