JAY B. PACKARD v. REBECCA M. PACKARD
AC 40445
Connecticut Appellate Court
April 24, 2018
DiPentima, C. J., and Alvord and Beach, Js.
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Syllabus
The defendant appealed to this court from the judgment of the trial court dissolving her marriage to the plaintiff, and from certain postjudgment orders concerning the guardian ad litem and pertaining to the sale of the marital residence. Held that this court declined to review the defendant‘s claims, which challenged the trial court‘s orders, and its findings and conclusions, the defendant having failed to provide this court with an adequate brief setting forth the legal bases for her claims of error and the relief sought.
Argued March 14—officially released April 24, 2018
Procedural History
Action for the dissolution of a marriage, and for other relief, brought to the Superior Court in the judicial district of Fairfield, and referred to the Regional Family Trial Docket at Middletown, where the matter was tried to the court, Albis, J.; judgment dissolving the marriage and granting certain other relief, from which the defendant appealed to this court; thereafter, the court, Albis, J., issued certain orders, and the defendant filed an amended appeal; subsequently, the court, Albis, J., issued certain orders, and the defendant filed an amended appeal; thereafter, the court, Albis, J., issued certain orders, and the defendant filed an amended appeal. Affirmed.
Rebecca M. Packard, self-represented, the appellant (defendant).
Jay B. Packard, self-represented, the appellee (plaintiff), filed a brief.
Opinion
PER CURIAM. The defendant, Rebecca M. Packard, appeals from the judgment dissolving her marriage with the plaintiff, Jay B. Packard. This appeal has been amended three times, challenging orders entered after
The defendant, in her lengthy and detailed brief, presents no legal analysis and cites virtually no case law.2 A narrative account of the demise of the parties’ relationship and the effect of various orders on the defendant, however compelling, does not suffice as an adequate brief under our procedural law.3 “[F]or this court judiciously and efficiently to consider claims of error raised on appeal . . . the parties must clearly and fully set forth their arguments in their briefs. . . . The parties may not merely cite a legal principle without analyzing the relationship between the facts of the case and the law cited.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) State v. Buhl, 321 Conn. 688, 724, 138 A.3d 868 (2016); see also Getty Properties Corp. v. ATKR, LLC, 315 Conn. 387, 413, 107 A.3d 931 (2015) (claim inadequately briefed when appellants undertook “no analysis or application of the law to the facts of [the] case“); Taylor v. Mucci, 288 Conn. 379, 383 n.4, 952 A.2d 776 (2008) (analysis, rather than mere abstract assertion, required to avoid abandoning issue by failing to brief issue properly; where claim receives only cursory attention without substantive discussion or citation of authorities, it is deemed abandoned). In this matter, we are unable to determine the legal bases for the claims and relief that the defendant seeks. As a result of the defendant‘s inadequate brief, we decline to address the claims raised therein.
The judgment is affirmed.
