The Husband and wife were married in 1991 and had
one child. The husband had four children from a previous marriage and
was required to pay both maintenance and child support. At the time the
parties married, both were working attorneys. The Wife stopped working
outside the home when the parties' son was three years old. The Husband
was a partner at a law firm from 1968 until 1999, and thereafter became
a managing director at a major investment banking firm until 2001. Prior
to the marriage, the husband owned a home on approximately 160 acres of
land in Claverack, New York. During the marriage the parties spent
approximately $2 million to renovate and improve the property. While the
husband played a larger role in these improvements, the wife also
participated in some of the project's details. In November 2001, the
wife commenced an action for divorce after discovering husband was
having an extramarital affair. Prior to trial, she made an application
for interim maintenance and child support. Supreme Court imputed an
average annual income of $2,273,680 to the husband and ordered him to
pay $18,465 monthly maintenance to wife and child support of $10,625 per
month. The Husband was also ordered to pay the wife interim counsel fees
of $100,000.
A judgment of divorce on the grounds of cruel
and inhuman treatment was awarded to the wife. The Trial court
recognized that the Claverack property was the husband's separate
property, but held the funds spent on the renovations to be marital
property subject to equitable distribution. The court awarded 50% of the
appreciation of the Claverack estate to the wife. It also credited the
wife with 50% of the marital property the husband used to pay the
maintenance and child support obligations to his first wife. After
considering that the wife had not worked outside the home for nine years
and that it would take six years to develop her career, the court
awarded the wife durational maintenance of $6,000 per month for six
years. It also awarded wife legal fees and expert fees to be determined
by a referee due in part to the fact that wife and her son "have
suffered day to day crises resulting from the [husband's] harassment of
them."
The Appellate Division modified the judgment by
reducing the wife's share of the enhanced value of the Claverack
property to 25% and by crediting the husband for his pendente lite
maintenance obligations (49 AD3d 348). The majority noted that the
husband had consistently been less than forthcoming regarding his income
and that Supreme Court had found him incredible in the reporting of his
income and assets. The majority therefore upheld the imposition of legal
and expert fees on husband, noting that he "engaged in a pattern of
obstructionist conduct which unnecessarily delayed and increased the
legal fees incurred in the litigation".
The Court of Appeals, in an opinion by Judge
Pigott, held that when a pendente lite award of maintenance is found at
trial to be excessive or inequitable, the Court may make an appropriate
adjustment in the equitable distribution award. Thus, Supreme Court did
not abuse its discretion in giving husband a credit representing the
amount of the pendent lite maintenance he paid that exceeded what he was
required to pay under the final maintenance award. In determining the
temporary maintenance award, Supreme Court imputed an average salary in
excess of $2 million to husband. However, at trial, it was established
that his income was significantly lower. Given the disparity in the
maintenance amounts, under the circumstances of this case, it was
appropriate for the husband to receive a credit.
The Court of Appeals rejected the husband's
claim that he should have been entitled to a credit for excess child
support payments, pointing out that it has long been held that there is
a "strong public policy against restitution or recoupment of support
overpayments" and nothing in this record showed it was error to deny
that relief.
Judge Pigott noted that under the equitable
distribution statute any appreciation in the value of separate property
due to the contributions or efforts of the nontitled spouse will be
considered marital property (Price v. Price, 69 N.Y.2d 8 [1986] ). This
includes any direct contributions to the appreciation, such as when the
nontitled spouse makes financial contributions towards the property, as
well as when the nontitled spouse makes direct nonfinancial
contributions, such as by personally maintaining, making improvements
to, or renovating a marital residence. Thus, Supreme Court properly held
that the improvements were marital, since the increase in the property
was a result of both parties' efforts. He found that the Appellate
Division did not abuse its discretion in reducing the award to wife from
50% to 25% of the property appreciation. The husband's income was the
sole source of the funds expended on the property and, the husband's
involvements in the renovations were far more extensive. The Court noted
that it had held that when "exercising its discretionary power to award
counsel fees, a court should review the financial circumstances of both
parties together with all the other circumstances of the case, which may
include the relative merit of the parties' positions" (citing DeCabrera
v. Cabrera-Rosete, 70 N.Y.2d 879 [1987]). Here, when awarding the fees,
the court considered the parties' financial positions as well as the
delay incurred as a result of husband's obstructionist tactics. Thus, it
declined to disturb those awards. Finally, the Court held that the wife
was not entitled to the 50% credit representing the money paid during
the marriage towards husband's pre-marital obligations to pay his first
wife maintenance and child support (citing "Mahoney-Buntzman v.
Buntzman, NY3d", which it decided the same day).