Conroy v. Idlibi ( 2021 )


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    CONROY v. IDLIBI—DISSENT
    FLYNN, J., dissenting. I cannot agree that the trial
    court properly denied the defendant an evidentiary
    hearing on his motion to open based on fraud. I would
    conclude that the motion court erred in denying the
    defendant’s motion to open without holding an eviden-
    tiary hearing and, accordingly, reverse the judgment
    and remand for another hearing on the defendant’s
    motion at which evidence may be taken.
    I disagree with the decision reached by the majority,
    first, because the defendant was not accorded an oppor-
    tunity to present his after discovered new evidence
    of the plaintiff’s admission to adulterous conduct, a
    conduct which she had denied under oath in the earlier
    trial of her divorce.
    Second, because the exercise of the court’s discretion
    depended on issues of fact that were disputed at trial,
    due process required that the defendant be permitted
    to present his after discovered evidence.
    Third, I do not agree with the motion court and the
    majority that the nonsexual affair, which the dissolution
    court attributed to the plaintiff, can be equated with
    the putative adultery on her part that the defendant
    claims his new transcript evidence shows. Adultery is
    a more egregious form of marital infidelity. If proved,
    that new evidence could work a different result in
    awards of alimony and property division.
    Fourth, although I agree that whether any discovery
    was warranted was within the motion court’s discre-
    tion, the motion court had to listen to the defendant and
    his evidence to exercise that discretion to determine if
    discovery were necessary to authenticate the transcript
    evidence.
    Fifth, the defendant had but one trial where evidence
    was offered. Therefore, I do not agree with the motion
    court that he already had ‘‘three bites at the apple’’
    because of his appeals of the initial divorce judgment,
    or that his divorce appeals justified denying his motion
    to open.
    Sixth, I do not agree with the majority that the dissolu-
    tion court’s finding that the defendant lacked credibility
    as to his finances could somehow justify the motion
    court’s denial of an evidentiary hearing. Our statutes
    are clear as to both alimony and property awards that
    causes of the marital breakdown can be considered in
    the making of such awards. The dissolution court made
    findings as to what the defendant’s financial resources
    were. That matrix presumably would not change. Any
    imperfections in his financial affidavit were not the
    cause of the marital breakdown because they occurred
    after the marital breakdown.
    I do not disagree with much of the majority’s reitera-
    tion of multiple facts found by the dissolution court.
    However, I do not find most of them persuasive on
    the issue of whether the defendant’s motion to open
    properly was denied without hearing evidence. Most of
    those marshalled facts do not address the defendant’s
    principal issue, namely, that he was entitled to an evi-
    dentiary hearing by the motion court regarding new
    evidence of facts the dissolution court did not hear. If
    heard and credited, they are after discovered evidence
    of the plaintiff’s admission to adulterous conduct which
    she had denied under oath in the dissolution trial.1
    While the action for dissolution was pending, the
    defendant was arrested on the complaint of the plaintiff
    for an alleged assault on the plaintiff. After Judge Car-
    bonneau’s judgment of dissolution had entered, that
    criminal charge against the defendant subsequently was
    dismissed by the Superior Court after a police investiga-
    tion of the alleged assault. This fact looms important
    in my analysis because, as part of the investigation of
    the alleged assault, police obtained the plaintiff’s cell
    phone records that the defendant alleges reveal the
    plaintiff’s admission to engaging in a sexual relationship
    with another man while married to the defendant. Sub-
    sequent to the dismissal of the assault charge, the defen-
    dant was able, by subpoena, to gain access to a tran-
    script of the plaintiff’s cell phone records that the police
    had obtained. The memorandum of decision was issued
    while the defendant’s assault case was still pending. The
    dissolution court found that the plaintiff had engaged
    in an affair, but nonetheless found that there was no
    direct evidence that it was sexual in nature. The dissolu-
    tion court further found: ‘‘While the wording of defen-
    dant’s interrogatories dated September 30, 2015 con-
    cerning plaintiff’s extramarital relationships may have
    been imprecise, plaintiff’s responses—under oath—
    were less than forthcoming. Plaintiff’s recollection of
    her relationship with George Jones was vague. . . .
