DIMITRA KAMBITSIS VS. DEMETRIUS KAMBITSIS (FM-12-2867-14, MIDDLESEX COUNTY AND STATEWIDE) ( 2020 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-0631-17T1
    DIMITRA KAMBITSIS,
    Plaintiff-Respondent/
    Cross-Appellant,
    v.
    DEMETRIUS KAMBITSIS,
    Defendant-Appellant/
    Cross-Respondent.
    ______________________________
    Argued December 16, 2019 – Decided April 17, 2020
    Before Judges Messano and Vernoia.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
    Chancery Division, Family Part, Middlesex County,
    Docket No. FM-12-2867-14.
    Stephen P. Haller argued the cause for appellant/cross-
    respondent (Einhorn, Barbarito, Frost & Botwinick,
    PC, attorneys; Stephen P. Haller and Jennie L. Osborne,
    of counsel and on the briefs).
    Francis W. Donahue argued the cause for
    respondent/cross-appellant (Donahue, Hagan, Klein &
    Weisberg, LLC, attorneys; Francis W. Donahue, of
    counsel and on the briefs; David S. Mack and Alexis
    Miriam Miller, on the briefs).
    PER CURIAM
    In March 2004, while represented by counsel and after exchanging certain
    financial information, plaintiff Dimitra Kambitsis and defendant Demetrius
    Kambitsis executed a premarital agreement (PMA). The Case Information
    Statement (CIS) each supplied to the other, and additional financial data
    defendant supplied to plaintiff, demonstrated that six months earlier, in
    September 2003, plaintiff's net worth was $52,197, and defendant's net worth
    exceeded $21 million.1 The parties signed the PMA in defense counsel's office
    with both counsel present, and a court reporter transcribed the proceedings.
    Plaintiff confirmed that her attorney had repeatedly advised her not to execute
    the agreement because it was not in her best interest. Nevertheless, plaintiff
    stated she understood the terms of the PMA, was not under any duress, and
    wished to proceed.
    The PMA specified in pertinent part:
    1
    Defendant shared a business valuation report prepared by an accounting firm
    for his company, Raceway Petroleum, Inc. (Raceway), which, along with related
    companies, defendant owned with his brother. Defendant also supplied his
    personal 2001 and 2002 tax returns, a statement for a 401k account, and
    brokerage and bank account statements.
    A-0631-17T1
    2
    11. (A) The parties acknowledge that the place of their
    initial contemplated joint residence is owned by
    [defendant], and that [plaintiff] has no legal or
    equitable right, title, interest, or claim in or to said
    property.
    ....
    16. "Termination of marriage" shall mean . . . the . . .
    [f]iling of a [c]omplaint for [d]ivorce . . . .
    ....
    18. . . . The parties have agreed that no temporary,
    pendente lite, term, rehabilitative, "permanent" or other
    alimony or spousal support or maintenance . . . shall be
    sought by [plaintiff] or in any form or fashion paid by
    [defendant] to [plaintiff]. In reaching this Agreement,
    the parties have considered the following foreseeable
    circumstances (and have waived the effects of any
    unforeseen circumstances):
    (a) [i]ncreases or decreases in their income;
    (b) [t]heir loss or inability to secure
    employment;
    (c) [a]ny prospective loss of, change in
    status, or change of employment;
    (d) [l]oss of separate property;
    (e) [d]issipation of separate property, for
    whatever cause;
    (f) [t]he existence of any child or children
    of the marriage;
    (g) [a]ny other event that may or does
    change the quality of their economic lives.
    ....
    A-0631-17T1
    3
    20. [Plaintiff] further warrants and represents that her
    premarital standard of living was modest . . . and can
    fully be funded now, and in the future, by the use of her
    personal income from all sources, as well as other
    assets and income from various and diverse members
    of her family. She further agrees that she does not
    require, and shall not accept, funds or support from
    [defendant] under any circumstances, in the event of
    termination of the marriage.
    21. In the event that the marriage terminates after the
    birth of children, the parties agree, understand and
    acknowledge that both shall have an obligation to
    contribute to the support and welfare of those children.
    The parties agree that New Jersey Law regarding
    support of the children shall prevail, however,
    [plaintiff] explicitly agrees that she shall not plead the
    provisions of this Agreement, or the terms thereof, in
    any effort to obtain child support payments from
    [defendant] which would exceed any applicable
    guidelines in the recognition that she has, and accepts,
    a co-equal obligation for the financial welfare of any
    children of the marriage.
    ....
    23. (b) In the event the marriage terminates with
    surviving children born to the parties:
    (1) Upon the birth of the first child,
    [defendant] shall purchase a $1 million
    term life insurance policy on his life,
    [plaintiff] would be the beneficiary of the
    insurance policy, which she shall be
    obliged to use to provide for the benefit of
    any children of the marriage.
    ....
    A-0631-17T1
    4
    (6) [Defendant] agrees to execute a Last
    Will & Testament leaving to the children
    of the marriage, share and share alike, 28%
    of his estate, naming [plaintiff] as the
    Trustee of the inheritance for any
    unemancipated child. The remaining 72%
    of [defendant's] estate can be divided as he
    sees fit, and [plaintiff] waives all right, title
    and interest in and to that portion of his
    estate, including any "forced share" or
    other such inheritance rights.
