This is аn appeal from the award of alimony and the assignment of property incident to a decree dissolving the eleven-year marriage of the parties. The plaintiff filed an amended complaint on October 24, 1979, alleging that the marriage had broken down irretrievably and seeking a decree of dissolution, custody of the two minor children of the parties, and “[s]uch other relief as tó equity may appertain.”
Testimony and argument on the complaint was heard by the
Hon. Norman M. Dube,
state referee, on June 27, 1980. During the course of the hearing it came to the trial court’s attention that no cross complaint had been filed. At the court’s suggestion, and over the objection of the plaintiff,
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the defendant was permitted to file a hand-written answer and cross complaint. The court then proceeded with the hearing. At the conclusion of the hearing on June 27, the court rendered an oral decision dissolving thе marriage, awarding custody of the children to the defendant wife, ordering
On appeal, the plaintiff’s sole claim is that the trial court was without jurisdiсtion
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to award alimony or any part of the proceeds of the sale of real property to the defendant on the basis of the cross eomplaint. He asserts that General Statutes § 46b-67
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mandates a twenty-day waiting period after the filing of a eross complaint in a dissolution proceeding before any action may be taken on that cross complaint. He therefore claims that the alimony and рroperty awards are void, because those issues were not raised in his complaint and could not be considered under the cross сomplaint without violating § 46b-67. We agree that §46b-67 by its clear language forbids the consideration of a cross complaint until twenty days after it is filed аnd, therefore, the court could not make awards
The trial court ordered that “[t]he jointly owned premisеs located at 769 Totoket Road, is hereby ordered speedily sold . . . [a]nd the net proceeds . . . shall be divided one-third to the Plaintiff and two-thirds tо the Defendant.” The plaintiff’s claim that this award was error is most easily answered by the fact that he requested a sale and division as part of his relief.
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He may not claim as error that which he has requested; see
Housing Authority
v.
Pezenik,
The plaintiff also claims that for the same reasоn (§ 46b-67) the court was without jurisdiction to order alimony based on the cross complaint. The statute which should be considered on the question of аn alimony award, however, is not § 46b-67 but § 46b-82. That section states, in part: “At the time of entering the decree, the superior court may order either of the parties to pay alimony to the other . . . .” Nowhere does the statute make the award contingent on a specific request fоr alimony by the party to whom it is awarded. In
Sands
v.
Sands,
As previоusly noted, in his pleadings the plaintiff made a claim for “[s]uch other relief as to equity may appertain.” The court determined that the equitable relief necessary to the decree of dissolution included an alimony award. The plaintiff seeks equity only for himself, but this he may not do. One who seeks equity must also do equity and expect that equity will be done for all. See
Sturgis
v.
Champneys,
5 Myl. & Cr. 97, 105, 41 E.R. 308 (1839)
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; 1 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence 419, §385 et seq. (1881). An equitable award may be fоund to be error only if it is based on factual findings that are clearly erroneous;
Kaplan
v.
Kaplan,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The plaintiff did not request a continuance nor does he сlaim on appeal that he was prejudiced in the trial or preparation of the case by the belatedness of the defendаnt’s claim for alimony. In his objection he did not call the attention of the court to General Statutes § 46b-67 which he now relies upon. We must review his сlaim of error, nevertheless, because it involves subject matter jurisdiction.
The argument by the defendant that we are without jurisdiction to hear this сlaim because it was not raised below is without merit. The plaintiff’s claim goes to the subject matter jurisdiction of the court which may be raised аt any time.
“[General Statutes] Sec. 46b-67. (Formerly See. 46-44). waiting period, effect of decree, (a) Following the expiration of ninety days after the day on whieh a eomplaint for dissolution or legal separation is made returnable, or after the expiration of six months, where рroceedings have been stayed under section 46b-53, the court may proceed on the eomplaint, or whenever dissolution is claimed under cross eomplaint, amended eomplaint or amended eross eomplaint, the case may be heard and a decreе granted thereon after the expiration of the ninety days and twenty days after the eross complaint, amended complaint or amended cross complaint has been filed with the court, provided the requirement of the twenty-day delay shall not apply (1) whenever opposing counsel, having appeared, consents to the eross complaint, amended complaint or amended eross eomplaint, or (2) where the defendant has not appeared and the amendment does not set forth either a cause of action or а claim for relief not in the original complaint. Nothing in this section shall prevent any interlocutory proceedings within the ninety-day period.”
At the close of testimony, the court asked, “What does the plaintiff want?" The plaintiff’s counsel responded, “Your Honor, we’re asking that the housе on Totoket Hoad be sold and that the proceeds be divided equally between the parties.”
The equitable consideration in
Sands
was the state’s interest in alimony where оne party may apply for welfare assistance while the other party has sufficient funds for support of both parties.
Sands
v.
Sands,
“[I]t appears that the equity which this Court аdministers in securing a provision and maintenance for the wife is founded upon the well-known rule of compelling a party who seeks equity to do equity The Lord Chancellor [Cottenham] in Sturgis v. Champneys, 5 Myl. & Cr. 97, 105, 41 E.R. 308 (1839).
