Belinda Biagiotti, Appellant-Respondent, v Peter Biagiotti, Respondent-Appellant.
948 NYS2d 445
McCarthy, J.
The parties were married in September 2002. In June 2010, when plaintiff was 48 and defendant was 54, plaintiff commenced this divorce action. In response to a request for temporary relief, Supreme Court (Platkin, J.) granted plaintiff exclusive use and occupancy of the marital residence, instructed defendant to pay carrying costs on the residence, awarded
Supreme Court did not err with respect to its award of maintenance to plaintiff. The amount and duration of spousal maintenance is a matter left to the sound discretion of the trial court, after considering statutory factors and the parties’ predivorce standard of living (see
Plaintiff was entitled to a credit for half of the marital funds used to reduce defendant‘s separate indebtedness. “If marital assets are used to reduce one party‘s separate indebtedness, the other spouse can recoup his or her equitable share of the expended marital funds” (Burtchaell v Burtchaell, 42 AD3d 783, 786 [2007]; see Lewis v Lewis, 6 AD3d 837, 839 [2004]; Micha v Micha, 213 AD2d 956, 957 [1995]). Defendant testified that he had a mortgage and a home equity line of credit as liens against his home prior to the marriage. In 2003, shortly after the marriage, he refinanced the mortgage and paid off the existing line of credit by rolling it into the new mortgage. The parties each testified that the mortgage payments were made from a checking account where both parties deposited their paychecks. The amount of the refinanced mortgage was reduced by $24,028 during the marriage. As these payments from marital funds reduced defendant‘s indebtedness on his separate property, plaintiff is entitled to recoup $12,014, or half of the marital funds applied to this separate debt (see Micha v Micha, 213 AD2d at 957-958).
Supreme Court properly divided the debt from the home equity line of credit. After refinancing the mortgage, defendant took out a new line of credit. Both parties testified that it was repeatedly borrowed against and paid down during the marriage from marital funds. Defendant testified that they
We modify Supreme Court‘s distribution of the parties’ retirement accounts. The court relied upon the same factors for analyzing defendant‘s retirement plan as for plaintiff‘s retirement plan and IRA, yet awarded plaintiff 10% of defendant‘s account while giving defendant 20% of plaintiff‘s accounts. Based on the parties’ disparate incomes, and the court‘s lack of any explanation for the discrepancy in the percentages awarded for these similar assets, we modify by awarding each party 10% of the other‘s retirement plans. Hence, plaintiff is entitled to reimbursement from defendant of $880.63 from her retirement account and $2,420.30 from her IRA.
The record does not include any value for defendant‘s three IRAs for any time period between the date of commencement of the action and the date of trial. As Supreme Court must use a valuation date within that time frame (see
Supreme Court erred by ordering defendant to reimburse plaintiff for all withdrawals from his Charles Schwab account made in the six months prior to commencement of this action. A court may consider transfers made in contemplation of a matrimonial action as one of the factors in equitably distributing marital property (see
The parties’ remaining contentions have been reviewed and do not warrant further modification of Supreme Court‘s judgment.
Mercure, J.P., Rose, Kavanagh and Egan Jr., JJ., concur.
Ordered that the judgment is modified, on the law and the facts, without costs, by (1) granting plaintiff a credit of $12,014 for the payments of marital funds used to reduce the mortgage on defendant‘s separate property, (2) awarding defendant 10% of plaintiff‘s retirement plan and IRA rather than 20%, amounting to a reimbursement to plaintiff of $880.63 from her retirement account and $2,420.30 from her IRA, and (3) reimbursing defendant $1,005.82 of repayments he made to plaintiff for withdrawals from his Charles Schwab account, and, as so modified, affirmed.