    24. . . . Each party waives and relinquishes all rights
    now held or hereafter acquired under the laws of any
    jurisdiction to share in the separate property and estate
    of the other as a result of the marital relationship,
    including, but not limited to, dower, curtesy, equitable
    distribution, statutory allowances, widow(er)'s
    share/allowance, homestead rights, rights under
    intestacy, "forced share," right to act as
    administrator/executor/trix, and any community
    property rights. (citation omitted).
    ....
    27. Each party has executed this Agreement freely,
    voluntarily, without persuasion, fraud, undue influence
    or economic, physical or emotional duress. . . .
    Moreover, the disparity between the total value of the
    assets owned by the parties is considered by them to be
    of no consequence.
    ....
    35. Each party shall pay her and his own legal fees in
    the negotiation and preparation/execution of this
    Agreement. A party who fails to abide by the terms of
    A-0631-17T1
    5
    this Agreement shall indemnify the other party for all
    reasonable costs and expenses, including professional
    fees, incurred in enforcing this Agreement or asserting
    or defending his or her rights hereunder as against the
    other party or third parties.
    Additionally, the PMA provided that if the marriage "terminate[d] with
    surviving children" after lasting "more than ten, but less than twenty-five years,"
    defendant agreed to provide plaintiff with:       (1) a lump sum payment of
    $145,000; (2) thirty-six months of health insurance (eighteen months through
    COBRA and eighteen months through a private HMO); (3) a "contribution . . .
    not to exceed $250,000[]" towards the purchase of a 3000 square foot home in
    Middlesex County that was "reasonably acceptable to [plaintiff]"; and (4) a
    "contribution . . . not [to] exceed $30,000[]" towards the purchase of an
    automobile. Other provisions of the PMA stated that plaintiff had no claim to:
    (1) defendant's separate premarital property; (2) property of any kind acquired
    during the marriage solely in defendant's name; or (3) any increase in value of
    any pension, deferred compensation, 401k, retirement, profit sharing, or IRA
    acquired by defendant before and during the marriage, and to any of the above
    acquired during the marriage in defendant's name alone.
    The parties married in May 2004 and moved into a home which defendant
    purchased in his name for $615,000 in cash. Five children were born between
    A-0631-17T1
    6
    2005 and 2010. In 2012, defendant purchased a home in his own name for $1.57
    million in cash. Although the parties intended to move there, from 2012 to 2014
    they essentially used only the pool and pool house. Defendant purchased a
    vacant school building in the same town through one of their companies in 2011,
    and the family used the gymnasium and art room in the building.
    Meanwhile, in 2007, the parties executed an amendment to the PMA
    during another transcribed signing ceremony at defense counsel's office. The
    amendment included plaintiff's specific acknowledgment that she was under no
    duress, had chosen to proceed without an attorney, was not represented by
    defense counsel, and her waiver of representation would "not act to impair or
    invalidate" the PMA as amended.
    The amendment deleted Paragraph 23(b)(1) of the PMA and provided:
    6. In place of Paragraph 23(b)(1) . . . the following
    provision is inserted:
    "23(b) [Defendant] shall further provide life
    insurance as follows:
    (1) Since children have been born to the parties,
    [defendant] shall immediately secure a minimum of
    $1,000,000[] . . . life insurance on his life, (or, in his
    sole discretion make the existing children, and any
    future children, the joint equal beneficiaries of that total
    amount from his estate). This amount shall be payable
    to a separate Trust for the benefit of all the children
    during the period of their minority, with [plaintiff]
    A-0631-17T1
    7
    named as the Trustee thereof. The "Trust" mentioned
    in this sub-paragraph is and shall be separate and apart
    from any other formal Trust created by [defendant] for
    any children born of the marriage. This $1,000,000[]
    policy/estate entitlement is a total amount for all
    children, irrespective of the number of children born to
    the parties. In addition, during the marriage and only
    during the marriage, [defendant] shall maintain
    $1,000,000[] . . . of insurance on his life payable to
    [plaintiff] in place of all other life insurance required of
    him in the [PMA] between the parties (or, in his sole
    discretion he may make [plaintiff] the beneficiary of
    that amount from his estate). [Defendant] shall have no
    other enforceable life insurance obligation except as
    explicitly set forth in this [p]aragraph."
    7. Paragraph 23(b)(6) is hereby deleted.
    Plaintiff filed for divorce in 2014, defendant filed an answer and
    counterclaim, and both filed CISs. Plaintiff claimed little or no knowledge of
    the parties' shelter expenses or assets but estimated monthly personal expenses
    of $13,391. Defendant did not state the value of the real estate he owned in his
    name, the vehicles owned by the parties, or the surrender value of his life
    insurance; he estimated the shelter, transportation and personal expenses of the
    family to be $11,510 per month. Defendant identified ten other businesses in
    which he held interests, a 401k, and an investment account in his name, but he
    assigned no values to these. Defendant also disclosed ownership of certificates
    of deposit and bank accounts totaling nearly $800,000. He said that Raceway
    A-0631-17T1
    8
    had outstanding loans and accounts payable, which he had personally guaranteed
    amounting to approximately $21 million.
    In an October 2014 order, the judge awarded plaintiff various pendente
    lite relief, and also granted defendant's request to conduct a plenary hearing on
    the enforceability of the PMA. 2 Motion practice continued thereafter unabated,
    but most of the issues raised at this point in the litigation are not relevant for our
    purposes.
