Lucy v. Lucy
Decision Date | 24 February 1981 |
Citation | 439 A.2d 302,183 Conn. 230 |
Court | Connecticut Supreme Court |
Parties | Patricia M. LUCY v. Lawrence V. LUCY. |
Joseph B. Lukas, New Haven, with whom, on brief, was Giancarlo Rossi, New Haven, for appellant (defendant).
P. J. Pittman, New Haven, for appellee (plaintiff).
Before BOGDANSKI, PETERS, HEALEY, ARMENTANO and WRIGHT, JJ.
This appeal is taken from an order in a dissolution matter directing the defendant husband to pay $35 per week support pendente lite for each of the two minor children of the parties. The defendant's sole claim on appeal is that the court abused its discretion in rendering the order because his financial affidavit revealed that he had no income and no assets.
This action was instituted by the plaintiff wife in January, 1980, who sought dissolution of the marriage, alimony, custody and support of the minor children. The parties had separated in June, 1979, when the defendant left the family home. The parties were married in 1958 and, at the time of the action, there were two issues of the marriage: a daughter, age 15, and a son, age 11. On February 6, 1980, the plaintiff's motion for custody, alimony and support pendente lite was heard by the court, Kinney, J. Both parties and their counsel were present. At that time, the parties agreed, and the court ordered, that custody of the minor children pendente lite be awarded to the plaintiff with rights of reasonable visitation in the defendant. The plaintiff and the defendant had filed financial affidavits and evidence was taken. 1 The plaintiff's affidavit disclosed gross weekly wages of $158 and net weekly wages of $138 after deductions for taxes and medical insurance. It further revealed that her total weekly expenses were $152.50. 2 Her liabilities totaled $2625 3 and she had a $6 total cash value of assets. The defendant's affidavit showed no weekly income and virtually no assets. 4 It revealed total weekly expenses of $160 5 and no liabilities. Neither affidavit disclosed the ownership of any interest in real estate.
At the hearing, it developed that the defendant was an experienced glazier and had worked at that trade for the past seventeen or eighteen years. The plaintiff testified that at the time of their separation in June, 1979, he was bringing home approximately $300 per week net for a five day work week. Although the defendant did not take the stand and testify, 6 he responded to questions from the court. This questioning disclosed that he had become unemployed about two weeks prior to the hearing and had tried to obtain employment at other glass establishments. He also said that he had worked as a foreman for another glass establishment where his hourly rate was $8. He declined to remain there when that business was sold because he was offered only $5 per hour; he felt he could earn more. The court observed that the defendant's two weeks of unemployment did not yet establish a neglect to stay employed on his part. The court declined to order alimony pendente lite at that time. It did, however, order a support order pendente lite of $35 per week for each of the two children and, in doing so, said it was doing it "on the strength of the fact that he's temporarily unemployed." 7
We have had occasion recently to explicate two principles evident in our review of any domestic relations case. Jacobsen v. Jacobsen, 177 Conn. 259, 262-63,413 A.2d 854 (1979); see Miller v. Miller, --- Conn. --- pp. ---, ---, 436 A.2d 279 (1980); Fucci v. Fucci, 179 Conn. 174, 181, 425 A.2d 592 (1979). The defendant claims that the court abused its discretion in rendering the pendente lite child support orders because, he claims, it could not have reasonably concluded as it did. We do not agree.
General Statutes § 46b-83 provides in part: General Statutes § 46b-84 enumerates a number of factors which the court must consider in determining the respective abilities of the parents to provide maintenance for a child and the amount thereof. These are "the age, health, station, occupation, earning capacity, amount and sources of income, estate, vocational skills and employability of each of the parents ...." General Statutes § 46b-84(b). "What a husband can afford to pay ... is a material consideration in the court's determination as to what is a...
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