OPINION OF THE COURT
In this case we must determine whether retirement benefits from the Police Superior Officers’ Variable Supplements Fund (PSOVSF) are marital property subject to equitable distribution.
Crescenzo and Marie DeLuca were married on May 29, 1966. The following year, Crescenzo began his career with the New York City Police Department (NYPD), eventually attaining the rank of Detective, First Grade. Marie stopped working outside the home after the birth of the couple’s first child. Thirty years later, Crescenzo filed this action for divorce. Before the judgment of divorce, Crescenzo retired from the NYPD after 31 years of service and began receiving PSOVSF benefits in addition to regular pension benefits.
Supreme Court granted Crescenzo a divorce and, as part of the equitable distribution of his assets, awarded Marie half of Crescenzo’s past and future PSOVSF payments. The Appellate Division modified the award (
I
The PSOVSF, along with its counterpart for non-detective police officers below the rank of sergeant, the Police Officers’ Variable Supplements Fund (POVSF), were the result of contract negotiations between the City of New York and the unions representing police officers. In 1968, both sides jointly proposed legislation allowing the Police Pension Fund, whose pension investments were limited to fixed-income obligations, to invest some of its assets in equities, such as common stock, with the hope of creating higher earnings. The additional earnings could then be used as extra post-retirement compensation to attract qualified individuals and induce long-term service
(see, Gagliardo v Dinkins,
Originally, the funds deposited into the VSFs represented the difference between the amount of money that the pension fund would have earned had all its investments been in fixed-income instruments and the amount actually earned from equity investments. In the years that equity investment income exceeded the hypothetical amount that would have been earned in fixed-income investments, a statutory formula divided the excess between the two funds (see, Administrative Code of City of NY § 13-232 et seq.). Conversely, the pension fund put no money into the VSFs in years when equity earnings were less than the hypothetical fixed-income earnings. Pursuant to statute, boards of trustees authorized payments from both VSFs in an amount and in such form as in their discretion they deemed appropriate.
With the enactment of chapter 479 of the Laws of 1993, the Legislature altered both the funding and payment structure of the PSOVSF. Most notably, instead of using an excess earn
Both VSFs are structurally linked to the Police Pension Fund. The money placed in the VSFs is derived from earnings on investments of the Police Pension Fund which, in turn, is partly funded by member contributions (see, Administrative Code § 13-232 et seq.). Moreover, to be eligible to receive distributions from the PSOVSF, a superior officer must be a “pension fund beneficiary” (see, Administrative Code § 13-281 [a] [2]). 2
Notwithstanding its ties to the pension system, the Legislature has declared that the PSOVSF, like the other variable funds, is not, and should not be construed to be a pension fund
(see,
Administrative Code § 13-279). In cases examining VSFs of various uniformed services, we have recognized that such funds do not violate the State Constitution’s pension-impairment clause (NY Const, art V, § 7) or the prohibition against making gifts of public funds (NY Const, art VIII, § 1;
see, Ballentine v Koch,
II
Whether the VSF benefits at issue here constitute marital property cannot be determined by the Administrative Code provisions relied on by the Appellate Division. Rather, that question must be answered by the relevant provisions of the Domestic Relations Law. If the benefit is a thing of value and was earned in whole or in part during the marriage, it may be considered marital property subject to equitable distribution.
Domestic Relations Law § 236 (B) (1) (c) defines “marital property” as “all property acquired by either or both spouses during the marriage and before the execution of a separation
In
Majauskas v Majauskas
(
Thus, under the broad interpretation given marital property, formalized concepts such as “vesting” and “maturity” are not determinative. Indeed, we have held that compensation received after dissolution of the marriage for services rendered during the marriage is marital property
(see, Olivo v Olivo,
At issue in
Olivo
were benefits received as part of an early retirement incentive. The package included a pension enhancement that allowed retirees to collect full pension benefits even though they had not worked the requisite number of years, a Social Security bridge payment that would provide a substitute for Social Security payments until the retiree became eligible,
Most recently, in
DeJesus v DeJesus
(
Ill
The key question, therefore, is whether VSF benefits are intended as compensation for past services rendered during the marriage or another form of compensation, such as an incentive to continued employment, which is separate property post-divorce. We conclude that VSF benefits are a supplement to pension fund payments and, as such, a form of compensation for past services related to the first 20 years of police employment, notwithstanding the date they mature.
As evidence that they are a supplemental enhancement of retirement benefits, VSF payments are made only to service
Because VSF benefits are compensation for past services, they do not raise the same concerns as
Olivo
about reliance on the “length of service” measure of marital property
(see, Olivo, supra,
While issues such as “vesting” and “maturity” do not raise serious obstacles to the determination that VSF benefits are marital property, they do affect valuation and distribution. Courts, however, are capable of fashioning domestic relations orders that equitably distribute the proceeds of future contingencies, if and when they are realized. Because it held that PSOVSF benefits were separate property, the Appellate Division in this case did not pass on the merits of the 50% equitable distribution, and should consider this issue on remittal.
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division, insofar as appealed from, should be reversed, with costs, and case remitted to that court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Chief Judge Kaye and Judges Smith, Levine, Wesley, Rosenblatt and Graffeo concur.
Order, insofar as appealed from, reversed, etc.
Notes
. Chapter 876 was codified in the Administrative Code of the City of New York, currently at title 13, chapter 2, subchapters 3 and 4. These laws, like others that created VSFs, were enacted pursuant to a home rule request by the City of New York, which, under the Retirement and Social Security Law, lacks authority to alter laws relating to pension system investments.
. For purposes of VSF eligibility, a “pension fund beneficiary” is “[a]ny person who receives a retirement allowance by reason of having retired * * * for service (with credit for twenty or more years)” (Administrative Code § 13-278 [5] [emphasis supplied]). Thus, one having retired for disability would not be eligible, even with more than 20 years of service.