    The court has considered her relationship with another
    man during the marriage. The court finds no direct
    evidence of her and this other man ever having sex.’’2
    Ordinarily, trial courts do not cite to a lack of evi-
    dence on some point, unless that point on which evi-
    dence is lacking might make a difference to some issue
    decided if the evidence existed, were offered, and found
    to be credible. However, in this case, the dissolution
    court expressly did cite to a lack of such evidence. It
    found ‘‘no direct evidence of her and this other man
    ever having sex.’’3 This indicates that had such direct
    evidence existed before the trial court, that orders of
    the court might have been different. Paragraphs 15 and
    16 of the defendant’s motion to open are the equivalent
    of an offer of proof. In those paragraphs, the defendant
    alleges nothing less than that a police transcript of the
    plaintiff’s conversation via text message with her then
    attorney revealed an agreement with him to deny under
    oath at trial that she had been adulterous, followed by
    an overt act wherein she so denied it under oath before
    the court hearing the dissolution, which was not cor-
    rected of record by her attorney. It is undisputed that
    this is not a situation, as discussed in Billington v.
    Billington, 
    220 Conn. 212
    , 225, 
    595 A.2d 1377
     (1991),
    in which both parties in marital litigation commit fraud
    on the court by joining to conceal material information
    from the court. The defendant admitted to such at oral
    argument before this court. However, the defendant in
    the present case made the claim in his motion to open
    that the plaintiff conspired with her attorney to deceive
    the court and the defendant by concealing information
    about her sexual affair. Although this is not the type
    of fraud on the court discussed in Billington, nonethe-
    less the allegations, if proved true, are fraud. Defining
    fraud in the marital dissolution context in such a limited
    way as to not include collusion by an attorney and client
    to conceal material information from the court and
    opposing party, deprives courts of a basic function in
    dissolution cases, namely, to fairly make awards of
    property division and alimony, both of which can be
    substantially affected if presented with credible evi-
    dence of an extramarital sexual affair, which caused
    the marital breakdown.
    In fairness, the defendant was never accorded the
    right to put on later discovered evidence from the police
    transcript before the motion court. If found credible,
    that evidence would constitute direct evidence of the
    adulterous conduct that the plaintiff had denied under
    oath and that the dissolution court found lacking.
    The majority holds that there was no evidence that
    the divorce court relied on the plaintiff’s alleged misrep-
    resentation. I disagree. That reasoning ignores the dis-
    solution court’s finding that there was no direct evi-
    dence that the plaintiff’s affair was sexual in nature.
    The dissolution court could not rely on evidence it never
    heard and that the plaintiff withheld and expressly,
    falsely denied the existence of under oath.
    In the defendant’s motion to open the dissolution
    judgment on the basis of fraud, he set forth: ‘‘On October
    2, 2017, approximately a year after the court issued its
    memorandum of decision, the Plymouth police depart-
    ment released record [sic] of the plaintiff’s text mes-
    sages that were extracted from the plaintiff’s cell
    phones. The Plymouth police department had seized
    the plaintiff’s cell phones to investigate the plaintiff’s
    false allegation of assault. The extracted text messages
    from the plaintiff’s cell phone disclosed a very graphic
    relation between the plaintiff and George Jones span-
    ning for over a year prior to the plaintiff’s filing of
    divorce. The extracted text messages from the plain-
    tiff’s cell phone disclosed communication between the
    plaintiff and her counsel, in which [A]ttorney Ollennu
    was counseling the plaintiff to mislead the court by
    concealing her sexual affair from the judge so the judge
    won’t feel sorry for the defendant.’’4
    The motion court and the parties focused on the
    defendant’s allegations of fraud, an exception to the
    four month rule, which necessarily implies that the
    motion to open was filed beyond the four month period.
