DocketNumber: No. FA-91-0608293
Judges: RUBINOW, J.
Filed Date: 3/17/1997
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The court finds all issues in favor of the plaintiff, and affirms the rulings of the family support magistrate. CT Page 3050
It is useful to view the defendant's petition and appeal in the context of the complex procedural history presented by this litigation.1 On April 25, 1996, the magistrate granted the plaintiff mother's motion for modification of child support dated May 19, 1995. Through that ruling, the defendant's current support obligation was increased from $58.00 per week to $90.89 per week. On that date, the magistrate found a child support arrearage of $5253, ordered arrearage payments to be increased from $10.00 per week to $18.11 per week, and applied these orders effective retroactively to May 19, 1995, the date the motion for modification was served upon the defendant. The magistrate further ordered the arrearage payment to be increased to $45.45 per week effective September 9, 1996, when the child at issue would reach majority, and current support obligations would cease. Also on that date, the magistrate granted the plaintiff's December 18, 1995 motion for counsel fees and ordered the Defendant to pay $300 as such. The Family Support Magistrate denied the defendant's November 13, 1995 motion to expunge arrearage and motion for attorney fees.
On May 9, 1996, the defendant filed his timely appeal from the above decisions.2 On that date, the defendant also submitted a motion to present additional evidence, and to add this evidence to the record.3 On June 4, 1996, the defendant filed a motion for articulation of the magistrate's April 25, 1996 decision relative to the following specific issues: the retroactive payment of modified child support payments and the order of attorney's fees to be paid by the defendant to plaintiff's counsel. On August 15, 1996, the magistrate issued an articulation of the April 25, 1996 decision. Pending resolution of the appeal, on August 20, 1996, the plaintiff filed a motion for contempt for the defendant's failure to pay $300 in attorney fees as had been ordered on April 25, 1996. On September 6, 1996, the defendant filed an objection to this motion for contempt, and requested a stay of fee payments during the appeal process. On September 10, 1996, a hearing was held at the Superior Court to address the plaintiff's motion for contempt and the defendant's May 9, 1996 motion to present additional evidence. The defendant was not present at that hearing, although his counsel appeared on his behalf.4 The court found that the defense had no evidence or witnesses to present in opposition to the contempt motion. The court determined that it was unable to adjudicate the contempt issue in the absence of the defendant, continued the case for hearing at the afternoon calendar session, and awarded the CT Page 3051 plaintiff $300 in additional attorney's fees, separate and distinct from the magistrate's -April 25, 1996 order of attorney fees. Upon appearing that afternoon, the defendant prevailed upon the court, for the first time, for an another continuance due to his illness. The matter was marked over for two weeks.
On September 13, 1996, the plaintiff filed an additional motion for contempt, along with a motion requesting extension of support beyond the eighteenth birthday of the child. On September 24, 1996, the defendant responded by denying any failure to pay child support and requesting attorney's fees. On September 25, 1996, a second hearing was held and the court heard argument regarding the plaintiff's May 9, 1996 motion to present additional evidence. The court deferred ruling on the issue. The court continued argument regarding the plaintiff's motions for contempt and extension of child support. On November 4, 1996, a third hearing was held, during which the court affirmed its denial of the defendant's motion to present additional evidence. In response to the plaintiff's motion to postpone the argument and decision on the motion for post majority child support pending determination of the superior court's jurisdiction over the defendant's appeal from the magistrate's April 25, 1996 rulings. The court again deferred presentation of evidence on legal and factual questions related to extension of child support, until the issue of jurisdiction was resolved.
Conn. Gen. Stat. § 46-231 (n)(1) provides that "a person aggrieved by a final decision of a family support magistrate is entitled to judicial review by way of appeal . . . ." The two-part test for aggrievement by a particular decision is well established. First, the person claiming to be aggrieved must have a specific, personal and legal interest in the subject matter of the decision, as distinguished from the general interest of the community as a whole. Second, the person must establish that his or her interest has been specially and injuriously affected by the decision. Newman v. Newman,
This court finds that since the magistrate's decision has the effect of increasing the defendant's child support obligation and requiring the defendant to pay attorney fees, the defendant is "aggrieved" by the decision. See O'Neill v. Novak, 1993 WL 343749 (Conn.Super. Sept. 7, 1993) (holding that plaintiff was "aggrieved" within the meaning of
Having satisfied the statutory definition of "aggrievement" and alleged the statutory basis of appeal pursuant to §
The defendant raises three claims on appeal. He first asserts that the magistrate erred in ruling that it had no jurisdiction to hear a motion to expunge an arrearage. The defendant argues that a "legitimate misunderstanding as to the terms or conditions of a support order" could, and in this case, does constitute "an excuse for nonpayment" entitling the magistrate to expunge any accrued arrearage. (Defendant's Appeal from Magistrate Court, p. 15) Appropriately, the magistrate held that the issue of the defendant's reasonable understanding was not relevant to the issue of the accumulation of an arrearage, without foreclosing the application of this circumstance to the formulation of remedial orders. This court finds that the magistrate effectively considered the defendant's application for recission of any finding of arrearage, and that the magistrate's order appropriately denied the defendant's motion to expunge the arrearage that was assessed.
The record reflects that the defendant attempted to persuade the magistrate that his obligation to pay child support had been suspended. He claimed this change in status was due to the plaintiff's notification to the support enforcement division that she no longer wanted assistance in collecting child support for the child. The record reflects that the defendant's wage withholding had ceased as of November 1993, although it fails to reveal any order from the court or the magistrate which could have served as the basis for this change.5 In refusing to grant the defendant's request to erase the accrued arrearage, the magistrate specifically noted the child support order that had been entered on September 2, 1992 for $58.00 per week, with an accompanying order for payment of $10 per week toward arrearage; the magistrate further found that no court had modified those orders in the interim. The magistrate's comments clearly indicate that he related the issue of "jurisdiction" over the defendant's request for elimination of the arrearage to the limitations on modification of support orders permitted by §
The defendant's second claim asserts that the magistrate's order of counsel fees denied him due process and violated §§
The defendant's third and final argument is that the magistrate's retroactive child support modification violates §
Regarding the retroactive application of the modification order, the magistrate in his articulation noted that the plaintiff's motion to modify support was dated May 15, 1995 and served on the defendant the same day, although the hearing to resolve the issues raised by this motion was not held until almost a year later. As noted above, the magistrate has discretion under Conn. Gen. Stat. §
WHEREFORE, the defendant's Petition to Appeal, submitted under date of May 9, 1996, having been granted by the court, the defendant's Appeal from the rulings of the family support magistrate, entered April 25, 1996, is hereby DENIED, and the court AFFIRMS the rulings of the magistrate issued on that date.
BY THE COURT, CT Page 3056
N. Rubinow, J.