Opinion
Our resolution of this appeal makes clear that when a trial court opinion is silent as to the standard of proof applied, an appellate court is not the proper forum to first raise a claim that the trial court
*123
applied the wrong standard when that claim could have been raised in, and more fairly remedied by, a motion for articulation or reargument. The plaintiff, Bemadetta Kaczynski, appeals following our grant of certification
1
from the judgment of the Appellate Court reversing the trial court’s judgment dissolving her marriage to the defendant, Dariusz Kaczynski. See
Kaczynski
v.
Kac-zynski,
The following undisputed facts and procedural history are relevant. The plaintiff and the defendant were married in 1993. In 2006, the plaintiff filed an аmended complaint seeking dissolution of the marriage and alleging that the defendant had engaged in fraudulent transfers of marital property to members of his family. She requested that the court either set aside those transfers or, alternatively, take them into consideration when making an equitable distribution of the parties’ assets. See
Greco
v.
Greco,
The trial cоurt rendered judgment dissolving the parties’ marriage. It further found that the defendant, in complicity with his two sisters, had taken financial advantage of the plaintiff by manipulating his assets to *124 reduce his estate available for distribution. 2 Accordingly, when making its financial orders, the trial court took into account the value of certain assets that the defendant had transferred to his sisters and his niece.
The defendаnt thereafter filed a motion to reargue in which he contested the trial court’s financial orders. He argued, in short, that they were inequitable because there was inadequate evidence to show that he had committed fraud by clear and convincing proof. Although the defendant, in his motion, disputed that the trial court’s findings of fraud were supportеd by the evidence and claimed that the court had misconstrued particular evidence when making those findings, he did not argue that the court had applied the wrong standard of proof. At a hearing on the motion to reargue, the defendant argued similarly, again failing to contest or question what standard of proof had been applied. 3 Follоwing the hearing, the trial court made minor adjustments to its original orders in regard to the maintenance of medical and life insurance and the disposition of the parties’ household furnishings.
*125 The defendant thereafter appealed from the trial court’s judgment to the Appellate Court. In conjunction with his appeal, the defendant filed a motion rеquesting that the trial court articulate whether an order that he pay certain attorney’s fees was duplicative of, or in addition to, an earlier order. In that motion, the defendant did not request that the trial court articulate what standard of proof it had applied in finding fraud. Consequently, in responding to the motion, the trial court issued an articulation only as to the question of attorney’s fees.
On appeal to the Appellate Court, the defendant claimed, inter alia, that the trial court “did not explicitly state, or otherwise implicitly indicate, whether the plaintiff had established by clear and convincing evidence that he had engaged in fraudulent transfers of property,” and, therefore, the court should not have considered those transfers when distributing the parties’ marital assets.
4
Kaczynski
v.
Kaczynski,
supra,
The plaintiff claims that the Appellate Court improperly reversed the trial court’s judgment on the ground that the trial court failed to state what standard of proof it had applied. According to the plaintiff, the Appellate Court should have rejected the dеfendant’s claim because the record was inadequate to support it. 6 We agree.
We first note the applicable standard of review. The question of whether a trial court has held a party to a less exacting standard of proof than the law requires is a legal one.
Lopinto
v.
Haines,
In resolving the defendant’s claim, the Appellate Court relied on its previоus jurisprudence, specifically,
Tessitore
v.
Tessitore,
In articulating the rule that, in the absence of a clear statement otherwise, it should be assumed that the normal, civil preрonderance of the evidence standard was used, the court in
Kavarco
and
Tessitore
relied on this court’s per curiam opinion disposing of several consolidated matters, captioned collectively as
In re Juvenile Appeal (83-AB),
Before reversing the judgments in fight of
Santosky,
we stated: “In each of [thе cases on appeal], the judgment of the [trial] court contains no indication of the standard of proof applied by the trial judge in arriving at a decision; we assume, therefore, that the trial court applied the civil standard of a fair preponderance of the evidence.”
In re Juvenile Appeal (83-AB),
supra,
After reviewing the context of our decision in In re Juvenile Appeal (83-AB), we conclude that the Appellate Court’s statement of that case’s holding in Kavarco was overly broad. In In re Juvenile Appeal (83-AB), we did not presume that the trial courts had applied *129 the preponderance of the evidence standard simply because the matters at issue were civil, but rather, because, at the time the judgments were rendered, that standard was the legally correct one to apply in a termination case under the governing statute. Stated otherwise, in the absence of any other indications, we assumed that the trial courts decided the cases correctly. 8 Our holding therefore was entirely consistent with the general rule, often stated when we decline to review claims due to the appealing party’s failure to provide an adequatе record to establish error by seeking an articulation, that “[w]e do not presume error; [instead] the trial court’s ruling is entitled to the reasonable presumption that it is correct unless the party challenging the ruling has satisfied its burden demonstrating the contrary. . . .