    At the hearing on the defendant’s motion to open, the
    motion court opined that its concern was that the
    motion was in effect ‘‘a third bite at the apple’’ because
    the defendant’s divorce action had already been heard
    by the dissolution court, reviewed by the Appellate
    Court, and certification to appeal the decision of the
    Appellate Court had been denied by our Supreme Court.
    The motion court further opined that the problem it
    saw with the defendant’s motion was that the dissolu-
    tion court had discredited both the plaintiff and the
    defendant. The defendant’s testimony was discredited
    concerning his financial situation. The motion court
    further held that, because the dissolution court found
    that the plaintiff had an affair, if the motion were
    granted it would not likely change the result of the case.
    Without hearing any evidence about the need for
    further discovery, the motion court in effect
    ‘‘demurred.’’ The motion court improperly equated the
    consequences of the nonsexual extramarital affair that
    the dissolution court found with adultery, despite the
    fact that the dissolution court had found there was ‘‘no
    direct evidence’’ that the affair was sexual in nature.
    The defendant newly alleged before the motion court
    that the affair was sexual in nature by virtue of the
    plaintiff’s admission to it.
    The General Assembly enacted a statutory provision
    that a judgment may be opened only if the court is
    moved to do so within four months of its rendering.
    See General Statutes § 52-212a. A recent case from our
    Supreme Court pointed out that it has ‘‘recognized that
    a trial court has inherent power, independent of [any]
    statutory provisions, to open a judgment obtained by
    fraud, in the actual absence of consent, or by mutual
    mistake at any time.’’ (Internal quotation marks omit-
    ted.) Wolfork v. Yale Medical Group, 
    335 Conn. 448
    ,
    469, 
    239 A.3d 272
     (2020), citing Kenworthy v. Kenwor-
    thy, 
    180 Conn. 129
    , 131, 
    429 A.2d 837
     (1980).5
    I agree with the defendant’s claim that the trial court
    erred by denying him a postjudgment probable cause
    hearing to determine whether any discovery beyond
    the testimony of the parties should be allowed in the
    future to substantiate the defendant’s allegations of
    fraud. The motion court was in the best position to
    determine if additional discovery was necessary. But it
    had to listen to the defendant to find that out. Evidence
    to be admissible must be properly authenticated. See
    Conn. Code Evid. § 9-1. ‘‘All documents must be authen-
    ticated before they are admitted into evidence.’’ E. Pres-
    cott, Tait’s Handbook of Connecticut Evidence (6th Ed.
    2019) § 9.1.2, p. 675. As § 9-1 (a) of the Connecticut Code
    of Evidence explains, the purpose of authentication is
    to ensure that the offered evidence ‘‘is what its propo-
    nent claims it to be.’’ In this matter, the defendant would
    be obligated to show that the transcript of the text
    messages was accurate and constituted discourse
    between the plaintiff and her attorney. It is possible
    that further discovery might be necessary to authenti-
    cate the transcript for admissibility into evidence. See
    State v. Garcia, 
    299 Conn. 39
    , 57, 
    7 A.3d 355
     (2010)
    (direct testimony and circumstantial evidence among
    ways to authenticate writing). My review of the record
    reveals that no evidence was taken at the hearing on
    the defendant’s motion to open. Although a full scale
    trial need not occur in order to determine probable
    cause for purposes of permitting further discovery, I
    conclude that it accords a person in the defendant’s
    shoes entitlement to a hearing and to show through
    testimony the need for further discovery. See id., 257.
    I next turn to our statutory scheme, which shows a
    continued recognition of the egregious nature of adul-
    tery as a cause of marital breakdowns. Section 46b-
    40 (f) of our General Statues defines ‘‘ ‘adultery’ ’’ as
    ‘‘voluntary sexual intercourse between a married per-
    son and a person other than such person’s spouse.’’
    Adultery such as would constitute grounds for dissolu-
    tion ‘‘will not be inferred from circumstantial evidence
    unless there is both an opportunity and an adulterous
    disposition . . . [and] without more does not necessar-
    ily compel a conclusion that adultery has occurred.’’
