OPINION OF THE COURT
Defendant in this matrimonial action claims: that he does
The parties were married in December 1985 and have two children, born in 1991 and 1993. Prior to the marriage, the plaintiff was an undergraduate at Middlebury College and later at Columbia University, where she received her bachelor’s degree in art history. At 21 years of age, she became the income beneficiary of a trust established by her paternal grandfather from which she receives $19,000 per year. She was last employed in the early 1990s and earned between $24,000 and $27,000 per year. Throughout the marriage, plaintiff has been a homemaker and primary caretaker for the children, each of whom has special needs. Defendant was born in Chile, schooled in Switzerland and graduated from Harvard University with an MBA. His premarital employment was with investment banks and, shortly after marriage, his employment income was approximately $75,000 per year. In January 1989, defendant was employed by a Swiss bank, Vontobel, at an annual salary of $100,000, where he remained until July 1991, at which timé he founded his own company, ACI Capital Management, Inc., a sole proprietorship which is an investment manager for non-United States clients. In that regard, he earns approximately 1% of the money under his management.
On the morning of the parties’ marriage, defendant insisted that plaintiff sign a prenuptial agreement which contained a waiver by plaintiff of equitable distribution and estate rights. During their marital cohabitation, the couple enjoyed a relatively lavish lifestyle, which included residence in a Manhattan apartment with a monthly rental of $5,000 and frequent travels, either together or separately, to Europe, South America and the Caribbean. In addition, they not only had a housekeeper but a full-time nanny to help care for their children.
Beginning with the death of defendant’s father in 1986, defendant became depressed and drank heavily. By 1993, defendant was completely withdrawn from plaintiff and the following year he sought medical help and began drug therapy. By
In an extensive opinion after 20 days of trial, the IAS court dissolved the marriage on the ground of defendant’s abandonment, directed defendant to pay support in the amount of $3,500 per month for each child, awarded monthly maintenance of $9,000 to plaintiff continuing until the death of either party or plaintiff’s remarriage or February 28, 2005, after which the amount would be reduced to $5,500 per month and continue until plaintiff’s remarriage or the death of either party. The court further awarded plaintiff the sum of $101,206 for her necessaries, awarded counsel fees to plaintiff in the total amount of $408,439, and further ordered defendant to be responsible for private school, summer camp, extracurricular activities and insurance for the children. Defendant moved for renewal on the financial aspects of the court’s decision, claiming, among other things, that substantial trust funds which were found available to him were, in fact, beyond his control.
Defendant’s connection to the trust funds happened in the mid-1980s when his grandmother established trusts in the British Virgin Islands. In 1991 those trusts were dissolved and new ones established. Defendant was and remains a vested beneficiary of four trusts and has the sole power of appointment for three of the trusts. The trial court properly rejected defendant’s contention that he has no control of, or access to, those offshore trusts. Defendant’s property interest in such trust property was not evaluated for purposes of equitable distribution (see, Riechers v Riechers,
A party’s interest in trusts can be taken into account when making maintenance and child support awards (Domestic Re
Defendant has further argued that the child support and maintenance awards should have been based on a precommencement standard of living, that lifetime maintenance should not have been awarded, that necessaries should not have been granted and that attorneys’ fees were improvidently granted. The precommencement standard of living was relatively lavish, however, and included a five-bedroom apartment in a luxury building near Lincoln Center, employment of a nanny and housekeeper, extensive travel, rental of a weekend home and private school tuition for the children. The award of the trial court permits plaintiff to resume a lifestyle approximating a standard of living enjoyed before commencement. The award of lifetime maintenance, albeit in a reduced amount after five years, was warranted under the circumstances since “ [consideration of the predivorce standard of living is an essential component of evaluating and properly determining the duration and amount of the maintenance award to be accorded a spouse” (Hartog v Hartog,
Where, as here, there is no equitable distribution and a party is not leaving the marriage with any marital property, an award of lifetime maintenance depends upon analysis of the payee spouse’s reasonable needs and predivorce standard of living. Plaintiff will be required to rely for her support entirely upon her own assets and whatever earning potential she might possess as a woman in her 40s who is returning to the job market after a long hiatus. The trial court weighed the appropriate statutory factors and correctly recognized that an award of lifetime maintenance was necessary because plaintiff would not otherwise be able to achieve a lifestyle that was at all comparable to the one that she had during the marriage.
Defendant also contends that plaintiff should not have been awarded any money for her necessaries since, in the course of the marriage, each party had paid for his or her own expenses. The necessaries involved included the housing costs of plaintiff and children as well as essential utilities and were properly charged to defendant. Finally, defendant claims that he should not be liable for plaintiffs attorneys’ fees since the prenuptial agreement relieved him from liability for “any debts, obligations, liabilities or losses of the other party * * * whether resulting from personal transactions of a private nature or from any business ventures entered into by such other party.” The prenuptial does not specify attorneys’ fees. Plaintiffs claim for attorneys’ fees arises under the Domestic Relations Law and is not a result of a personal transaction or business venture. The court had broad discretion in awarding such fees and there has been no demonstration by defendant of any abuse in the fee award (DeCabrera v Cabrera-Rosete,
Accordingly, the judgment of the Supreme Court, New York County (Jacqueline Silbermann, J.), entered March 29, 2000,
Nardelli, J. P., Mazzarelli, Ellerin and Saxe, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order, Supreme Court, New York County, entered March 29, 2000 and October 24, 2000, respectively, affirmed, without costs.