    The plenary hearing took place between February and April 2016, at
    which plaintiff and defendant testified about their relationship leading up to
    execution of the PMA. 3 In her August 18, 2016 order (the August 2016 order)
    and accompanying statement of reasons, which we discuss more fully below, the
    hearing judge determined the PMA was enforceable, defendant had no alimony
    obligation to plaintiff, and he was not required to pay plaintiff any more than a
    lump sum of $145,000.          The order provided that the ruling as to the
    enforceability of the PMA "shall not be disturbed by the [c]ourt at a later
    2
    For the balance of the opinion, we refer to the PMA and the amendment as the
    PMA.
    3
    The only other witness was a clergyman who refuted plaintiff's claim that she
    had made plans for an earlier wedding but had to cancel them when defendant
    insisted on executing a premarital agreement.
    A-0631-17T1
    9
    hearing." The order further required defendant to pay plaintiff's counsel fees,
    which award "represent[ed] a final determination on the issue of counsel fee
    payments for the enforceability of the parties' [PMA.]"
    The judge also ordered that the amount of defendant's child support
    obligation and his responsibility to maintain life insurance for the children's
    benefit would be determined at a later hearing. Contrary to the provisions of the
    PMA, the judge did not place a $1 million limit on any potential policy ordered
    in the future. The order also vacated the PMA's provisions regarding defendant's
    contributions toward the purchases of a new home and automobile for plaintiff
    and said, instead, that defendant's obligations in this regard would be determined
    at a later hearing.
    Plaintiff and defendant filed an updated CIS prior to the trial that took
    place on all remaining issues and over which a different judge presided. We
    need not recount the testimony in detail at this point. The pertinent provisions
    of the August 2017 final dual judgment of divorce (JOD) provided:
    5. Commencing in 2018, each party shall also be
    entitled to two (2) weeks of vacation time with the
    children per year, to be exercised non-consecutively,
    with the parties to provide a minimum of [thirty] days
    of advance notice to each other. . . . The party having
    priority in any given year shall advise the other of their
    vacation parenting time in writing by April 1. The party
    not having priority shall notify the other party in
    A-0631-17T1
    10
    writing by May 1. . . . There is no prohibition on
    "tacking" vacation time on to regular parenting time
    (e.g.[,] scheduling a week of vacation which adjoins
    that party's parenting time, thus giving a party more
    than [seven] consecutive days with the children).
    ....
    7. The defendant shall pay the plaintiff child support
    . . . in the sum of [$8186] per month, payable at the rate
    of [$1889] per week commencing upon entry of this
    [JOD].
    ....
    9. The [defendant] shall contribute up to $675,000[]
    toward the purchase of a home for the plaintiff. This
    sum shall be placed in escrow by the defendant . . .
    within 60 days. That $675,000[] maximum obligation
    may be used by the plaintiff for the sale price, including
    all necessary and customary closing costs. Any amount
    . . . in excess of the sale price and all necessary and
    customary closing costs after closing shall be retained
    by the defendant.
    ....
    11. The defendant shall contribute up to $40,000[]
    toward the purchase of a vehicle for the plaintiff. The
    defendant shall place this sum in escrow . . . within 60
    days. The plaintiff shall purchase said vehicle within
    90 days. Upon doing so, she shall return the vehicle
    currently in her possession to the defendant as it is the
    [c]ourt's understanding that she currently drives one of
    his vehicles. Any excess above the $40,000[] not used
    for said vehicle shall be . . . returned to the defendant.
    A-0631-17T1
    11
    12. Defendant shall provide health insurance for
    plaintiff for [thirty-six] months; [eighteen] months
    through COBRA and an additional [eighteen] months
    through a private HMO policy. This obligation to
    maintain medical insurance as provided in the [PMA]
    shall commence upon entry of the [JOD].
    ....
    14. The defendant shall maintain $2,750,000[] in life
    insurance for the benefit of the minor children until
    emancipation. This coverage can be reduced by
    $550,000[] upon the emancipation of each of the five
    (5) children. The plaintiff shall be designated as trustee
    for the funds to be used for the benefit of the children.
    15. The defendant shall pay the plaintiff counsel fees
    in the sum of $225,000[]. This sum shall be paid from
    defendant to plaintiff within 60 days . . . .
    Defendant filed his appeal, and plaintiff cross appealed.
    Defendant then moved in the trial court for a stay of paragraphs nine,
    eleven and fifteen of the JOD, which required him to pay $940,000 toward the
    purchase of plaintiff's new home and car, and the award of counsel fees within
    sixty days. Plaintiff filed a cross-motion seeking enforcement of the child
    support and the travel provisions of the JOD.
    At the conclusion of the October 27, 2017 hearing on the cross-motions,
    the judge entered an order (the October 27 order) denying defendant's motion
    for a stay and granting in part plaintiff's enforcement motion. In paragraph four
    A-0631-17T1
    12
    of the order, the judge agreed that the child support awarded under the JOD only
    satisfied the children's needs when they were with plaintiff, and "each party
    [was] responsible for satisfying expenses the children incur during their
    respective parenting time[.]" In paragraph five, the judge also "enforce[ed]" and
    "clarif[ied]" the parenting time provisions of the JOD, such that "if either party
    [were] taking any of the children out of the tri-state area or traveling by plane,
    that party shall notify the other, in advance, and provide a complete itinerary."