    (Citations omitted.) Turgeon v. Turgeon, 
    190 Conn. 269
    ,
    279, 
    460 A.2d 1260
     (1983). In short, adultery, unless
    observed ‘‘in flagrante delicto,’’ is hard to prove, which
    explains why the dissolution court did not find as a
    fact that it had occurred because there was ‘‘no direct
    evidence’’ of it. However, an admission to such conduct
    by the plaintiff on her cell phone would constitute
    strong evidence, if authenticated, that the conduct had
    occurred. This state allows for divorce upon a finding
    that the marriage has broken down irretrievably. See
    General Statutes § 46b-40 (c) (1). Nonetheless, the legis-
    lature saw fit to retain adultery as a separate ground
    for divorce. See General Statutes § 46b-40 (c) (3). This
    legislative statement evinces a recognition of how seri-
    ous a form of marital infidelity adultery is. Although
    § 46b-40 (c) (1) ‘‘clearly establishes a state policy recog-
    nizing that a marital relationship may terminate in fact
    without regard to the fault of either marital partner
    . . . [n]o-fault divorce does not mean that the causes
    of a marital breakup are always irrelevant . . . .’’ (Cita-
    tion omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.) Posada
    v. Posada, 
    179 Conn. 568
    , 572, 
    427 A.2d 406
     (1980).
    Adultery, however, can still be relevant in divorce pro-
    ceedings when considering property division and ali-
    mony. See General Statutes §§ 46b-81 (c) and 46b-82
    (a).6 ‘‘[A] spouse whose conduct has contributed sub-
    stantially to the breakdown of the marriage should not
    expect to receive financial kudos for his or her miscon-
    duct.’’ Robinson v. Robinson, 
    187 Conn. 70
    , 72, 
    444 A.2d 234
     (1982). Section 46b-81 (c) specifically requires a
    trial court to consider ‘‘the causes for the . . . dissolu-
    tion of the marriage’’ in making decisions as to distribu-
    tion of property. Similarly, § 46b-82 (a) provides that a
    trial court, ‘‘[i]n determining whether alimony shall be
    awarded, and the duration and amount of the award
    . . . shall consider . . . the causes for the . . . disso-
    lution of the marriage . . . .’’
    In Weinstein v. Weinstein, 
    275 Conn. 671
    , 685, 
    882 A.2d 53
     (2005), which concerns the fraud exception in
    the context of a motion to open a dissolution judgment,
    our Supreme Court stated that ‘‘[f]raud consists in
    deception practiced in order to induce another to part
    with property or surrender some legal right, and which
    accomplishes the end designed. . . . The elements of
    a fraud action are: (1) a false representation was made
    as a statement of fact; (2) the statement was untrue
    and known to be so by its maker; (3) the statement
    was made with the intent of inducing reliance thereon;
    and (4) the other party relied on the statement to his
    detriment.’’7 (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Although our motion to open case law defines ‘‘fraud’’
    in the context of a motion to open similar to the defini-
    tion of fraud in the inducement of the making of a
    contract or fraud in the execution of it, the defendant’s
    claims do not arise out of a contractual agreement
    except in the broad sense that the plaintiff and defen-
    dant contracted a marriage which has been dissolved.
    See Cimino v. Cimino, 
    174 Conn. App. 1
    , 8–9, 
    164 A.3d 787
     (motion to open), cert. denied, 
    327 Conn. 929
    , 
    171 A.3d 455
     (2017); Harold Cohn & Co. v. Harco Interna-
    tional, LLC, 
    72 Conn. App. 43
    , 50–51, 
    804 A.2d 218
    (fraudulent inducement of contract), cert. denied, 
    262 Conn. 903
    , 
    810 A.2d 269
     (2002).
