The "Agreement for Continuance" provides in relevant part that "[t]he parties in the above referenced matter agree that jurisdiction of the Court to deal with the issue of the appropriate distribution of stock ownership in the business Harry's, Inc. shall be continued for a period of six months past the date of Judgment of Dissolution." it further provides that the agreement "is reached based upon the promise of each party to abide by the conditions set forth below. . . . 7. Any shareholder may return to court to request the court to review the issue of stock ownership at any time until the end of six months. . . . If no shareholder has petitioned the court for such a review, the court's jurisdiction over the issue of stock ownership shall terminate."
By motion filed June 10, 1998, and entitled "Motion Re: Stock Ownership," the defendant, referencing the "Agreement for Continuance," requested "the Court to set a date for a continuation of a trial in this matter as to the stock ownership of Harry's, Inc."1 This motion was not ruled upon. The defendant, however, filed an identical motion on August 25, 1998, as well as reclaimed the June 10, 1998 motion on that same date. Neither the June 10, 1998 motion nor August 25, 1998 motion were ruled upon or reclaimed, and the court file indicates no further activity with respect to either motion.
On February 22, 2000, the defendant filed a motion entitled "Motion for CT Page 8802 Order — Post Judgment," requesting "appropriate orders dividing the respective interests of the parties in a business known as Harry's Pizza which said business was specifically excluded from the judgment. . . ." The plaintiff objects to the motion on the ground that the court lacks jurisdiction to enter orders modifying the property distribution after the lapse of the agreed upon six month continuance specified in the "Agreement for Continuance."
General Statutes §
In the present case, because the issue of the division of stock ownership is one of property assignment pursuant to §
Clearly, the parties' intention regarding the proper assignment of the stock manifested by their agreements was for each party to retain their respective interests in Harry's Pizza unless and until either party requested within the ensuing six months an appropriate division from the court. This agreement regarding the division of this property became part of the court's dissolution judgment on March 2, 1998. Thus, the issue of the appropriate division of the stock was not "specifically excluded from the judgment" upon agreement of the parties "that the court reserve decision" on such distribution, as the defendant claims. Rather, the issue of the stock was specifically addressed, and the parties placed the burden upon themselves, if either so desired a court-determined division of the stock, to affirmatively request one and do so within six months of the judgment. Therefore, the cases cited by the defendant allowing a court to retain jurisdiction by expressly reserving judgment on certain financial matters to a time subsequent to its entry of a judgment of dissolution, either because of the necessity of a further hearing on such matters; see Ross v. Ross,
The defendant's February 22, 2000 motion requesting a division of the stock was filed nearly two years after the judgment of dissolution and well beyond the six month period consented to by the parties. The parties by agreement, the provisions of which were incorporated in the March 2, 1998 dissolution judgment, expressly consented to the continuing jurisdiction of the court over the issue of the division of such property for a period of six months from the date of the dissolution judgment, after which date the parties expressly agreed the court's jurisdiction over the issue would terminate. The court, therefore, lacks jurisdiction to rule on the defendant's motion since the motion was filed well beyond the six month period.
The defendant never reclaimed the motions filed on June 10, 1998 and August 25, 1998. If the defendant were to reclaim those motions now, he would be faced with the rule of practice which prohibits him from reclaiming those motions since they were filed more than three months ago. See Practice Book Sec.
For the foregoing reason, the motion to dismiss is granted.
Barall, J.