“The defendant has an obligation to supply this court with a record adequate to review his clаim of error. ... It is important to recognize that a claim of error
*130
cannot be predicated on an assumption that the trial court acted erroneously.”
9
(Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
State
v.
Crumpton,
Consequently, we hereby overrule Kavarco, Tessitore and their progeny, 10 and we abаndon the presumption stated in those cases in favor of the following one: When *131 a trial court in a civil matter requiring proof by clear and convincing evidence fails to state what standard of proof it has applied, a reviewing court will presume that the correct standard was used. If a party, following the rendering of the trial court’s judgment, believes that the trial court potentially utilized the less stringent standard of preponderance of the evidence, that party has the burden of seeking an articulation 11 if the decision is unclear; see Practice Book § 66-5; or reargument 12 if impropriety is apparent; see Practice Book § 11-12; thus giving that court the opportunity to clarify thе standard used or to correct the impropriety and thereby avoiding an unnecessary appeal. If, instead, the party forgoes articulation or reargument and instead chooses to raise the issue for the first time on appeal, the reviewing court will not presume error from silence as to the standard used. 13 Consequently, if it is not otherwise clear from the record that an improper standard was applied, the appellant’s claim will fail on the basis of inadequate support in the record.
*132 The judgment of the Appellate Court is reversed and the case is remanded to that court with direction to address the remaining issues raised by the defendant’s appeal.
In this opinion the other justices concurred.
Notes
We granted the plaintiffs petition for certification to appeal limited to the following issue: “Did the Appellate Court properly reverse the trial court’s decision based on its failure to enunciate specifically that it was applying ‘clear and convincing evidence’ as the standard of proof?”
Kaczynski
v.
Kaczynski,
Specifically, the trial court found: “While the [defendant] would like to present the financial aspects as another straightforward wage earner case the evidence belies and refutes this. After six days of trial the court is satisfied that the [defendant] in complicity with his sisters sought to take financial advantage of the [plaintiff] by deceitfully clever means. Unfortunately, the [defendant] has artfully disguised his assets so that a substantial portion of his equitable estate has been reduced.” The trial court further described the defendant’s actions in this regard as “machinations” and “nefarious dealings,” and found that the defendant and his sisters “lack[ed] credibility.” The trial court concluded: “A review of all the testimony shows an obvious manipulation of [the defеndant’s] assets with the connivance and assistance of his family. The evidence is replete with fraudulent transfers, false tax returns, and property deeds that are devoid of truth.”
The defendant emphasizes that his counsel referred to the standard of proof several times during the hearing on the motion to reargue, but he does not suggest that his counsel ever claimed that the trial court applied the incorrect standard of proof or questioned what standard of proof the court had employed.
The defendant also claimed that the trial court made an alimony award that was not supported by the evidence and the applicable law and entered financial orders that disproportionately favored the plaintiff.
Kaczynski
v.
Kaczynski,
supra,
Judge Lavine, in a well reasoned dissent, concluded that it was implicit from the record and memorandum of decision that the trial court had applied the requisite standard of proof.
Kaczynski
v.
Kaczynski,
supra,
The plaintiff argues, alternatively, that the Appellate Court improperly reversed the trial court’s judgment because its memorandum of decision and the transcript of reargument make clear that the trial court implicitly applied the correct standard of proof. Although this argument is well supported, we do not address it in light of our agreement with the plaintiffs first argument.
In
Patrocinio
v.
Yalanis,
supra,
The presumption that the trial court had applied the prepоnderance standard, on which the Appellate Court relied, also has been applied in a variety of other contexts. See, e.g.,
Smith
v.
Muellner,
Indeed, in
Capozzi
v.
Luciano,
See, e.g.,
Citino
v.
Redevelopment Agency,
“[A]n articulation is appropriate where the trial court’s decision contains some ambiguity or deficiency reasonably susceptible of clarification. . . . [PJroper utilization of the motion for articulation serves to dispel any . . . ambiguity by clarifying the factual and legal basis upon which the trial сourt rendered its decision, thereby sharpening the issues on appeal.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Stone-Krete Construction, Inc.
v.
Eder,
“[rf]he purpose of a reargument is ... to demonstrate to the court that there is some decision or some principle of law which would have a controlling effect, and which has been overlooked . . . .” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Intercity Development, LLC
v.
Andrade,
Unlike the presumptive rule of
Tessitore,
the rule we adopt today will prevent a party, like the defendant in the present matter, from pursuing one strategy in the trial court and another on appeal, resulting in an ambuscade of the trial judge. See
State
v.
Scruggs,