    In the more pertinent sense, the fraud alleged here
    relates to the plaintiff’s denial of adulterous conduct
    at trial at the urging of an officer of the court who was
    her lawyer, who then did not correct his client’s false
    statement but in fact signed the jurat after taking her
    oath. Black’s Law Dictionary defines ‘‘fraud’’ as ‘‘[a]
    knowing misrepresentation of the truth or concealment
    of a material fact to induce another to act to his or her
    detriment.’’ Black’s Law Dictionary (7th Ed. 1999), p.
    670. That is the type of fraud contemplated as an excep-
    tion to the four month rule within which motions to
    open must otherwise be made.8 If an evidentiary hearing
    were to be held to determine if probable cause has
    been established that discovery is necessary for the
    defendant’s newly discovered cell phone evidence,
    then, if probable cause is established, discovery should
    be ordered. If the defendant’s allegations were substan-
    tiated beyond a mere suspicion, the court should have
    opened the judgment for the limited purpose of discov-
    ery. ‘‘If the [party seeking to open the judgment] was
    able to substantiate [his] allegations of fraud beyond
    mere suspicion, then the court would open the judg-
    ment for the limited purpose of discovery, and would
    later issue an ultimate decision on the motion to open
    after discovery had been completed and another hear-
    ing held.’’ (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Spilke v.
    Spilke, 
    116 Conn. App. 590
    , 593 n.6, 
    976 A.2d 69
    , cert.
    denied, 
    294 Conn. 918
    , 
    984 A.2d 68
     (2009).
    The defendant also challenges the reasons given by
    the court for the outright denial of his motion. ‘‘There
    are three limitations on a court’s ability to grant relief
    from a dissolution judgment secured by fraud: (1) there
    must have been no laches or unreasonable delay by the
    injured party after the fraud was discovered; (2) there
    must be clear proof of the fraud; and (3) there is a
    [reasonable probability] that the result of the new trial
    will be different. . . . Additionally, the granting of such
    relief must not unfairly jeopardize interests of reliance
    that have taken shape on the basis of the judgment.’’
    (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
    Foisie v. Foisie, 
    335 Conn. 525
    , 535–36, 
    239 A.3d 1198
     (2020).
    In reviewing the reasons that the court gave for deny-
    ing the motion to open, I can appreciate that all litigation
    must come to an end, but I do not agree that the defen-
    dant’s motion to open was a ‘‘third bite at the apple’’
    as the court found. It does not appear from this record
    that the cell phone evidence was known by the defen-
    dant during the defendant’s dissolution trial before
    Judge Carbonneau. The record before us is silent as to
    whether it became known at the time of his earlier
    appeal to the Appellate Court or at the time he sought
    certification from our Supreme Court, but, in any event,
    because both appellate courts were limited to the
    record evidence before the dissolution court, neither
    appellate court could have taken new evidence or made
    factual findings about it.
    The motion court also noted that the dissolution court
    discredited some of the testimony of both parties, after
    hearing both the plaintiff’s and the defendant’s evi-
    dence. The dissolution court made factual findings as to
    the financial circumstances of both parties. Presumably
    these findings stand as to the defendant’s finances
    because they are not challenged on appeal and would be
    the matrix for any financial awards. However, I cannot
    agree that they would bar any relief to the defendant
    if the defendant is permitted to offer after discovered
    evidence in support of his motion. Some later conduct
    cannot cause the breakdown of a marriage that has
    already broken down irretrievably. This lack of credibil-
    ity found on the part of the defendant9 was not the cause
    of the marriage breakdown because the inconsistencies
    and misrepresentations in the defendant’s financial affi-
    davit occurred during the pendency of the divorce pro-
    ceeding, which occurred long after the marriage break-
    down had already occurred and, therefore, could not
    be a factor under the statutes authorizing fault in caus-
    ing the breakdown to be considered in alimony and
    property awards. Section 46b-81 (c) expressly provides
    that, as to the division of marital property, that the court
    ‘‘shall consider’’ the ‘‘causes for the . . . dissolution of
    the marriage . . . .’’ Section 46b-82 (a) places a similar
    obligation on a court in its awards of alimony.