    Lastly, in paragraph six, because of defendant's bad faith in seeking a stay, the
    judge also ordered defendant to pay plaintiff's counsel fees in the amount of
    $13,301.
    We denied defendant's application for a stay on an emergent basis. He
    filed a formal motion for a stay, which was considered by our court and denied
    in the normal course. Defendant filed an amended notice of appeal challenging
    paragraphs four, five, and six of the October 2017 order.
    I.
    As to each and every portion of the JOD discussed above, defendant
    contends that the trial court misapplied the law, abused its discretion, or both.
    Succinctly stated, as to the financial provisions of the JOD, defendant claims the
    trial judge awarded plaintiff alimony through the "back door." As to the October
    A-0631-17T1
    13
    2017 order, defendant contends the judge abused his discretion and, regarding
    the award of counsel fees, defendant asserts the judge made "insufficient and
    improper findings of fact upon which" to base the award. In the event we reverse
    and remand on any issue, defendant urges us to order that a different judge
    conduct the hearing.
    Plaintiff opposes the arguments raised by defendant, and, in her cross-
    appeal, contends the "substantial credible evidence in the record does not
    support the enforcement of plaintiff's alimony waiver." Plaintiff argues that
    reversal of those provisions of the August 2016 order that enforced the alimony
    waiver in the PMA compels only a remand "for limited discovery and
    determination of a fair award of limited duration alimony." She also argues that
    the elimination of paragraph 23(b)(6) of the original PMA, which obligated
    defendant to bequeath 28% of his estate to the children, violated public policy
    and lacked any consideration.     Plaintiff also contends those provisions of
    paragraph fourteen of the JOD, which permitted reduction of defendant's life
    insurance obligations upon emancipation of each child, must be set aside
    because the PMA provided for no such reduction.
    In opposition to the cross-appeal, defendant contends the August 2016
    order was a final order, appealable as of right, and, therefore, plaintiff's
    A-0631-17T1
    14
    challenge is untimely. We reject that argument out of hand. "Appeals as of
    right from the Superior Court generally may be taken only from final
    judgments." Huny & BH Assocs. Inc. v. Silberberg, 
    447 N.J. Super. 606
    , 609
    (App. Div. 2016) (citing R. 2:2-3(a)(1)). "Final judgments are those that
    adjudicate 'all issues as to all parties.'"
    Ibid. (quoting Silviera-Francisco v.
    Bd.
    of Educ. of Elizabeth, 
    224 N.J. 126
    , 136 (2016)). It is obvious that the August
    2016 order did not adjudicate all issues as to the parties and specifically required
    further proceedings resulting in the JOD.        In any event, defendant argues
    plaintiff failed to demonstrate the PMA was "unenforceable," the elimination of
    the children's inheritance did not violate public policy, and the reduction of life
    insurance upon each child's emancipation was appropriate.
    Because it impacts all that follows, we consider plaintiff's cross-appeal
    first.
    A.
    In her August 18, 2016 opinion following the plenary hearing on the
    enforceability of the PMA, the judge found defendant credibly testified that he
    never would have married without a PMA, and that he discussed this fully with
    plaintiff. The judge was persuaded that defendant's brother, who, according to
    defendant, controlled much of the businesses' operations, had a great deal of
    A-0631-17T1
    15
    influence over defendant. On the other hand, the judge rejected plaintiff's
    testimony that defendant told her the PMA only dealt with Raceway, or that
    defendant "blindsided her" when he confronted her with the PMA. Although
    the judge accepted plaintiff's testimony that defendant paid for her lawyer to
    negotiate and advise her about the PMA, the judge noted that the attorney
    successfully effectuated changes to the agreement proposed by plaintiff. In the
    judge's view, plaintiff's "demonstrable effort[s] to disingenuously dramatize her
    story" with "falsifications" about wedding plans essentially eliminated duress as
    a possible reason to invalidate the PMA.
    Noting that testimony from an expert would have been helpful, the judge
    expressed doubt about plaintiff's medical conditions and purported lack of
    employability. The judge concluded:
    In view of the other provisions [in the PMA],
    [p]laintiff had not specifically demonstrated how the
    waiver of alimony, in all contexts, subsequent to the
    parties' divorce would be an unconscionable provision.
    By clear and convincing evidence, [p]laintiff has not
    shown the [PMA] would only be conscionable — or
    would not be unconscionable — if she were to receive
    alimony. . . . [T]he [PMA] provides for her and the . . .
    children through other means, such that the specific
    waiver of alimony, a provision expressly agreed upon
    by the parties, is not unconscionable. Moreover,
    [p]laintiff has not demonstrated by clear and
    convincing evidence that she cannot financially support
    herself and provide for herself alone. Plaintiff is
    A-0631-17T1
    16
    certainly entitled to receive child support for the benefit
    of the children . . . but this [c]ourt will not reward what
    so clearly appears to be [p]laintiff's willful
    unemployment . . . .
