Opinion
The plaintiff, Carol L. Isham, appeals 1 from the decision of the trial court, denying her motion to, inter alia, find the defendant, F. Lance Isham, in contempt of the judgment dissolving the parties’ marriage for improperly basing his alimony payments to the plaintiff on his “salary” only, rather than on his employment “income,” which includes bonus compensation, and to establish a payment schedule to satisfy the amount that the defendant had underpaid. The plaintiff claims that the trial court improperly determined that the alimony provision in the parties’ separation agreement (agreement) was clear and unambiguous and did not include the defendant’s bonuses. She also claims that the trial court improperly refused to permit the introduction of extrinsic evidence concerning the parties’ intent with respect to the alimony provision. We conclude that the trial court improperly determined that the agreement was unambiguous, and we therefore reverse the judgment and remand for further proceedings.
The record reveals the following undisputed facts and procedural history. After twenty-nine years of marriage, the parties
Although the agreement also disposed of the parties’ real property, certain items of personal property and the defendant’s retirement accounts, this appeal centers on the provisions requiring the defendant to pay alimony to the plaintiff. As read into the record, the agreement specified that the defendant would provide alimоny to the plaintiff throughout her lifetime in “the sum of $150,000 for the first year, and $160,000 for the next two years following the date of the divorce, and $150,000 [per year] thereafter . . . .” The agreement also provided a provision for the automatic adjustment of alimony, an issue of central importance in this appeal, which was recited into the record as follows:
“[O’Sullivan]: . . . In the event that the [defendant’s] salary shall increase by $100,000 over the current level, then his obligation shall increase by $20,000 to the [plaintiff] at that time. In the event that his salary shall decrease by $100,000, then his obligation to the [plaintiff] shall be reduced by $10,000. There is a provision, however, that if the [defendаnt’s] salary shall be reduced below the level of $325,000, then he shall be free to seek a downward modification of his obligation for support.
“The Clerk: I’m sorry, I just need to get one thing.
“The Court: Sure.
“The Clerk: The sentence where the salary increases over $100,000, I didn’t get that.
“[O’Sullivan]: For every $100,000 that [the defendant] gets an increase, [the plaintiff] gets $20,000. If his income should decrease by $100,000, his obligation for alimony decreases by $10,000.
“The Court: We’re going to order the transcript, so just get sum and substance.
“[O’Sullivan]: We did indicate that if his salary should decrease below $325,000, that he can come back to the court to seek a downward modification. Upon retirement of the [the defendant], the [plaintiff] shall receive the lesser of: (A) one half of the [defendant’s] pension income, or (B) her then current alimony. All obligations for support and maintenance of the [plaintiff] shall cease upon the death of the payor, the death of the payee, remarriage or one year cohabitation.” (Emphasis added.)
Notably, the agreement set forth no definitions for the terms used therein. At the conclusion of the recitation of
the agreement into the record, the trial court canvassed the parties as to whether they understood the agreement and whether they believed that it was fair and reasonable under the circumstances, to which bоth parties responded in the affirmative, and as to whether they had any questions concerning the agreement, to which they both responded in the negative. In accordance with their responses, the court expressly found that the agreement was fair and reasonable under the circumstances, that the parties had concurred in this assessment and that both parties had been represented by counsel. The court ordered the transcript of the hearing to be placed in the file and, stating that the transcript would be treated as a separation agreement, ordered that it be incorporated by reference into the decree of dissolution. The corut did not order, nor did the parties request, that only certain portions of
At the time of the dissolution in 1993, the defendant’s employment compensation package consisted of an annual salary of $500,000, on which his presumptive “base” alimony obligation of $150,000 had been set, and various retirement plans; he did not receive any bonuses. 2 In 1996, however, his compensation package changed to include bonuses and stock options. His 1996 W-2 form reflected wages of $573,132, of which the defendant claims $500,000 was designated as sаlary, and he paid $160,000 in alimony. His 1997 W-2 form reflected wages of approximately $1.3 million, of which the defendant claims $646,154 was designated as salary, and he paid $167,319 in alimony. His 1998 W-2 form reflected wages of approximately $1.4 million, of which the defendant claims $757,692 was designated as salary, and he paid $190,000 in alimony. His 1999 W-2 form reflected wages of approximately $1.15 million, of which he claims $900,000 was designated as salary, and he paid $222,707 in alimony. From 2000 to 2003, the defendant’s W-2 forms, as amended, and/or his federal 1040 form reflected wages of approximately $1.47 million, $3.1 million, $ 1.66 million and $6.58 million, respectively, of which he claimed $900,000 was annua! salary, and he maintained his alimony payment for all four years at $230,022. Finally, in 2004, the year that the defendant retired, his 2004 W-2 form reflected wages of approximately $4.25 million, of which he claims approximately $225,000 was designated as salary, and he paid $219,434 in alimony.
