Juma v. Aomo
Juma v. Aomo
Opinion of the Court
Opinion
In this appeal, the defendant, Tom M. Aomo, claims that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the action for the dissolution of his marriage to the plaintiff, Jacqueline O. Juma, because he had initiated an action for, and ultimately obtained, a divorce from the plaintiff in Kenya. The defendant also challenges certain of the trial court’s orders related to the parties’ finances and children. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Since the plaintiff commenced this action on October 1,2009, the defendant has repeatedly attempted to challenge the court’s jurisdiction on the ground that he had already commenced an action for dissolution in Kenya and that the parties’ marriage could only be dissolved by the Kenyan courts. On June 16, 2010, after a hearing, the court, Dolan J., rejected the defendant’s jurisdictional claims and denied a motion to dismiss filed by him. On September 15,2010, the defendant filed another motion to dismiss, again challenging the court’s jurisdiction over the parties’ dissolution action. On November 22, 2010, after another hearing, the court, Prestley, J., denied the defendant’s motion to dismiss. On December 30, 2010, the defendant filed yet another motion to dismiss, again alleging the trial court’s lack of jurisdiction. In conjunction with the dissolution trial, the court,
I
We begin with the defendant’s claim that the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the parties’ dissolution action. In examining this issue, the trial court made the following relevant factual findings. “The defendant moved to the United States in November, 1997. He obtained a degree from the University of Michigan. He obtained permanent residency. He filed the necessary papers for the plaintiff and [the parties’ eldest child] to move to the United States in 2001. Visas were issued in November, 2006. In January, 2007, the plaintiff and the eldest child . . . moved to the United States. The plaintiff has been a legal permanent resident of the United States since January 20, 2007. The second child of the [parties] . . . was bom in the United States on October 27, 2007. The defendant became a naturalized United States citizen in 2008 and in so doing relinquished his Kenyan citizenship. In August, 2010, after this proceeding was instituted, Kenya approved dual citizenship and the defendant obtained the same.
“At the time the defendant initiated divorce proceedings against the plaintiff in Kenya in August 4, 2009, he was a United States citizen (and not a Kenyan citizen) and he, the plaintiff and their two children were residing in Connecticut.
“The Kenya divorce petition provides [that the parties] are both domiciled in the United States. The defendant testified [that] the domicile representation was made in error and it was corrected through the process.
“In the summer of 2009, the marriage of the parties clearly was breaking down. There is credible evidence of the defendant engaging in extramarital affairs and of domestic violence in the marital home and further the plaintiff was, in the words of the defendant, ‘develop [ing] more confrontational ways in interacting with the [defendant which surely disturbed the [defendant.’ . . . The defendant elected to obtain a divorce in Kenya pursuant to which he would benefit financially.
“The defendant had the divorce petition prepared while he was in Brazil on a work assignment and the plaintiff and the children were on a vacation in Kenya. The credible evidence is the plaintiff went to Kenya at the behest of the defendant as he wanted to obtain a divorce in that country. The court does not find credible the claim of the defendant that the plaintiff wanted to go and he relented. The defendant has throughout the marriage been in command of the home life of the plaintiff and the children. Once the plaintiff arrived in Kenya, the defendant, without [her] knowledge . . . extended the return date of her ticket and that of [the parties’ eldest child] for a significant period—which period corresponded to the time she would have been required to remain in Kenya in connection with the divorce proceedings had she been served.
“The credible evidence is [that] the defendant attempted to have the plaintiff served at her mother’s home in Kisumu, but that she was in Nairobi at the time the process server attempted service. The plaintiff’s mother alerted the plaintiff to the service attempt, the plaintiff contacted her social worker at [the department of children and families] and an attorney in Nairobi and
With that factual underlayment, the court analyzed the defendant’s jurisdictional claim as follows: “ ‘A valid divorce judgment is a judgment in rem and is binding on all the world as to the existence of a status which is the subject of the action, that is, the status of being unmarried upon the adjudication of divorce.’ . . . Vogel v. Sylvester, [148 Conn. 666, 670, 174 A.2d 122 (1961)]. ‘Courts of the United States [however] are not required by federal law to give full force and effect to a judgment granted in a foreign nation .... On the other hand, judgments of courts of foreign countries are recognized in the United States because of the comity due to the courts and judgments of one nation from another. Such recognition is granted to foreign judgments with due regard to international duty and convenience, on the one hand, and to rights of citizens of the United States and others under the protection of its laws, on the other hand.’ . . . Litvaitis v. Litvaitis, [162 Conn. 540, 544, 295 A.2d 519 (1972)]. . . . ‘When so recognized, a decree of divorce granted in a foreign country will be given full force and effect not only as to the determination of the parties’ status, but also
“With regard to whether a court has jurisdiction, ‘[t]he traditional requisite for subject matter jurisdiction in matrimonial proceedings has been domicil. . . . Regardless of its validity in the nation awarding it, the courts of this country will not generally recognize a judgment of divorce rendered by the courts of a foreign nation as valid to terminate the existence of a marriage unless, by the standards of the jurisdiction in which recognition is sought, at least one of the spouses was a good faith domiciliary in the foreign nation at the time the decree was rendered.’ ... Id., 545-46.
