Opinion
In this marital dissolution case, the plaintiff, Lorraine Parrotta, appeals from the order of the trial court lifting, in part, the automatic orders
1
that apply to all dissolution cases and allowing the defendant, Michael Parrotta, to expend $100,000 for attorney’s fees to defend himself in a criminal matter
involving an alleged assault on the plaintiff.
2
Because we conclude
The following procedural history is pertinent to our discussion. On December 3, 2008, the plaintiff filed a complaint seeking dissolution of her marriage to the defendant, a division of the marital property and debts, and orders regarding child support and custody as to the parties’ minor child. 4 On April 3,2009, the defendant was arrested and charged with attempt to commit murder and assault in the first degree after he allegеdly stabbed the plaintiff repeatedly. As noted, the defendant remains in the custody of the commissioner of correction pending trial.
On April 6, 2009, the plaintiff filed an application for an ex parte temporary injunction pendente lite, seeking an order prohibiting the defendant from withdrawing funds from brokerage accounts for fear that he would use those funds to post bond in the criminal cases. The court, Schofield, J., granted that motion ex parte on April 6, 2009. 5
On April 16, 2009, the dеfendant filed a motion for transfer, in which he sought a change of venue of this action to the criminal section of the Superior Court for the limited purpose of determining his rights to secure legal counsel and to prepare for his defense in the criminal proceedings. On April 29,2009, the court, Scho-field, J., heard argument on the defendant’s motion to transfer and, treating it as a motion for modification of the automatic orders, ordered the sum of $100,000 to be wired from a brokerage account in the defendant’s name directly to the account of his criminal defense attorney, to be used for legal fees and expert witness fees in conjunction with the pending criminal charges. The court also ordered that no portion of those funds could be used for the posting of the defendant’s bail or bond. Finally, the court indicated that the $100,000 sum would be сonsidered a draw against the defendant’s share of the equitable distribution of property at the time of the final hearing in the dissolution action. This appeal followed.
Before examining the plaintiffs claims on appeal, we must first determine whether we have jurisdiction. It is axiomatic that the jurisdiction of this court is restricted to appeals from judgments that are final. General Statutes §§ 51-197a and 52-263; Practice Book § 61-1; see
Liberty Mutual Ins. Co.
v.
Lone Star Industries, Inc.,
When the plaintiff filed this appeal, the court had not rendered judgment on her complaint for dissolution or the defendant’s cross complaint. 6 Nor had the court assigned to either party any part of the estate of the other as the cоurt is permitted to do, by statute, only at the time of the final hearing. 7 We must, therefore, determine whether the court’s order modifying the automatic orders to give the defendant permission to expend funds in his own name, although interlocutory, is a final judgment for purposes of appeal. The plaintiff contends that there is an appealable final judgment pursuant to the second prong of Curdo. We are not persuaded.
“The second prong of the
Curdo
test focuses on the naturе of the right involved. It requires the parties seeking to appeal to establish that the trial court’s order threatens the preservation of a right already secured to them and that that right will be irretrievably lost and the [parties] irreparably harmed unless they may immediately appeal. . . . Thus, a bald assertion that [the appellant] will be irreparably harmed if appellate review is delayed until final adjudicatiоn ... is insufficient to make an otherwise interlocutory order a final
judgment. One must make at least a colorable claim that some recognized statutory or constitutional right is at risk. ... In other words, the [appellant] must do more than show that the trial court’s decision threatens him with irreparable harm. The [appellant] must show that that decision threatens to abrogate a right that he or she
then
holds. . . . Moreover, when a statute vests the trial court with discretion to determine if a particular [party] is to be accorded a certain status, the [party] may not invoke the rights that attend the status as a basis for claiming that the court’s decision not to confer that status deprives the [party] of protections to which [it] ... is entitled. For an interlocutory order to be an appealable final judgment it must threaten the preservation of a right thаt the [party] already holds. The right itself must exist independently of the order from which the appeal is taken. Whe[n] a [discretionary] decision has the effect of not granting a particular right, that decision, even if erroneous, does not threaten the [party’s] already existing rights.” (Citations omitted; emphasis in original; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Hartford Accident & Indemnity Co.
v.