    The defendant has made substantial allegations
    regarding fraud. His evidence deserves to be heard.
    I would reverse the judgment and remand the motion
    to open for further proceedings at which the defendant
    is permitted to offer his evidence of the plaintiff’s admis-
    sion to adulterous conduct that she had denied at trial.
    1
    My analysis is guided by the following standards. An interpretation of
    what is required by the relevant statute presents a question of law over
    which our review is plenary. See Trumbull v. Palmer, 
    161 Conn. App. 594
    ,
    598–99, 
    129 A.3d 133
     (2015), cert. denied, 
    320 Conn. 923
    , 
    133 A.3d 458
     (2016).
    Review of whether the defendant’s motion to open was properly denied is
    examined under an abuse of discretion standard. See Gaary v. Gillis, 
    162 Conn. App. 251
    , 255–56, 
    131 A.3d 765
     (2016).
    However, the defendant alleges that he was denied the opportunity to
    present evidence that the plaintiff was adulterous although she had denied
    it at trial. Whether due process was denied to offer evidence on a disputed
    fact is a question of law, over which our review is plenary. ‘‘Whether a party
    was deprived of his due process rights is a question of law to which appellate
    courts grant plenary review.’’ McFarline v. Mickens, 
    177 Conn. App. 83
    , 100,
    
    173 A.3d 417
     (2017), cert. denied, 
    327 Conn. 997
    , 
    176 A.3d 557
     (2018).
    2
    The pertinent portion of the defendant’s interrogatory to the plaintiff
    and her answer to it under oath, together with the notarization of it by her
    attorney, Jeremiah Nii Amaa Ollennu, are as follows. Question 6 of the
    defendant’s interrogatories asked: ‘‘Have you had sexual relations with any-
    one other than your spouse since the date of your marriage?’’ The plaintiff
    responded, ‘‘No.’’ The notarization on the final page is signed by Ollennu,
    who wrote ‘‘Esq.’’ after his name, and the words ‘‘notary public’’ under the
    line containing his signature are crossed out, presumably indicating that he
    signed it as a Commissioner of the Superior Court.
    3
    This court stated that the trial court ‘‘considered the evidence of the
    plaintiff’s extramarital affair and found that it was not sexual in nature.’’
    Conroy v. Idlibi, 
    183 Conn. App. 460
    , 464, 
    193 A.3d 663
    , cert. denied, 
    330 Conn. 921
    , 
    194 A.3d 289
     (2018). I agree with the defendant that this overstates
    what the trial court found. The trial court found only that there was ‘‘no
    direct evidence of [the plaintiff] and [Jones] ever having sex.’’
    4
    The defendant further alleged in his motion to open that the plaintiff
    had fabricated an incident of assault with self-inflicted wounds to falsely
    accuse the defendant of a brutal assault and falsely testified during the
    divorce proceedings that the defendant had assaulted her. Although the
    defendant wants to again probe into the merits of the plaintiff’s dismissed
    criminal assault complaint, because the dissolution court did not find that
    the defendant had assaulted the plaintiff, I agree with Judge Connors that,
    even if he could prove that there were no assault, doing so would be unlikely
    to change the result of the awards in the dissolution judgment and that
    therefore there was no need to retry that issue.
    5
    Our common law in part derives from English common law. There is
    an historic recognition in the literature of English speaking peoples that
    fraud, if found to exist, must be rooted out. ‘‘The Principal Dutie of a Judge,
    is to suppress Force and Fraud; wherof Force is the more Pernicious, when
    it is Open; and Fraud when it is Close and Disguised.’’ Sir Francis Bacon,
    The Essayes or Counsels, Civil and Morall, Essay LVI, Of Judicature, Edited
    by Michael Kiernan, Harvard University Press, 1985.
    6
    General Statutes § 46b-81 provides: ‘‘(a) At the time of entering a decree
    annulling or dissolving a marriage or for legal separation pursuant to a
    complaint under section 46b-45, the Superior Court may assign to either
    spouse all or any part of the estate of the other spouse. The court may pass
    title to real property to either party or to a third person or may order the
    sale of such real property, without any act by either spouse, when in the
    judgment of the court it is the proper mode to carry the decree into effect.