The plaintiff filed a motion dated December 11, 2001 (contempt motion) seeking, inter alia, to: (1) hold the defendant in contempt for failing to comply with his alimony obligations under the 1993 dissolution decree; (2) modify the agreement incorporated into that decree to reflect the defendant’s current annual compensation and commensurate alimony obligation; (3) compel the defendant to produce his tax returns from 1993 to the date of the contempt motion to ascertain the amount of the arrearage; and (4) set a payment schedule to satisfy the arrearage. The basis of the plaintiffs motion was her contention that the agreement had provided that her alimony would increase by 20 percent for every increase of $100,000 in the defendant’s “salary/income.” She claimed that the defendant had received both salary and bonus compensation as income but improperly had based his alimony payments on his salary only.
Prior to the hearing on the contempt motion, the plaintiff disclosed her intent to introduce expert testimony from Edward Axelrod, a certified public accountant, to establish that the alimony arrearage that had accrued was more than $2.9 million, not including statu tory interest. She later expanded the scope of his proffered testimony to include the meaning ascribed to the terms “salary” and “income” by experts and laypeople, including the parties to the present case in the context of their agreement. The defendant moved to preclude this testimony, claiming that the interpretation of the agreement and the intent of the parties at the time that they entered into the agreement addressed the ultimate issue to be decided by the trier of fact, which is not a proper subject of expert testimony.
The trial court then turned to the contеmpt motion and heard testimony from both parties and the defendant’s accounting expert, Kenneth J. Pia, Jr. The trial court permitted the defendant to testify, over the plaintiffs objection, that he had interpreted his alimony obligations under the agreement to be limited to his salary.
3
The court did not permit, however, the defendant to testify regarding his intent at the time the parties entered into the agreement. The trial court also refused to permit the plaintiff to testify regarding her understanding of the agreement or her intent at the time the agreement was formed.
4
Pia was permitted to provide
Following the hearing, the trial court issued a memorandum of decision denying the plaintiffs contempt motion. The court began with a recitation of the agreement as read into the record, including the various questions and responses. The court concluded that the agreement unambiguously linked alimony increases to increases in salary and that salary did not include bonuses. It first noted that the references to increases in alimony were in a paragraph that referred only to salary. The court further noted that salary was the only form of employment compensation that the defendant had been receiving at the time of the dissolution. The court disagreed with the plaintiffs claim that the words salary and income were used interchangeably in the agreement, stating: “The word salary is directed to the court. The word income is directed to the [court clerk] who uses the word salary in making her inquiry. Her inquiry is not a part of the settlement terms. It is her effort to reflect the accuracy of the oral provisions in the transcription.” Finally, the court concluded that the term salary means “fixed compensation for services, paid to a person on a regular basis,” in accordance with its common meaning, citing two dictionary definitions, and that the term does not include other forms of income, such as bonuses. Accordingly, the trial court denied the plaintiffs contempt motion, and this appeal followed.
