Filed Date: 12/23/2008
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/1/2024
The plaintiff left the marital residence in July 1991 after more than 18 years of marriage. In November 1991 the defendant commenced the underlying action, inter alia, for a divorce. The parties entered into a separation agreement entitled a “stipulation of settlement,” dated January 9, 1992. The defendant was represented by an attorney in connection with the negotiation of the separation agreement, while the plaintiff represented himself. At that time, the plaintiff was 42 years old and employed by the Nassau County Sheriffs Department, while the defendant was 41 years old, unemployed, and legally blind, albeit able to work part-time and receiving Social Security disability benefits.
The parties visited the defendant’s attorney twice in connection with the separation agreement, and the attorney advised
In relevant part, the separation agreement provided that the marital residence subject to the mortgage, the IRAs and joint bank accounts, and the plaintiffs deferred compensation plan in the form of promissory notes would be distributed to the defendant and that she would receive child support and lifetime maintenance even upon remarriage. Further, the agreement provided that the maintenance payment would be increased by a percentage each time one of the children was emancipated and by an additional 4% per annum. For his part, the plaintiff retained his pension, his automobile, some bank accounts, and certain furniture. The agreement was subsequently incorporated, but not merged, into the judgment of divorce dated April 17, 1992.
In 1998 the defendant remarried. On March 24, 2000 the plaintiff commenced this action to set aside the separation agreement as unfair, inequitable, and unconscionable. The defendant moved for summary judgment dismissing the complaint, which motion was granted. By decision and order dated June 2, 2003, this Court reversed the order granting the defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing the complaint, reinstated the complaint, and directed a hearing on the issues of unconscionability and ratification (see Santini v Robinson, 306 AD2d 266 [2003]).
Following that hearing, the Supreme Court, inter alia, (1) set aside the provisions of the parties’ separation agreement awarding the defendant 100% of the plaintiffs deferred compensation and the parties’ IRAs, (2) terminated the defendant’s exclusive possession of the marital home, (3) limited the plaintiffs obligation for college expenses of the parties’ three children to $15,000 per year, (4) terminated the defendant’s lifetime maintenance as of the date of her 1998 remarriage, (5) awarded a money judgment to the defendant for all interest payable on a $19,000 promissory note dated January 9, 1992, and (6) awarded a credit of $33,488 to the plaintiff for his maintenance payments after the defendant’s remarriage. The defendant appeals, and we modify.
“A stipulation of settlement should be closely scrutinized and
In applying these principles, the Supreme Court erred in setting aside the parties’ entire separation agreement as unconscionable since the equitable distribution of the marital property was not manifestly unjust (see Cruciata v Cruciata, 10 AD3d at 350; Lounsbury v Lounsbury, 300 AD2d 812, 814 [2002]; Croote-Fluno v Fluno, 289 AD2d 669, 670 [2001]). Pursuant to the separation agreement, the defendant was awarded, inter alia, the marital residence and most of its contents, the IRAs and the payment of certain promissory notes by the plaintiff, while the plaintiff retained his pension, his car, and some furniture. The plaintiff acknowledged at trial that he was willing to give the defendant everything as long as he retained his pension. Any inequity in this property division is not “so strong and manifest as to shock the conscience and confound the judgment” of this Court (Christian v Christian, 42 NY2d at 71; see Lounsbury v Lounsbury, 300 AD2d at 814; Croote-Fluno v Fluno, 289 AD2d at 670). Accordingly, these provisions of the separation agreement must be reinstated, except as provided herein below.
We agree with the Supreme Court that the interest provision in the promissory note and the lifetime escalating maintenance
Furthermore, the plaintiff was obligated to pay child support and all college expenditures for three children, as well maintenance payments which increased each year during the defendant’s lifetime. The lifetime nature of the maintenance and its 4% increase each year for the rest of the defendant’s life, on top of a percentage increase following the emancipation of each of their children, represents a sum far in excess of the value of the plaintiffs marital distribution.
In fact, testimony elicited at trial revealed that by the time the plaintiff is 65 years of age, he will be exhausting his primary marital asset by giving the defendant almost one half of his yearly pension. This Court finds “that no reasonable and competent person would have consented to” this lifetime escalating maintenance provision (Bright v Freeman, 24 AD3d at 588; see Christian v Christian, 42 NY2d at 71). Contrary to the Supreme Court’s termination of the defendant’s maintenance upon her remarriage, a maintenance period of 16 years— from the 1991 commencement of the matrimonial action to the 2007 order and judgment appealed herein—is more appropriate under the extant circumstances and in accordance with Domestic Relations Law § 236 (B) (6) (a) (see Schwalb v Schwalb, 50 AD3d 1206 [2008]; Sevdinoglou v Sevdinoglou, 40 AD3d 959, 960 [2007]). Given this determination, the plaintiff is not entitled to any recoupment of maintenance he paid between 1998 and 2007 as set forth in the tenth decretal paragraph (see e.g. Rader v Rader, 54 AD3d 919 [2008]).
The defendant’s remaining contentions are without merit. Fisher, J.P., Balkin, McCarthy and Chambers, JJ., concur.