    Later in her decision, the judge again commented on plaintiff's lack of
    employment:
    Only at [a later hearing when defendant's child support
    obligation is determined] will the merits of [p]laintiff's
    level of employment, despite sharing equal parenting
    time of the children with [defendant], be ripe for
    adjudication. It is true that [p]laintiff is and has been
    unemployed, but she has not shown by clear and
    convincing evidence that she has no ability to work,
    earn an income, or support herself in any way[,] shape
    or form. It is also clear that by virtue of her work
    experience and recent absence from the job market that
    she would not be capable of earning an income
    comparable to that of [d]efendant. But the disparity in
    the parties' income does not relieve her of any
    responsibility to provide financial support for herself.
    Her salary and income may pale in comparison to
    [d]efendant, but her willful unemployment shall not be
    rewarded by the receipt of extra financial support from
    [d]efendant beyond an incidental benefit she may
    receive from [d]efendant's child support obligation in
    support of the parties' children. At a final hearing, the
    [c]ourt shall take a hard look at the parties'
    circumstances, including all financial determinations
    therein providing money or other assets to [p]laintiff,
    and carefully calculate [d]efendant's child support
    obligation so as to avoid a situation wherein child
    support serves as "back door alimony" beyond the
    extent of an incidental benefit permitted by law.
    A-0631-17T1
    17
    Even though the judge upheld the alimony waiver in the PMA, she nonetheless
    concluded "[t]he bottom[]line is that in order to avoid an unconscionable result,
    [p]laintiff requires more financial support than what is granted to her under the
    [PMA] . . . for the benefit of the children."
    The judge cited N.J.S.A. 37:2-32(c), which, when the PMA was executed
    and amended, defined an "[u]nconscionable premarital agreement" as
    an agreement, either due to a lack of property or
    unemployability:
    (1) Which would render a spouse without a means
    of reasonable support;
    (2) Which would make a spouse a public charge;
    or
    (3) Which would provide a standard of living far
    below that which was enjoyed before the
    marriage. [4]
    4
    "New Jersey adopted the Uniform Pre-Marital Agreement Act (the Act),
    N.J.S.A. 37:2-31 to -41, in 1988." Rogers v. Gordon, 
    404 N.J. Super. 213
    , 219
    (App. Div. 2008). A 2013 amendment to the Act eliminated N.J.S.A. 37:2-32(c).
    See L. 2013, c. 72, § 1. The amendment applied only to those agreements
    entered into, or amended, after the legislation's effective date, June 27, 2013. L.
    2013, c. 72, § 3.
    Both parties seemingly accept, as did the judge, that the pre-amendment
    Act applied. This is consistent with the express language of the amendment,
    and the Legislature's intent. See N.J. Comm., Statement to S. 2151 n.3 (March
    21, 2013) ("premarital . . . agreements entered into before the effective date
    would remain subject to the current law, which permits agreements to be set
    aside if deemed, at the time of enforcement, to be unconscionable").
    A-0631-17T1
    18
    The judge imputed income of $15,000 to plaintiff, assumed the $145,000
    plaintiff would receive under the PMA would be quickly exhausted, and given
    the uncertainty about the amount of any child support award, determined that
    even though the PMA obligated defendant to pay for plaintiff's house and car,
    plaintiff would soon become impoverished.         The judge specifically found
    plaintiff would experience "'a standard of living far below that which was
    enjoyed before the marriage' or . . . [be] left 'without a means of reasonable
    support.'" (quoting ibid.). Accordingly, the hearing judge decided to "rescue"
    the PMA from unconscionability by reforming some of its provisions. She
    decided that defendant's financial contributions towards plaintiff's home and car
    would be "ascertained at a final hearing" taking into account plaintiff's total
    financial circumstances.
    The trial judge ultimately imputed income of $17,555 per annum to
    plaintiff after considering her education, prior work experience, past income and
    then part-time position working at the children's school. In his written decision,
    the trial judge noted that defendant's income was 99.9999% of the parties'
    combined income. Even defendant acknowledged during trial that plaintiff was
    not capable of earning much more than $16,000 per year.              Meanwhile,
    Raceway's accountant testified at trial that defendant's personal brokerage
    A-0631-17T1
    19
    account was worth approximately $21 million as of May 2017. He estimated
    that another account owned by an LLC, in which defendant was an equal partner
    with his brother, was worth approximately $32 million in 2015.
    B.
    We generally defer to factual findings made by a trial court when such
    findings are supported by adequate, substantial, and credible evidence. Gnall v.
    Gnall, 
    222 N.J. 414
    , 428 (2015). "We review the Family Part judge's findings
    in accordance with a deferential standard of review, recognizing the court's
    'special jurisdiction and expertise in family matters.'"   Thieme v. Aucoin-
    Thieme, 
    227 N.J. 269
    , 282–83 (2016) (quoting Cesare v. Cesare, 
    154 N.J. 394
    ,
    413 (1998)). This is particularly so where the evidence is largely testimonial
    and rests on the judge's credibility determinations. 
    Gnall, 222 N.J. at 428
    . "A
    more exacting standard governs our review of the trial court's legal
    conclusions[,] . . . [which] we review . . . de novo." 
    Thieme, 227 N.J. at 283
    (citing D.W. v. R.W., 
    212 N.J. 232
    , 245–46 (2012)).
    "Pre-nuptial agreements establishing post-divorce obligations and rights
    should be held valid and enforceable." Hawxhurst v. Hawxhurst, 318 N.J.