On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the trial court improperly: (1) determined that the alimony provision in the parties’ agreement was clear and unambiguous and did not include the defendant’s bonuses; and (2) refused to permit the introduction of extrinsic evidence concerning thе parties’ intent with respect to the alimony provision. In connection with the second claim, the plaintiff specifically contends that the trial court improperly precluded both parties from testifying as to their intent at the time the agreement was formed and the plaintiffs expert, Axelrod, from testifying to the meaning of the words salary and income as they are used in various contexts.
We begin our analysis with the plaintiffs claim addressing the interpretation of the agreement’s provision to adjust alimony automatically, as the resolution of that issue will influence the outcome of her claim that the trial court improperly excluded
It is well established that a separation agreement that has been incorporated into a dissolution decree and its resulting judgment must be regarded as a contract and construed in accordance with the general principles governing contracts.
Issler v. Issler,
The threshold determination in the construction of a separation agreement, therefore, is whether, examining the relevаnt provision in light of the context of the situation, the provision at issue is clear and unambiguous, which is a question of law over which our review is plenary. S
ee Allstate Life Ins. Co.
v.
BFA Ltd. Partnership, 287
Conn. 307, 313,
In the context of a settlement agreement, this court has stated that “[t]he word salary is neither a word of art nor one of strict or narrow meaning. . . . [T]he meaning of the word is not inflexible . . . [and] [t]he conflicting meanings given depend upon the context in which the word salary was used. . . . [Therefore] the language of the judgment itself must be cоnstrued.” (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Silver
v.
Silver,
supra,
With these principles in mind, we turn to the agreement in the present case. The term salary was not defined in the agreement, and, indeed, both salary and income were used in relation to the defendant’s alimony obligations. Specifically, O’Sullivan, the plaintiffs counsel at the time of the dissolution hearing, initially had used the term salary as the basis on which the defendant’s alimony
In light of this interchangeable use of the terms, both interpretations of the term “salary” — to include or to not include bonuses — are plausible. See
Poole
v.
Water-bary,
supra,
The defendant contends that this court’s decision in
Silver
necessitates a rigid interpretation of the word salary, meaning fixed compensation to be paid regularly
for services. As our prior discussion of
Silver
demonstrates, however, the defendant’s reliance on this case to mandate a fixed, narrow construction of salary is misplaced. Indeed, in light of the fact that the lack of a definition necessitated a contextual analysis in
Silver,
had the parties in the present case intended a narrow definition of
Our conclusion that the trial court improperly determined that the agreement was clear and unambiguous inexorably leads us to conclude further that the trial court improperly excluded extrinsic evidence to determine the parties’ intent with respect to the meaning of salary and income in the context of their agreement. As we previously have noted, “[e]xtrinsic evidence is always admissible ... to explain an ambiguity appearing in [an] instrument.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Poole
v.
Waterbury,
supra,
We do not agree, however, with the plaintiff that the trial court improperly excluded Axelrod’s expert testimony. The decision to admit expert testimony is within the discretion of the trial court, and the court’s decision will not be disturbed unless there was an abuse of that discretion.
State
v.
Beavers,
Finally, the interpretation of the meaning of the terms salary and income in
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
Notes
The plaintiff appealed from the judgment of the trial court to the Appellate Court, and we transferred the appeal to this court pursuant to General Statutes § 51-199 (c) and Practice Book § 65-1.
At the time of the dissolution, the defendant was employed by Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation. The defendant testified at the hearing on the contempt motion that his employment with Polo Ralph Lauren Corporation began in 1981 as a salesman and continued through his retirement from the board of directors in September, 2004.
The defendant testified on direct examination by the plaintiffs counsel as to the amount of his wages and other compensation as reflected on his W-2 forms during the relevant years. Immediately thereafter, the plaintiffs counsel queried the defendant about his interpretation of his alimony obligations, as set forth in the following colloquy:
“[The Plaintiffs Counsel]: In your interpretation of the separation agreement your ex-wife does not share in your deferred compensation, is that correct?
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: I will object. It speaks for itself.