“ ‘To constitute domicil, the residence at the place chosen for the domicil must be actual, and to the fact of residence there must be added the intention of remaining permanently; and that place is the domicil of the person in which he has voluntarily fixed his habitation, not for a mere temporary or special purpose, but with the present intention of making it his home . . . .’ Rice v. Rice, 134 Conn. 440, 445-46, 58 A.2d 523 (1948), aff'd, 336 U.S. 674, 69 S. Ct. 751, 93 L. Ed. 957 (1949). ‘[T]his intention must be to make a home in fact, and not an intention to acquire a domicil.’ ”... Id., 447. ‘Where ... it becomes highly advantageous to the claimant temporarily to feign an intention to become a resident for only a brief time, in order to accomplish other ends, his claim of intention will be scrutinized and weighed like any other evidence in the light of his conduct and all the circumstances surrounding it.’ Id., 448. Moreover, ‘[a] person may have . . . only one domicil at any one time.’ Smith v. Smith, 174 Conn. 434, 439, 389 A.2d 756 (1978). ‘[A] former
“In Litvaitis v. Litvaitis, supra, 162 Conn. 546, the Supreme Court affirmed the trial court’s refusal to recognize a Mexican divorce decree on the ground that the defendant was not a domiciliary of the Mexican state because he ‘went to Mexico solely for the purpose of securing a divorce and that he intended to return to Connecticut.’ More recently, the Superior Court has noted that temporary residence does not constitute a change in domicil when there is no intent to remain. See Nirookh v. Aburabei, Superior Court, judicial district of New Haven, Docket No. FA-09-4012235-S (May 25, 2010, Burke, J.) [49 Conn. L. Rptr. 877] (concluding that defendant was not domiciliary of Jordan where defendant testified that he was looking for work in both Jordan and United Arab Emirates).
“In this case, the court finds [that] the defendant left Kenya and moved to the United States for an indefinite period. He relinquished his Kenya citizenship to obtain United States citizenship and became domiciled in the United States—the Kenya divorce petition confirms the same. He did not attend the proceedings in Kenya. He testified that he will not be returning to Kenya at any foreseeable time due to work. The plaintiff made it clear [that] the family intended to live in the United States for an indefinite time. The defendant claimed to be domiciled in Kenya solely to take advantage of their divorce laws; he was not, in good faith, domiciled in Kenya at the time the divorce was rendered.
“With regard to whether a court has complied with the requirements of due process, ‘[i]t is the settled rule of [Connecticut], if indeed it may not be safely called
“Based on the earlier findings, the court does not find [that] the plaintiff was afforded due process.” (Emphasis in original.) Juma v. Aomo, Superior Court, judicial district of Hartford, Docket No. FA-09-4046839-S (July 1, 2011).
On the basis of the foregoing,
On appeal, the defendant claims that the court improperly determined that it had jurisdiction over the parties’ dissolution action. Although our review of a question of subject matter jurisdiction is a matter of law over which our review is plenary; New England Road, Inc. v. Planning & Zoning Commission, 308 Conn. 180, 183, 61 A.3d 505 (2013); we see no reason to further expound upon, and hereby adopt, the trial court’s thorough and well reasoned analysis of this issue as set forth above.
II
The defendant also claims that the court erred in issuing certain financial orders and orders regarding the parties’ children. It is well settled that our inquiry in dissolution matters is whether the court abused its discretion in fashioning its orders. See Tuckman v. Tuckman, 308 Conn. 194, 200, 61 A.3d 449 (2013). The defendant’s claims in this regard are cursorily raised, with little or no legal analysis, and, based on their lack of merit, require little discussion.
First, the defendant claims that the court improperly issued an order for work-related child care expenses that included after school work programs and extracurricular activities. The defendant claims: “The purpose of child care is to ensure that parents go to work and therefore any other child care expenses should not be included as it can only be discretionary.” The foregoing constitutes the defendant’s entire analysis of this claim and we are thus left to speculate that he must be taking
The defendant also claims that the court erred in ordering periodic alimony on the bases that “[his] net worth cannot support the payment and will diminish the lifestyle that he has maintained.” The defendant’s argument does not provide a basis in law for this court to conclude that the trial court abused its discretion in awarding the plaintiff periodic alimony.
Similarly, the defendant fails to provide this court with a legal basis to find error in the court’s order that he maintain life insurance for the benefit of his children and to secure the alimony award to the plaintiff in his argument that “[Requiring him to maintain [such a policy] against his practice or custom is unreasonable.”
The defendant also claims that “[t]he trial court made an error . . . entering child visitation and custody orders and ignored one child’s needs in entirety and thereby abus[ed] its discretion of making decisions that are in the best interest[s] of the children. As a result, the orders do not encourage the children’s happiness, security, mental health and emotion development into young adults. The orders essentially marginalized the children from the [defendant] and in essence prevented the [defendant] from parenting his children.” This constitutes the entirety of the defendant’s challenge to the trial court’s orders regarding the parties’ children. Because the defendant fails to point to any specific orders of the trial court in support of his claim, and his claim is, like his others, devoid of any legal analysis or citation, we cannot conclude that the court abused its discretion.
The defendant next claims that the court improperly “distribut[ed] various retirement assets that neither the
The defendant finally claims that the court improperly ordered him to pay a debt to the parties’ former landlord that he claims to have been accrued as a result of the plaintiff and the parties’ children continuing to reside at the premises after he had moved out. The defendant claims that the debt arose as a result of the negligence of the plaintiff and refers to General Statutes § 46b-37 in purported support of his claim. The defendant fails, however, to indicate how § 46b-37, or any subsection thereof, applies to this claim. On the basis of the record before us, we cannot conclude that the trial court abused its discretion.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
The court also noted that the defendant’s jurisdictional claim had previously been decided by both Judge Dolan and Judge Prestley, and found
Reference
- Full Case Name
- JACQUELINE O. JUMA v. TOM M. AOMO
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published