This appeal questions whether a trial court, after having orally approved a settlement agreement of the parties, may modify or augment its terms in the dissolution decree.
After twenty-nine years of marriage the parties appeared before the trial court for the purpose of dissolving their marriage. They informed the
Before the decree was filed, counsel for the parties and the trial court met informally in the trial court’s chambers, at the request of counsel for the plaintiff, to determine who would be responsible for the payment of the mortgage and household expenses during the eighteen months after the
Subsequently the court filed its memorandum of decision in which it fully approved and specified the terms of the parties’ oral agreement, except that it ordered that the defendant’s annuity be made payable solely to the minor daughter. In addition to these terms the court ordered that the defendant be solely responsible for the payment of the mortgage principal and interest, town real property taxes, and the premium on the fire insurance on the property until the sale of the property. The court subsequently denied the defendant’s motion for arrest of judgment and/or for a new trial.
In his appeal from the judgment dissolving the marriage the defendant claims that the court erred in modifying the settlement agreement by substituting the minor daughter for the three children as the beneficiaries of the defendant’s annuity, and in adding to the agreement by ordering him to pay expenses on the residential property after he vacated until the sale of the property. Several months subsequent to the dissolution decree, on the plaintiff’s motion, the court awarded her $1500 counsel fees to defend the appeal. No amendment to the appeal from the judgment was filed, but the defendant raised the issue of counsel fees in his brief.
General Statutes §46b-66 provides that “[i]f the court finds the agreement fair and equitable, it shall become part of the court file, and if the agreement is in writing, it shall be incorporated by reference into the order or decree of the court. If the court finds the agreement is not fair and equitable, it shall make such orders as to finances and custody as the circumstances require.” The plaintiff contends that this language empowers the court to modify or augment provisions in an otherwise fair agreement provided that the resulting decree is fair and equitable. We do not agree.
It is a fundamental premise of due process that a court cannot adjudicate a matter until the persons directly concerned have been notified of its pend-ency and have been given a reasonable opportunity
The plaintiff concedes that the court erred in modifying the agreement by substituting the minor daughter as the sole beneficiary of the defendant’s annuity. The plaintiff, however, distinguishes the additional order that the defendant pay household expenses after he vacated the house until the sale of the property because the provision was never considered by the parties while negotiating their settlement agreement. It is precisely because the parties never considered it upon fair notice and an opportunity to be heard that we must agree with the
The defendant’s claim of error with respect to the award of counsel fees is not properly before us. Practice Book § 3062 directs an appellant desiring review by this court of a ruling subsequent to the filing of an appeal to amend his appeal within twenty days after the issuance of notice of the ruling. See Maltbie, Conn. App. Proe. § 180. The rule of practice further permits the appellant to amend his preliminary statement of issues to present claims of error of law arising out of that post-judgment ruling.
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As the plaintiff asserts in her brief, this court need not consider the defendant’s
There is error in part, the judgment is set aside and the ease is remanded with direction to render judgment as on file except as modified in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Practice Book § 3062 provides in full: “Should the trial court, subsequent to the filing of the appeal, make a ruling which the appellant desires to have reviewed by the supreme court, the appellant shall amend his appeal, filing notice thereof with the chief clerk of the supreme court within twenty days from the issuance of notice of the ruling. The appellant may file an amendment to his preliminary statements of issues to present any claimed errors of law arising out of such a ruling at the time he files the notice.”