“[The Plaintiffs Counsel]: It speaks for itself? I don’t know that it speaks for itself, Your Honor. We have a very ambiguous and undefined separation agreement. I am attempting to get clarity from the witness as to his understanding so that the court can hear both sides and make a determination as to the court’s interpretation of the agreement.
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: The agreement is clear. The interpretation of the parties is not relevant to the agreement. The agreement is what it says it is. And the agreement is here. It is part of the judgment. It was canvassed by Judge Karazin at the time and this is the agreement of the parties. It is not what the parties think the agreement is or what they think maybe it should have been. But the question is this is the agreement and this is the agreement that the parties have to live by and everybody has to live by ... . And for him to inquire as to what the parties meant or what they intended, goes beyond the scope of this case and would be incompetent.
“The Court: The objection is overruled. You may answer. . . .
“[The Defendant]: It wasn’t in existence.
“[The Plaintiffs Counsel]: But your understanding of the agreement . . . is that [the plaintiff] does not share in deferred compensation, isn’t that correct?
“[The Defendant]: Absolutely. . . .
“[The Plaintiffs Counsel]: And she does not share in bonuses, is that correct?
“[The Defendant]: Absolutely. . . .
“[The Plaintiffs Counsel]: You understand your interpretation of the agreement is that [the plaintiff] shares in nothing but your salary, is that correct?
“[The Defendant]: Correct.”
For example, during the direct examination of the plaintiff by her counsel, tire following colloquy occurred:
“[The Plaintiffs Counsel]: . . . [W]hat does the word salary mean to you in the agreement?
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: Objection.
“[The Plaintiffs Counsel]: I claim it, Your Honor.
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: I object to it. This is an agreement of the parties. That is exaсtly what you ruled on in connection with my motion [to preclude], the first motion you dealt with here. The parties’ own interpretation of what the agreement means is not relevant in this case. It is a decision for the court to make. It is not for the party to come back fifteen years later and say this is what I was thinking about because then we have no finality to the judgment here. It is not for her to say this is what I thought it meant. This is what it is. This is what she was canvassed on. Her independent thoughts arrived at fifteen years later are not only irrelevant but incompetent.
“[The Plaintiffs Counsel]: If I may be heard, Your Honor. The agreement references the word salary and income interchangeably. . . .
“[The Court]: Excuse me, that is not correct. It says what it says and you don’t have to tell me what it says. And I don’t think this witness does either. The objection is sustained. . . .
“[The Plaintiffs Counsel]: Mrs. Isham, what does the word income mean to you in your separation agreement?
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: Object for the same reason.
“[The Court]: Sustained.
“ [The Plaintiffs Counsel]: What was your understanding of your separation agreement . . . ?
“[The Defendant’s Counsel]: Object to it.
“[The Court]: Sustained.”
The plaintiff also claims that the underlying facts demonstrate the parties’ intent to include bonuses and other employment compensation earned by the defendant and therefore that she is entitled to a judgment in her favor. We disagree. We note that this contention is subsumed by the plaintiffs second claim relating to extrinsic evidence that the trial court did not consider and, moreover, requires a factual determination that necessitates a remand of the case for further proceedings.
As we previously have noted, O’Sullivan’s initial recitation of the agreement stated: “In the event that the [defendant’s] salary shall increase by $100,000 over the current level, then his obligation shall increase by $20,000 to the [plaintiff] at that time. In the event that his salary shall decrease by $100,000, then his obligation to the [plaintiff] shall be reduced by $10,000. There is а provision, however, that if the [defendant’s] salary shall be reduced below the level of $325,000, then he shall be free to seek a downward modification of his obligation for support.”
As we previously have noted, O’Sullivan responded to the court clerk’s request as follows: “For every $100,000 that [the defendant] gets an increase, [the plaintiff] gets $20,000. If his income should decrease by $100,000, his obligation for alimony decreases by $10,000.” (Emphasis added.)
Although the trial court permitted Pia, the defendant’s accounting expert, to testify as to general meanings of the pertinent terms, it is clear that, on remand, the defendant would be bound by the same limitations as the plaintiff.