Ace American Reinsurance Co.,
In support of her position, the plaintiff cites cases in which our Supreme Court
Although we acknowledge that our decisional law makes this a close question, we do not believe that either this court’s or the Supreme Court’s prior treatment of interlocutory financial orders in marital dissolution cases as final orders determines the issue at hand. We beliеve, however, that prior cases dealing with the question, generally, of the finality of interlocutory orders in marital dissolution cases guide our conclusion that the order at hand is not a final judgment.
In general, the jurisprudence finding finality in pen-dente lite orders rests on the notion that the orders under scrutiny have concluded a party’s rights with respect to the issue at hand because the court is not able, at the time of the final judgment, to provide any remedial relief in regard to the pendente lite orders. In
Hiss
v.
Hiss,
The plaintiff claims, nevertheless, that the court’s order in this instanсe effectively determined her rights with respect to a portion of the defendant’s estate and that, because the defendant has been permitted to expend those funds, the funds are irretrievably lost. Our Supreme Court has stated that “where an order requires monetary payments that are irretrievable, so that there is no right of reimbursement . . . the order is immediately appealable” because it concludes the
rights of the parties so that further proceedings cannot affect them.
Goodson
v.
State,
In
Pendiman Corp.
v.
White Oak Corp.,
Here, the plaintiffs claim to immediate appellate reviеw fails because the ruling from which the plaintiff appeals does not involve a right that is presently held by the plaintiff and that will be irretrievably lost or irreparably harmed if it is not immediately reviewed. As noted, although the plaintiff has a claim against the defendant’s estate, she does not have a present legal right to the funds that are in the defendant’s name.
10
Any right that the plaintiff may have in the defendant’s
Additionally, here, as in Pendiman Corp., the court’s order, by its very terms, was not a conclusive adjudication as it did not irreversibly conclude the plaintiffs interest in the defendant’s estate because it expressly contemрlated that the $100,000 to which it gave the defendant access would nevertheless be considered as a portion of his estate for purposes of equitable distribu tion at the time of the dissolution hearing. 12 Therefore, the court’s order did not so conclude the rights of the plaintiff that further proceedings could not affect them.
Finally, we are further persuaded that the court’s order did not constitute an appеalable final judgment in light of the decisional law regarding temporary injunctions. We believe that the automatic orders in marital dissolution judgments are most akin to temporary injunctions on the basis that they represent a temporary restraint on the use of or alienation of one’s assets pending full adjudication in conjunction with a final hearing. “[I]n the absence of a statutory provision to the contrary, a denial or grant of a temporary injunction does not constitute a final judgment for purposes of appeal. . . . This is so because the purpose of a temporary injunction is to [maintain] the status quo while the rights of the parties are being determined. . . . Similarly, the denial of a temporary injunction is a determination that the status quo need not be maintained while the court determines the rights of the parties. By contrast, a permanent injunction effects a final determination of [those] rights.” (Citations omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
As in the case of a temporaiy injunction, the purpose of the automatic orders in marital dissolution cases is simply to maintain the status quo while the action is pending. And, as a permanent injunction typically encompasses the relief sought or granted by the temporary injunction, a dissolution judgment similarly assigns, to one party or the other, the property that was subject to the injunctive effect of the automatic orders. The similarity between a temporary injunction in a civil action and automatic orders in a dissolution action can readily be contrasted with pendente lite alimony or child support orders, which are fashioned to meet the financial needs of the parties until the marriage is dissоlved and which, because they are not subject to retroactive modification, are irretrievably beyond the remedial reach of the court at the final hearing.
On the basis of the foregoing, we conclude that the court’s order granting the defendant partial relief from the automatic orders did not constitute an appealable final judgment. As a consequence, we do not have subject matter jurisdiction to hear the plaintiffs appeal.
The appeal is dismissed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Practice Book § 25-5 (a) provides in relevant part: “The following automatic orders shall apply to both parties, with service of the automatic orders to be made with service of process of a complaint for dissolution of marriage . . .
“(1) Neither party shall sell, transfer, encumber . . . conceal, assign, remove, or in any way dispose of, without the consent of the other party in writing, or an order of a judicial authority, any property, individually or jointly held by the parties, except in the usual course of business or for customary and usual household expenses or for reasonable attorney’s fees in connection with this action . . . .”