    Super. 72, 80 (App. Div. 1998) (citing Marschall v. Marschall, 
    195 N.J. Super. 16
    , 27 (Ch. Div. 1984)). "These contracts should be encouraged by the courts
    A-0631-17T1
    20
    'at least "to the extent that the parties have developed comprehensive and
    particularized agreements responsive to their peculiar circumstances."'"
    Ibid. (quoting D'Onofrio v.
    D'Onofrio, 
    200 N.J. Super. 361
    , 366 (App. Div. 1985)).
    "[S]imply because a spouse receives a disproportionate amount of assets does
    not necessarily render an agreement voidable because it is for the parties
    themselves to decide what is fair and equitable."
    Ibid. (citing DeLorean v.
    DeLorean, 
    211 N.J. Super. 432
    , 437 (Ch. Div. 1986)). In Rogers, we later
    summarized some basic principles governing review of PMAs:
    The "conditions" under which prenuptial agreements
    would be deemed valid and enforceable evolved into a
    three prong test: (1) that there be "full disclosure by
    each party as to his or her financial conditions;" (2) that
    the party sought to be bound by the agreement
    understood and accepted the terms and conditions of the
    agreement; and (3) that the agreement be fair and not
    unconscionable, that is, that the agreement will not
    "leave a spouse a public charge or close to it, or …
    provide a standard of living far below that which was
    enjoyed both before and during the marriage."
    [404 N.J. Super. at 219 (quoting Marschall, 195 N.J.
    Super. at 29–31).]
    As already noted, when the parties entered into the PMA, N.J.S.A. 37:2-
    32(c) defined an unconscionable agreement as one that "render[ed] a spouse
    without a means of reasonable support[,] . . . would make a spouse a public
    A-0631-17T1
    21
    charge[,] or . . . would provide a standard of living below that which was enjoyed
    before the marriage." The Act further provided:
    A premarital . . . agreement shall not be enforceable if
    the party seeking to set aside the agreement proves, by
    clear and convincing evidence, that:
    ....
    b. The agreement was unconscionable at the time
    enforcement was sought; or
    ....
    d. The issue of unconscionability of a premarital
    . . . agreement . . . shall be determined by the
    court as a matter of law. [5]
    [N.J.S.A. 37:2–38 (2007).]
    The hearing judge found that at the time of enforcement, the PMA as executed
    would leave plaintiff with a standard of living below what she enjoyed before
    the marriage and without a reasonable means for support. Rather than declaring
    the PMA unenforceable, the judge embarked on a "rescue" mission. She decided
    to leave the alimony waiver intact and overcome the unenforceable nature of the
    PMA as executed by postponing resolution of essentially all other financial
    5
    The 2013 amendment to the Act deleted subsection (b).
    A-0631-17T1
    22
    issues through possible revisions of other provisions of the PMA after a later
    trial.
    In Rogers, we recognized that a finding of unconscionability does not
    compel scrapping an entire 
    PMA. 404 N.J. Super. at 225
    . In that case, we noted
    that under the PMA and its later amendment, the defendant-husband would
    receive "equitable distribution of assets acquired during the marriage[,]" and
    real property he obtained in his own name, including the condominium in which
    he resided.
    Id. at 227.
      Nevertheless, given the defendant's "substantially
    altered" employment circumstances from his pre-marital status, we affirmed
    setting aside the alimony waiver provisions of the PMA and left the "remainder
    of the agreement . . . in full force and effect."
    Ibid. Here, although plaintiff's
    employment circumstances changed little from
    those that existed prior to execution of the PMA, undeniably there were
    significant changes from the date of the marriage. The parties had five children
    in less than six years, the oldest of which was only nine when the divorce
    complaint was filed. Plaintiff literally acquired no assets during the marriage,
    while defendant's assets and wealth continued to increase by leaps and bounds.
    In Rogers, we noted "that alimony provisions in prenuptial agreements need not
    'cover all eventualities, since upon changes in circumstances a spouse may apply
    A-0631-17T1
    23
    to the court for an appropriate modification.'"
    Id. at 219–20
    (quoting 
    D'Onofrio, 200 N.J. Super. at 369
    –70). In this case, the PMA was unconscionable when
    defendant sought to enforce its alimony waiver and other provisions because
    there was no correlation between the terms of the agreement and plaintiff's ever-
    increasing economic dependence. Furthermore, the hearing judge's attempts to
    "rescue" the PMA by leaving for another day consideration of other financial
    questions failed to salvage the unconscionability of the agreement.
    The trial judge followed the terms of the PMA and awarded plaintiff no
    share of the assets that defendant acquired during the course of this ten -year
    marriage. Instead, the judge tried to overcome the inherently unconscionable
    nature of the agreement by amending those provisions which the hearing judge
    had earlier left undecided. Defendant's primary assertion on appeal is ironically
    correct: the disputed provisions of the JOD were attempts to provide some level
    of economic fairness — defendant argues alimony — through "the back door."
    "Alimony is a claim arising upon divorce, which is rooted in the prior
    interdependence occurring during the parties' marital relationship. '[A]limony is
    neither a punishment for the payor nor a reward for the payee.'" Reese v. Weis,
    
    430 N.J. Super. 552
    , 569 (App. Div. 2013) (alteration in original) (quoting Mani
    v. Mani, 
    183 N.J. 70
    , 80 (2005)). The bottom line following the trial judge's
    A-0631-17T1
    24
    efforts to rectify the drastic, unconscionable financial imbalance between the
    parties at the time they executed the PMA, and which only increased during the
    marriage, was a one-time infusion for plaintiff's benefit of $435,000 more than
    provided to her under the terms of the PMA: $10,000 more for her car and
    $425,000 more for a home for her and the children. We conclude that the trial
    judge's efforts were inadequate.
