11 Conn. App. 43 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1987
The marriage between the parties was dissolved by judgment dated March 20, 1980. At that time it was ordered, pursuant to a written agreement between the parties, that the defendant husband would pay the plaintiff wife $75 per week for the support of two minor children until December 28,1987, which was the date of the younger child’s twenty-first birthday. Furthermore, the husband was ordered to quitclaim his interest in the marital home to the plaintiff who was to assume all of the expenses of maintaining the property. Upon sale of the property, or on December 28, 1988, whichever came first, the plaintiff was to pay $15,000 to the defendant.
On March 16,1982, the defendant assigned his interest in the $15,000 payment to Selma D. Halperin (the intervening defendant) for consideration of only $1200. This assignment was recorded on the land records.
On November 8,1982, upon motion by the plaintiff, the trial court modified the original judgment and ordered the husband to release approximately $9000 of his equitable interest in the marital home. That figure represented an arrearage in child support pay
On March 27, 1985, the plaintiff moved to cite in Selma Halperin as a party defendant (hereinafter the intervening defendant). That motion was granted by agreement.
In April, 1985, the plaintiff moved to hold the defendant in contempt claiming that between the time of the modification in November, 1982, to January 30,1985, there had accrued an arrearage of child support payments in the amount of $12,868. She sought relief by extinguishing the defendant’s remaining interest in the $15,000 and ordering the defendant to obtain a release of his assignment to the intervening defendant.
In June, 1985, the intervening defendant moved to vacate the order of November 8,1982, claiming the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter such an order modifying the assignment of realty to the husband.
In its July, 1985 memorandum of decision on the plaintiff’s April contempt and modification motion, the trial court stated that at oral argument the parties had stipulated to a total arrearage of $19,743 including child support, attorney’s fees and sheriffs fees. Accordingly, the court ordered that the “[pjlaintiff shall have a lien to secure this arrearage against the sum of $15,000 that she was ordered to pay [the husband]. If the arrearage has not been paid prior to the time the $15,000 payment comes due, then the plaintiff’s obligation in this regard shall be discharged to the extent of the arrearage.”
The intervening defendant thereafter moved to open this finding and requested a clarification of the decision since her interests were unresolved. Such motion was denied on December 2, 1985. The defendant filed no motions of any kind.
The judgments which the intervening defendant seeks to open are singular in nature, relating specifically to orders which were concomitant to a judgment dissolving the marriage of two individuals. That judgment established the personal status of the parties, and their obligations to one another arising from that status. They had been married; it made them single. Part of that judgment also delineated the obligations of each to their children. That judgment, and those orders which later modified it, cannot be opened at the request of a complete stranger to the original judgment. The
Any redress to which the intervening defendant may be entitled is more properly addressed to the defendant in a separate action. We conclude that the intervening defendant lacks proper party status in this case, and thus also lacks standing to appeal.
The appeal is dismissed.