28 Conn. App. 854 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1992
The defendant, Salvatore J. Passamano, appeals from the trial court’s denial of his motion to modify certain financial orders entered in connection with a prior judgment dissolving his marriage to the plaintiff, Diane Passamano. He claims that the trial court (1) incorrectly concluded that the prior order to pay the mortgage and real estate taxes on the parties’ jointly owned house constituted a nonmodifiable assignment of property to the plaintiff, and (2) improperly awarded the plaintiff counsel fees to defend this appeal. We reverse the trial court’s judgment denying the motion to modify and we affirm its award of counsel fees.
The parties’ marriage was dissolved by a judgment of the Superior Court on June 22, 1984. In connection with that judgment, the court ordered that the plain
The parties’ youngest child reached the age of eighteen on December 7, 1990. On August 16, 1991, the defendant filed a motion to modify the prior judgment to extinguish his obligation to pay the mortgage and real estate taxes on the family home. After a hearing, the trial court, Arena, J., denied the motion to modify, finding that the prior order to pay the mortgage and real estate taxes on the house constituted a nonmodifiable assignment of property. This appeal followed.
After the defendant filed this appeal, the plaintiff filed a motion with the trial court seeking an award of counsel fees to defend the appeal. After a hearing on the motion, the court, Higgins, J., ordered the defendant to pay the plaintiff $2000 to defend this appeal. The defendant then amended this appeal to include a challenge to the trial court’s award of counsel fees.
I
The defendant first claims that the trial court incorrectly determined that the prior order to pay the mortgage and real estate taxes on the family home until the youngest child reached the age of eighteen constituted a nonmodifiable assignment of property. We agree.
General Statutes § 46b-81 (a) provides in pertinent part: “At the time of entering a decree annulling or dissolving a marriage . . . the superior court may
The order to pay the mortgage and real estate taxes on the house was not a property award because it did not alter the parties’ respective ownership interests. At the time that the judgment dissolving the parties’ marriage was rendered, the parties owned the house as joint tenants. The dissolution court ordered that the plaintiff and the parties’ children be permitted to occupy the marital home until the youngest child turned eighteen, at which time the property was to be sold and the net proceeds divided equally between the parties.
A more reasonable construction of this order was that it served to ensure that the plaintiff and the parties’ children would be able to live in the family home until the children had reached the age of majority. Our courts consistently have held that both the amount of alimony to be awarded and the form that such alimony may take are subjects within the sound discretion of the trial judge. See Schmidt v. Schmidt, 180 Conn. 184, 191, 429 A.2d 470 (1980); Pasquariello v. Pasquariello, 168 Conn. 579, 583, 362 A.2d 835 (1975); Baker v. Baker, 166 Conn. 476, 488, 352 A.2d 277 (1974). Because this order resulted from the defendant’s continuing duty to support his family, not from a distribution of the parties’ property interests, it is an award of periodic alimony, which is modifiable. See Berg v. Berg, supra, 513-14.
The trial court incorrectly found that the prior order to pay the mortgage and real estate taxes on the house constituted a nonmodifiable property assignment.
II
The defendant next claims that the trial court’s award of counsel fees to the plaintiff to defend this appeal was improper because it was not based on a consideration of the proper statutory criteria. We are not persuaded.
The plaintiff further testified that her weekly expenses, excluding all payments made for the benefit of her children, totalled $290 per week, and that her most recent financial affidavit indicated a net weekly income of $511.80. She stated that she had paid cash recently for a 1991 Nissan and had bought a parcel of land in Lebanon since the divorce. The plaintiff also testified that the defendant had failed to make the weekly court ordered child support payments from February, 1986, through 1990. In addition, the trial court had the parties’ financial affidavits before it.
After hearing the arguments of counsel, which included a discussion of the parties’ relative financial positions, the pertinent statutes and case law and after considering the probability that the defendant’s appeal from the denial of his motion to modify would be successful, the court ruled on the motion for counsel fees from the bench: “It is the ruling of the court that the expenses that the mother has undertaken to pay in connection with the child in college are reasonable and equitably justified. Taking into account the dim prospects of success on appeal, the court will award the plaintiff the sum of $2000 as an allowance to defend the appeal.” Neither counsel requested, either orally or in writing, further articulation regarding the court’s reasoning in entering this order.
Nothing in the record supports the defendant’s theory that the trial court failed to apply the proper criteria. The court heard extensive testimony and argument regarding the parties’ relative financial positions immediately before issuing its ruling. The court also heard the arguments of counsel regarding the pertinent statutory criteria. Its statement that it took the defendant’s “dim prospect of success on appeal” into account is of little moment. Indeed, the defendant correctly points out that our Supreme Court in Marino v. Marino, 136 Conn. 617, 73 A.2d 339 (1950), indicated that although a court may inquire into the probability of success on appeal when ruling on a request for coun
We also note that no motion for articulation was filed requesting the trial court to articulate on the record the basis on which it ordered the payment of counsel fees. See Practice Book § 4051. In the absence of some evidence to the contrary, we will not presume that the trial court improperly applied the law. “ ‘[I]t would be sheer speculation for this court to assume that the trial court applied the incorrect legal standard.’ ” Carothers v. Capozziello, 215 Conn. 82, 105, 574 A.2d 1268 (1990); Brookfield v. Candlewood Shores Estates, Inc., 201 Conn. 1, 7, 513 A.2d 1218 (1986). The defendant has not sustained his burden of demonstrating that the trial court committed harmful error, and cannot prevail on this claim. See Carothers v. Capozziello, supra.
The judgment denying the defendant’s motion for modification is reversed and the case is remanded for a hearing on the defendant’s motion to modify the judgment of June 22, 1984, as to the ordered payment of the mortgage and real estate taxes, consistent with this opinion. The order awarding counsel fees to defend the appeal is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
General Statutes § 47-14g provides in pertinent part: “Whenever a husband and wife are joint tenants in the same real estate, either together or in conjunction with others, a divorce or dissolution of the marriage, unless the divorce decree or decree of dissolution otherwise provides, severs their interests and converts them into tenants in common as to each other . . .