    We reverse paragraph 1(a) of the August 2016 order that upheld the
    alimony waiver in the PMA. We remand the matter for further proceedings
    consistent with this and the balance of this opinion. In doing so, the remand
    judge may of course consider the effect, if any, of paragraph 1(c) of the August
    2016 order, which resulted in a lump sum payment to plaintiff of $145,000 in
    accordance with the terms of the PMA.      We next consider the further effect of
    our holding.
    C.
    Plaintiff argues that any remand can be limited to discovery and a plenary
    hearing as to an appropriate alimony award. 6 We conclude that the remand
    cannot be so limited.
    6
    Plaintiff also argues that the trial judge erroneously amended the PMA to
    permit defendant to reduce his life insurance policy limits upon the
    A-0631-17T1
    25
    Our courts have long recognized the interrelationship between alimony
    and other financial issues posed by the dissolution of any marriage. See, e.g.,
    Steneken v. Steneken, 
    183 N.J. 290
    , 299–300 (2005) ("[A]limony and equitable
    distribution are separate yet interrelated and ultimately subject to an overriding
    sense of fairness . . . buttressed by our statutory scheme, where the separate
    powers to award alimony and determine equitable distribution are codified .");
    Brown v. Brown, 
    348 N.J. Super. 466
    , 475 (App. Div. 2002) (recognizing "the
    interrelationship of equitable distribution, alimony, child support, and fee
    awards"); N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(a) (listing factors to consider in awarding child
    support, including, in subsection (2), the "[s]tandard of living and economic
    circumstances of each parent"); N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(b) (listing factors to consider
    in awarding of alimony).
    The inescapable conclusion is that contrary to plaintiff's assertion, the
    remand hearing cannot be limited solely to the issue of whether she is entitled
    emancipation of each child. We address that in the context of our holding in
    this subsection. We discuss in a separate subsection below plaintiff's ancillary
    argument, i.e., that the elimination of the children's forced share of defendant's
    estate, paragraph 23(b)(6) of the original PMA, is void as against public policy.
    A-0631-17T1
    26
    to alimony, and, if so, its amount and duration.7 Consideration of a just, fair,
    and equitable alimony award must, by its nature, consider other financial
    circumstances and needs. Simply put, we are unable to affirm or reverse on the
    merits other aspects of the JOD challenged by defendant in light of our holding.
    The wisest course requires us to permit the remand court to vacate or modify as
    necessary paragraphs seven, nine, eleven, twelve, and fourteen of the JOD
    pending full consideration of all financial issues.
    We reject, therefore, plaintiff's facial challenge to paragraph fourteen of
    the JOD, which permits defendant to reduce his life insurance obligations as
    each child became emancipated, as being beyond the express terms of the PMA.
    Obviously, "[l]ife insurance policies or trusts are frequently included in final
    judgments of divorce as security for support obligations." Claffey v. Claffey,
    
    360 N.J. Super. 240
    , 263 (App. Div. 2003) (citing Jacobitti v. Jacobitti, 
    135 N.J. 571
    , 574–75 (1994)). Because we hazard no prediction about the composite
    financial picture of the parties following remand, we leave that court free to
    fashion an appropriate surety for defendant's obligations.
    7
    Because the issue was not addressed by either party, we specifically do not
    consider application of the 2014 revisions to the alimony statute and whether
    they apply to the particular circumstances of this case. See, e.g., Landers v.
    Landers, 
    444 N.J. Super. 315
    , 322–24 (App. Div. 2016). The issue is better left
    for the remand judge's consideration.
    A-0631-17T1
    27
    As to defendant's challenge to paragraph fifteen of the JOD awarding
    plaintiff counsel fees, the arguments made lack sufficient merit to warrant
    extensive discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E). We find no
    mistaken exercise of the judge's discretion. R. 5:3-5(c); Eaton v. Grau, 368 N.J.
    Super. 215, 225 (App. Div. 2004). We affirm that portion of the JOD, without
    prejudice to the remand judge considering the award, and the prior award to
    plaintiff following the plenary hearing, in fashioning a just, fair and equitable
    resolution of all financial issues.
    Additionally, we reject defendant's argument that a different judge must
    preside over the remand. We find no merit to defendant's claim of bias, or that
    the same judge would be in an "untenable" position if required to reconsider any
    issue previously decided. Luedtke v. Shobert, 
    342 N.J. Super. 202
    , 219 (App.
    Div. 2001).
    D.
    Plaintiff's other argument raised by cross-appeal is that the elimination of
    paragraph 23(b)(6) of the PMA as a result of the 2007 amendment was void as
    against public policy, because the parties were not free to bargain away the
    inheritance rights of their children, who did not receive any consideration in
    return. The cases cited by plaintiff in support of her argument are inapposite,
    A-0631-17T1
    28
    since they all deal with a well-recognized principle, i.e., the right to support
    "belongs to the child, not the custodial parent. . . . [P]arents [may not] bargain[]
    away the essential rights of their sons and daughters, including the right to be
    properly supported." Patetta v. Patetta, 
    358 N.J. Super. 90
    , 94 (App. Div. 2003)
    (citing Pascale v. Pascale, 
    140 N.J. 583
    , 591 (1995); Blum v. Ader, 279 N.J.
