The parties were married in 1974. Early in September of 1979, the defendant was summoned for jury duty at the Superior Court in Waterbury and shortly thereafter met a reporter who was covering a trial in progress at the court.
The parties were joint owners of a savings account in the amount of $7355 and of the family residence in Naugatuck. The parties divided the savings account equally and the court disposed of the residence in its final decree. The defendant made no claim for either periodic or lump sum alimony. She did claim an assignment of property pursuant to General Statutes § 46-51 (now § 46b-81). In granting a dissolution of the marriage the trial court, “ [t] aking into consideration the norms prescribed in § 46b-81 (c) with particular emphasis on the conduct of the defendant, the sums already received by her, [and] the humiliation and mental suffering of the plaintiff . . .” ordered the defendant to convey to the plaintiff her interest in the family dwelling subject to a lien in her favor to secure payment of $4100. The defendant’s principal claim is that in making its assignment of property the trial court gave inordinate weight to the cause of the breakdown of the marriage and in doing so erroneously considered factors such as humiliation and mental anguish. We do not agree.
Because an action for dissolution of marriage is a creature of statute, it is sometimes assumed that the statute not only creates the grounds for relief but also circumscribes the remedy. Although ere
The defendant’s assertion that the trial court found without evidence that the plaintiff used his portion of the joint savings account for the upkeep and expenses of the family residence is not well
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