The defendant was arrested on April 3, 2009, in docket number CR-09-0166567-T, in which he is charged with attempt to commit murder in violation of General Statutes § 53а-54a and assault in the first degree in violation of General Statutes § 53a-59 (a) (1). Both charges relate to an alleged assault by the defendant on the plaintiff in which he is alleged to have stabbed her several times. The defendant was subsequently arrested on April 7, 2009, in docket number CR-09-0166604-T, in which he is charged with violating a standing criminal restraining order in violation of General Statutes § 53a-223a and criminal possession of a weapon in viоlation of General Statutes § 53a-217. These charges, as well, relate to the defendant’s alleged conduct toward the plaintiff. In conjunction with these charges the defendant is presently incarcerated, held in lieu of posting bonds in the aggregate amount of $1.5 million.
On appeal, the plaintiff claims that the court’s order was improper in that (1) it constituted a distribution of marital property that is permitted only аt the time the marriage is dissolved pursuant to General Statutes § 46b-81 and (2) the court did not make any inquiry or finding as to the reasonableness of the amount sought by the defendant. Because we conclude that we do not have jurisdiction to hear this appeal, we do not reach these claims.
The defendant subsequently filed a cross complaint seeking similar relief.
In the absence of an objection by the defendant, the court, Malone, J., subsequently granted that injunction on May 15, 2009.
Nor, to our knowledge, has this matter gone to final judgment sinсe the filing of the appeal.
General Statutes § 46b-81 (a) provides in relevant part: “At the time of entering a decree annulling or dissolving a marriage . . . the Superior Court may assign to either the husband or wife all or any part of the estate of the other. ...” Although the court order gave the defendant access to funds in his own name, part of his estate, it did not amount to a transfer from one spouse to another.
In support of this conclusion, the
Ahneman
сourt made specific reference to other cases regarding a trial court’s ruling regarding allocation of a federal income tax dependent child exemption as part of a final judgment, a trial
court’s denial of a post judgment motion to modify alimony and child support, an order for the payment of support pendente lite and a ruling on a motion for contempt.
Ahneman
v.
Ahneman,
supra,
Furthermore, offsetting a pendente lite alimony or child support payment when fashioning financial orders at the time the marriage is ultimately dissolved would amount to a retroactive modification of those orders in contravention of Generаl Statutes § 46b-86 (a). See General Statutes § 46b-86 (a) (“[n]o order for periodic payment of permanent alimony or support, may be subject to retroactive modification, except that the court may order modification with respect to any period during which there is a pending motion for modification of an alimony or support order from the date of service of notice of such pending motiоn upon the opposing party pursuant to section 52-50”).
“[General Statutes] § 46b-81 gives the court broad power to redistribute the property of either or both parties at the time of entering a decree. This does not mean that the party had a legal ownership interest in the assets of the other spouse during the marriage and prior to the decree. Connecticut is not by any means a community propеrty state nor is any automatic form of joint ownership created simply by the fact that the parties enter into a marriage.
“Up until the time that a property distribution is ordered by the court pursuant to ... § 46b-81, the situation is governed by [General Statutes] § 46b-36. That statute explicitly provides that neither the husband nor the wife acquires by virtue of the marriage any right to or interest in any property held by the other before or acquired after the marriage.” A. Kutkin & K. Hogan, 7 Connecticut Practice Series: Family Law and Practice (1999) § 26.1, pp. 470-71.
We are aware, from the record, that on October 8,2009, after the issuance of the order granting the defendant access to $100,000 in a brokerage account in his own name for payment of a legal retainer in the criminal matter, he executed a promissory note in a like amount payable to “the рarty to whom the court distributes this note.” Elsewhere in the recitals, this instrument is referred to as a “loan.” In determining that the court’s order granting partial relief from the automatic orders in this instance does not constitute a final judgment for appeal purposes, we specifically do not rely on the terms of this instrument, whose meaning and legal vitality are subject to determination by the court at the time of the marital dissolutiоn judgment.
The plaintiff argues that because the court could determine, at the time of judgment, that the plaintiff is entitled to 100 percent of the assets in the marital estate, which the parties have represented in filings with the trial court to be worth approximately $5 million, its order constitutes a final judgment regarding her rights to that sum simply because that sum is no longer available for distribution and it is unlikely that the defendant will have the wherewithаl with which to reimburse her. This argument is based on the speculation that the court could feasibly award the plaintiff 100 percent of the parties’ joint assets and 100 percent of the defendant’s assets, while permitting the plaintiff to retain the assets presently in her own name. This argument presumes an exercise of discretion by the court and the theoretical determination of rights at the time of the marital dissolution hearing. It does not involve a presently existing right held by the plaintiff.
