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De Almeida-Kennedy v. Kennedy

Conn. App. Ct.September 7, 2021No. AC43348Cited 3 times
Mixed ResultKennedy

Case Details

Judge(s)
Alvord; Elgo; Alexander
Status
Published
Procedural Posture
appeal

Related Laws

No specific laws identified for this ruling.

Outcome

Trial court's dismissal of defendant's motions was affirmed in part and reversed in part. The court properly lacked jurisdiction over custody and visitation matters but improperly dismissed motions relating to alimony, child support, and other non-custody matters.

Excerpt

The defendant, whose marriage to the plaintiff previously had been dis- solved, appealed to this court from the judgment of the trial court granting the plaintiff's motion to dismiss the defendant's pending motions, which included a motion for modification of his alimony, child support and visitation orders, two motions for contempt, a motion for an order to prevent the plaintiff from filing additional motions without leave of the court pursuant to Strobel v. Strobel (92 Conn. App. 662), a motion to remove the guardian ad litem, and a motion to compel compli- ance with his discovery request, all for lack of subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction and Enforcement Act (§ 46b-155 et seq.). Prior to the filing of the motion to dismiss, the defendant relocated to Florida and the plaintiff and the parties' children relocated to Tennessee. The defendant returned to Connecticut after approximately one year in Florida. While the plaintiff's motion to dismiss was pending, the defendant filed an application for an emergency ex parte order of custody, and the trial court entered an emergency order awarding temporary custody to the defendant and also ordered a hearing on the custody issue. At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court ordered that all existing orders regarding the custody of the parties' minor children be stayed until the plaintiff's motion to dismiss was resolved. Following a hearing on the motion to dismiss, for which the plaintiff submitted an affidavit in support of her arguments, as she was unable to attend in person, the trial court dismissed the defendant's motions for a Strobel order, to remove the guardian ad litem, and to compel, and one of his motions for contempt. The defendant appealed to this court and then filed a motion to reargue with the trial court. The trial court stayed consideration of the defendant's motion for modifica- tion of his alimony, child support and visitation orders, which remained pend

What This Ruling Means

# Plain English Summary: De Almeida-Kennedy v. Kennedy ## What Happened A former spouse appealed a trial court's decision that dismissed several of their motions. These motions included requests to change alimony (money paid to an ex-spouse), child support, and requests claiming the other person violated court orders. ## What the Court Decided The appeals court partially agreed and partially disagreed with the trial court. The court confirmed that the trial court couldn't handle custody and visitation matters. However, the court ruled that the trial court made a mistake by dismissing the motions about money payments—those cases should have been allowed to proceed. ## Why This Matters for Workers While this case primarily involves family law rather than employment, it demonstrates an important principle: courts must properly consider all relevant claims brought before them. Workers should understand that when they file complaints or motions, courts have a responsibility to address each claim appropriately rather than dismissing everything at once. This case shows courts will review dismissals if they appear improper, protecting people's right to have their cases heard.

This summary was generated to explain the ruling in plain English and is not legal advice.

Similar Rulings

Gentile-Riaz
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Remanded
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