    Super. 1, 4 (App. Div. 1994)).
    None of the cases cited by plaintiff stand for the proposition that one of
    the parties to a PMA or other marital agreement must accommodate the potential
    needs of his or her children by a bequest from his or her estate. For example,
    plaintiff cites Kiken v. Kiken, 
    149 N.J. 441
    (1997), as authority. However, in
    that case, citing N.J.S.A. 2A:34-23(a), the Court affirmed the Family Part's order
    directing the deceased husband's estate to contribute to the costs of his son's
    college education, stating only "[n]othing in the statute prevents courts from
    entering such orders after the death of a parent."
    Id. at 453;
    accord Fazilat v.
    Feldstein, 
    180 N.J. 74
    , 81 (2004).
    More on point is dicta in our decision in Koidl v. Schreiber, where we
    rejected the father's estate's claim that a post-death order continuing child
    support in the absence of a testamentary bequest "amount[ed] to an overturning
    of the will." 
    214 N.J. Super. 513
    , 516 (App. Div. 1986). We noted that while
    A-0631-17T1
    29
    "[s]urviving children have not been given the protection of an elective share[,]"
    the children did "not claim a right under the will[.] . . . [T]hey assert[ed] a
    continuing dependency claim against the estate."
    Ibid. We concluded the
    trial
    court had the right "to continue support payments after the death of the paren t."
    Ibid. In short, plaintiff
    cites no authority for her argument that the elimination
    of paragraph 23(b)(6) from the original PMA by way of the 2007 amendment
    was void as against public policy. Further, during the plenary hearing on the
    enforceability of the PMA, plaintiff never asserted that the amendment itself
    was void for lack of consideration. We refuse to consider that specific argument
    for the first time on appeal. Selective Ins. Co. of Am. v. Rothman, 
    208 N.J. 580
    ,
    586 (2012).
    III.
    We turn to defendant's remaining arguments.
    The trial judge awarded the parties joint legal custody and fixed a
    parenting time schedule that provided plaintiff and defendant equal time with
    the children during the week. The parties reached an agreement with regard to
    other parenting time issues.8 By its terms, paragraph five of the JOD permitted
    8
    The agreement is not in the record.
    A-0631-17T1
    30
    each party to "tack[]" a week of vacation parenting time onto regularly
    scheduled parenting time, "thus giving a party more than [seven] consecutive
    days with the children[.]" The judge rejected defendant's request to permit the
    consecutive exercise of both weeks of vacation time, finding the children's
    "frequent contact with both parties, especially based on their young ages[,]" was
    in their best interests.
    Defendant contends the trial judge abused his discretion by requiring the
    exercise of vacation parenting time in non-consecutive weeks and thereby
    prohibited defendant from taking the children on vacation to Greece, defendant's
    ancestral homeland. "An abuse of discretion 'arises when a decision is "made
    without a rational explanation, inexplicably departed from established policies,
    or rested on an impermissible basis."'" Milne v. Goldenberg, 
    428 N.J. Super. 184
    , 197 (App. Div. 2012) (quoting Flagg v. Essex Cty. Prosecutor, 
    171 N.J. 561
    , 571 (2002)). Given our highly deferential standard of review, we reject
    defendant's contention without further discussion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    Defendant contends that the trial judge erred by including paragraphs four,
    five, and eleven in the October 2017 post-judgment order on plaintiff's
    enforcement motion. The order clarified that each party was responsible for the
    children's expenses while the children were with them and further required
    A-0631-17T1
    31
    advance notice to the other party and an itinerary if the children were to be taken
    out of the tri-state area by car or plane. Defendant also challenges the award of
    counsel fees to plaintiff in opposing his motion for a stay and in bringing her
    enforcement motion.
    We agree completely with the trial judge's disposition of these two issues
    and the fee award. The judge's findings about defendant's recalcitrant positions
    regarding the picayune costs of school lunches and other incidental costs for the
    children, defendant's continued tack of trying to relitigate child support and his
    refusal to provide notice regarding the children's out-of-state vacation were all
    amply supported by the record. Once again, given our standard of review, we
    have no reason to reverse or even comment further. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
    IV.
    To summarize, on plaintiff's cross-appeal, we reverse paragraph 1(a) of
    the August 2016 order and remand for further proceedings. We reject plaintiff's
    facial challenge to the elimination of paragraph 23(b)(6) of the PMA being void
    as against public policy.
    As a result, without reaching the merits of plaintiff's remaining argument
    as to paragraph fourteen of the JOD, and without reaching the merits of
    defendant's arguments, we vacate paragraphs seven, nine, eleven, twelve and
    A-0631-17T1
    32
    fourteen of the JOD, but stay this portion of our judgment until the trial court's
    resolution and decision on remand, which may modify as appropriate any of
    these provisions of the JOD so as to achieve a fair, reasonable and equitable
    resolution of all financial issues.
    We affirm paragraph five of the JOD and the October 2017 order.
    Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded for further proceedings.
    We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-0631-17T1
    33