This case concerns the effect of an antenuptial agreement between the parties upon the trial court’s judgment dissolving their marriage and ordering a property settlement. The plaintiff and the defendant met in early 1974 and sometime in April, 1974, decided to live together without being married. On February 20, 1976, the parties married and on April 22, 1976, the plaintiff gave birth to a child. In July, 1978, the parties’ brief and stormy marriage was dissolved.
Prior to their marriage, the plaintiff and the defendant had entered into an antenuptial agreement. In that agreement the parties stated that they intended to retain individual ownership of the property that each had acquired prior to the marriage “to the same extent as if each had remained single.” The agreement went on to set out the particular property it was intended to encompass,
The trial court, in the judgment dissolving the marriage, entered various orders, which provided, inter alia, that the plaintiff have custody of the minor child; that she be awarded lump sum alimony of $15,000 payable in certain installments; and that the defendant transfer his interest in the jointly owned family home in Woodbridge to the plaintiff.
On appeal, the defendant does not take serious issue with the alimony award or any other aspect of the trial court’s judgment,
1
except that portion requiring him to transfer to the plaintiff his interest in the family home.
2
The defendant claims that the
Because this case involves a claim that the terms of an antenuptial agreement relating to the property of the parties is binding upon the court in a dissolution action, a question that this court has not previously decided, it is appropriate at the outset to consider generally the enforceability of such agreements. The validity of an antenuptial contract depends upon the circumstances of the particular case.
Wulf
v.
Wulf,
An antenuptial agreement is a type of contract and must, therefore, comply with ordinary principles of contract law.
In re Estate of Rosenstein,
In
Sacksell
v.
Barrett,
It is clear that antenuptial agreements will not be enforced where to do so would violate the state statutes or public policy. See annot.,
Finally, an antenuptial agreement will not be enforced where the circumstances of the parties at the time of the dissolution are so far beyond the contemplation of the parties at the time the agreement was made as to make enforcement of the agreement work an injustice. See Clark, op. cit. § 1.9, pp. 28-29. Thus, where a marriage is dissolved not because it has broken down irretrievably, but because of the fault of one of the parties, an antenuptial waiver of rights executed by the innocent party may not be enforceable, depending upon the circumstances of the particular case and the language of the agreement. See, e.g.,
Eule
v.
Eule,
We now consider specifically the defendant’s claim that the trial court erred in ordering him to transfer his interest in the family home to the plaintiff. The family home was eoncededly acquired by the parties after the marriage and was, therefore, not within the purview of that portion of the ante-nuptial agreement relating to property acquired before the marriage. The agreement by its terms did not purport to affect the parties’ rights to real property acquired during the marriage, as it easily could have. The defendant’s argument that the
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
In his brief, the defendant suggests that even the award of alimony constituted an infringement on the parties’ rights “to arrange their financial affairs privately and to avoid the interference of the state.” An examination of the agreement discloses, however, that there is no provision of it that can be construed as even remotely governing the parties’ rights to alimony upon dissolution of the marriage. Moreover, no such claim was raised by the defendant in his preliminary statement of issues.
In this dissolution action the defendant pleaded the antenuptial agreement of February 7, 1976, by way of special defense. In her reply to this special defense, the plaintiff admitted the allegations of the special defense and then alleged that (a) the agreement was unenforceable because it was coerced from her and that (b) it was also unenforceable because it conflicts with the provisions of General
In Sadksell wc were called upon to construe General Statutes § 5156 (1930 Rev.), the predecessor of General Statutes § 45-273a, in determining the rights of the surviving spouse.
Although the plaintiff did claim at trial that she had been coerced into executing the antenuptial contract in question and that, therefore, the contract was unenforceable, no such finding was made by the trial court and, on appeal, no claim, of error is directed to its failure to do so.
We do not suggest by our conclusion that it would never be appropriate to “trace” funds that originate from a party’s earnings under a similar clause. We conclude only that under the facts of this ease, neither the language of the contract itself nor equitable considerations militate in favor of adopting such an approach to this clause.
Because of our conclusion in this regard, wo need not consider whether an antenuptial agreement containing a provision limiting the rights of a spouse to the family home upon dissolution would be enforceable where the provision would operate to the detriment of a minor child of the marriage.
