Cross appeals from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Rose, J.) ordering, inter alia, equitable distribution of the parties’ marital property, entered August 17, 1995 in Tioga County, upon a decision of the court.
The nonjury trial focused on financial matters, including the classification of property as separate or marital, and the valuation of defendant’s law practice. A judgment was entered awarding plaintiff, inter alia, one half of defendant’s practice, which was valued at $15,000; one half of certain deferred compensation earned by defendant during the marriage, to be paid beginning in 2002; one half of the proceeds of the sale of the marital residence, after crediting defendant with approximately $43,700 in separate property he was found to have contributed thereto; durational maintenance for five years; and $3,000 in counsel and experts’ fees. Each party has appealed.
Both parties disagree with Supreme Court’s valuation of defendant’s law practice: plaintiff maintains that the testimony of her expert, rather than that of defendant’s expert, should have been credited, while defendant contends that it was improper to disregard evidence which, he asserts, demonstrates that the practice did not appreciate at all during the marriage.
Neither argument is convincing. The record discloses no grounds for rejecting Supreme Court’s well-reasoned decision to accept the valuation arrived at by defendant’s expert. As for defendant’s suggestion that the practice was worth as much or more when the parties married as it was 10 years later, the evidence preferred to establish its value at the earlier date is—as Supreme Court apparently recognized—manifestly inadequate for that purpose. Although defendant testified that his office accounts contained some $21,000 at the time of the parties’ marriage, it is unclear how much of that amount actually represented assets of the practice, or the extent to which those assets—if any—were offset by business debts or liabilities.
Plaintiff’s other assertions are equally uncompelling. Supreme Court’s finding that the $21,500 plaintiff inherited in 1989 lost its character as separate property, through commingling with marital funds, has ample support in the record (see, Saasto v Saasto,
While the marital standard of living is a factor that cannot be disregarded when arriving at an appropriate maintenance award (see, Hartog v Hartog,
Of the other points raised by plaintiff, the only one meriting comment concerns her request for counsel fees. And as to that, we find Supreme Court’s determination to reimburse plaintiff for only a portion of the fees she actually incurred was not improper, given the relative merit of the parties’ positions with respect to the contested issues, the assets available to plaintiff as a result of the equitable distribution of marital property, the impact of defendant’s ongoing financial obligations to plaintiff and the children upon his ability to pay, and the fact that some of the fees for which compensation is sought are attributable to related Family Court matters, not to resolution of the divorce action (see, DeCabrera v Cabrera-Rósete,
Turning to the aspect of the judgment with which defendant takes issue, we find that Supreme Court did not err in concluding that all of his deferred income—the product of settlements in 1986, 1987 and 1990 of three large cases undertaken on a contingent fee basis—is marital property, subject to distribu
Mikoll, J. P., Casey, Spain and Carpinello, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is affirmed, without costs.
