DocketNumber: No. FA 890103445S
Citation Numbers: 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 2895-JJ, 16 Conn. L. Rptr. 557
Judges: KAVANEWSKY, J.
Filed Date: 4/23/1996
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
The parties' marriage was dissolved on October 11, 1990. On the date of dissolution, the parties submitted a signed separation agreement which contained, inter alia, provisions concerning alimony in Article VII thereof. Said Article states:
7.1. Simultaneously with the execution of this agreement the Husband shall pay to the Wife as alimony the sum of One Thousand Dollars ($1,000) per month for eight months through June, 1991.
7.2. Thereafter, commencing July, 1991, the Husband shall pay the sum of Nine Hundred Dollars ($900) per month as alimony through August, 1994.
7.3. From September, 1994 through October, 2005, the Husband shall pay to the Wife Eight Hundred Dollars ($800) per month as alimony.
7.4. The amount and term of alimony shall be nonmodifiable. The amount and term of alimony shall continue regardless of whether the Husband's employment at Pitney Bowes terminates, he retires, or the Wife is employed at some time in the future. (Emphasis added).
Additionally, Article XVI, paragraph 16.9. provided that CT Page 2895-KK "None of the paragraphs contained in the Separation Agreement shall be modifiable."
The decree itself, as set forth in the judgment file, incorporated the agreement into the judgment, and made it a part thereof. Further, the judgment file states that "[I]n addition, on October 29, 1990 the parties further clarified the Judgment by stating that the alimony is nonmodifiable as to amount or term except that the alimony will be terminated upon the death of the Husband or the remarriage of the Wife."1
C.G.S. §
The provisions in the subject separation agreement concerning the nonmodifiability of periodic alimony are express and unambiguous. Paragraph 7.4 of the Agreement, supra, clearly states that the amount and term of alimony shall be nonmodifiable. It then goes on to set forth certain illustrative instances when the alimony would be nonmodifiable. Further, Paragraph 16.9 of the agreement, supra, provides that none of the paragraphs contained in the separation agreement shall be modifiable. If there were any doubts concerning the nonmodifiability of the periodic alimony, and this court has none, these were certainly put to rest by the clarification of the judgment. This again provided that the amount or term of the alimony was not modifiable, but that it would terminate upon the death of the husband or the remarriage of the wife. CT Page 2895-LL
Several Appellate Court cases cited by the plaintiff concerning the issue of modification of periodic alimony, are inapposite. In Bronson v. Bronson,
For the foregoing reasons, the plaintiff's motion for modification of alimony is denied.