    (b) A conveyance made pursuant to the decree shall vest title in the pur-
    chaser, and shall bind all persons entitled to life estates and remainder
    interests in the same manner as a sale ordered by the court pursuant to the
    provisions of section 52-500. When the decree is recorded on the land records
    in the town where the real property is situated, it shall effect the transfer
    of the title of such real property as if it were a deed of the party or parties.(c)
    In fixing the nature and value of the property, if any, to be assigned, the
    court, after considering all the evidence presented by each party, shall
    consider the length of the marriage, the causes for the annulment, dissolution
    of the marriage or legal separation, the age, health, station, occupation,
    amount and sources of income, earning capacity, vocational skills, educa-
    tion, employability, estate, liabilities and needs of each of the parties and
    the opportunity of each for future acquisition of capital assets and income.
    The court shall also consider the contribution of each of the parties in the
    acquisition, preservation or appreciation in value of their respective estates.’’
    General Statutes § 46b-82 provides: ‘‘(a) At the time of entering the decree,
    the Superior Court may order either of the parties to pay alimony to the
    other, in addition to or in lieu of an award pursuant to section 46b-81. The
    order may direct that security be given therefor on such terms as the court
    may deem desirable, including an order pursuant to subsection (b) of this
    section or an order to either party to contract with a third party for periodic
    payments or payments contingent on a life to the other party. The court
    may order that a party obtain life insurance as such security unless such
    party proves, by a preponderance of the evidence, that such insurance is
    not available to such party, such party is unable to pay the cost of such
    insurance or such party is uninsurable. In determining whether alimony
    shall be awarded, and the duration and amount of the award, the court shall
    consider the evidence presented by each party and shall consider the length
    of the marriage, the causes for the annulment, dissolution of the marriage
    or legal separation, the age, health, station, occupation, amount and sources
    of income, earning capacity, vocational skills, education, employability,
    estate and needs of each of the parties and the award, if any, which the
    court may make pursuant to section 46b-81, and, in the case of a parent to
    whom the custody of minor children has been awarded, the desirability and
    feasibility of such parent’s securing employment. (b) If the court, following
    a trial or hearing on the merits, enters an order pursuant to subsection (a)
    of this section, or section 46b-86, and such order by its terms will terminate
    only upon the death of either party or the remarriage of the alimony recipient,
    the court shall articulate with specificity the basis for such order. (c) Any
    postjudgment procedure afforded by chapter 9061 shall be available to
    secure the present and future financial interests of a party in connection
    with a final order for the periodic payment of alimony.’’
    7
    Furthermore, ‘‘[t]here are three limitations on a court’s ability to grant
    relief from a dissolution judgment secured by fraud: (1) there must have
    been no laches or unreasonable delay by the injured party after the fraud
    was discovered; (2) there must be clear proof of the fraud; and (3) there is
    a substantial likelihood that the result of the new trial will be different.’’
    (Internal quotation marks omitted.) Weinstein v. Weinstein, supra, 
    275 Conn. 685
    . In the present case, where there exists no claim of undue delay, our
    review is limited to ‘‘whether there was sufficient proof of fraud and whether
    the result in a new trial would differ.’’ Id., 686.
    8
    The defendant conceded at oral argument that he was not claiming ‘‘fraud
    on the court’’ because he had not joined in it. Our Supreme Court has
    decided, in the case of Billington v. Billington, supra, 
    220 Conn. 224
    –25,
    ‘‘that the concept of fraud on the court in the marital litigation context is
    properly confined to situations where both parties join to conceal material
    information from the court.’’
    9
    The dissolution court determined that ‘‘[t]he mistakes, omissions, misrep-
    resentations, inconsistencies and irregularities in his sworn financial affida-
    vits damaged the defendant’s credibility in the eyes of the court, especially
    in financial matters and values.’’