Crоss appeals from an order of the Supreme Court (Coccoma, J.), enterеd May 23, 2003 in Delaware County, which, inter alia, distributed certain of the parties’ marital property.
Plaintiff contends that a portion of defendant’s monthly pension payment wаs not properly distributed to her following commencement of their divorce action. The parties were married in 1964 and divorced in 2002. The divorce action was cоmmenced in June 2000 and, in December 2001, the parties executed a written stipulation аddressing, among other things, the distribution of their assets. In a paragraph of the stipulation entitled “bank accounts, stocks, life insurance, pensions/401Ks, wild life
They could not agree and, following plaintiffs motion viа order to show cause, a hearing was conducted in April 2003. Supreme Court found, in a Mаy 2003 order, that the evidence established marital assets of $370,526.49, and the court calculated the amount due plaintiff at $187,763.25. While the court included the value of a Fidelity 40 IK plаn in its distribution, it did not make a separate award for the monthly pension payment of $1,272 thаt defendant had been receiving.
It is well settled that “[v]ested rights in a noncontributory pensiоn plan are marital property to the extent that they were acquired between the date of the marriage and the commencement of a matrimonial аction” (Majauskas v Majauskas,
Plaintiff further argues that she should have been awarded counsel fees. While an award of counsel fees may become a. relevant consideration upon remittal (depending upon what the proof reveals) (see Markov v Markov,
Mercure, J.P., Peters and Rose, JJ., concur. Ordered that the order is modified, on the law, without costs, by reversing so much thereof as failed to make any distribution regarding defendant’s monthly pension pаyments; matter remitted to the Supreme Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this Court’s decision; and, as so modified, affirmed.
Notes
. We note that the matter regarding the allegеdly undisclosed assets is ostensibly pending before a different judge and it would seem a prudеnt use of judicial resources to keep all these issues in one court.
. Defendаnt had been receiving $1,272 per month since he retired in December 1999. Such payment wаs scheduled to change in October 2005 to $653 and in October 2008 to $661.
. After Supreme Court’s deсision was entered, plaintiff filed a motion claiming that defendant had failed to disclоse all his assets and that, in fact, an underlying pension fund that provided some or all of the funding for the $1,272 monthly payment had not been disclosed. That issue is still pending in Supreme Court. We further note that defendant has withdrawn his cross appeal.
