In this divorce action, a judge of the Probate and Family Court ruled that the beneficial interest of Joseph Lauricella (husband) in real estate held in trust is not a marital asset divisible under G. L. c. 208, § 34 (1988 ed.). Dawn Lauricella (wife) appealed, and we transferred the case to this court on our own motion. We conclude that the husband’s interest is part of his marital estate and subject to *212 equitable division under § 34. 1 Accordingly, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
The facts (taken from the judge’s memorandum and the materials before him) are as follows. In 1976, Joseph E. Lauricella, the husband’s father, created a trust which has as its sole asset a two-family house located at 22-24 Mague Avenue in West Newton. The husband’s father was the original trustee; his wife and two children (the husband and his sister) were the beneficiaries. The declaration of trust provides that the trust is to last for twenty-one years from the death of the husband’s father, during which the beneficiaries have equitable interests with no power to require partition or distribution. The interests of the beneficiaries are restricted by a spendthrift clause that provides in part that their interests are inalienable and not subject to any legal or equitable proceedings by creditors or others. The trust is subject to amendment upon a unanimous vote of the trustee or trustees and beneficiaries. The trust also is subject to termination by the trustee or trustees if they sell the res and turn the proceeds over to the beneficiaries. Upon the natural termination of the trust, the res is to be distributed in equal shares to the beneficiaries.
The parties were married in 1983. The husband’s father died in 1986, as did his wife shortly thereafter. Successor trustees have been appointed. During the marriage, the parties resided in the trust property in one of its two apartments. The husband’s sister resided in the other apartment. Throughout the period of the marriage after their mother’s death, the husband and his sister were the sole beneficiaries of the trust. In 1988, the wife filed a complaint for divorce and requested an equitable division of the marital property. The wife has physical custody of the two minor children of the marriage and, according to the judge’s memorandum, she “emphasize [d] that the trust res is the only ‘asset’ of any *213 value in th[e] marriage, and that she needfed] it financially.” The real estate was valued at $247,000. Thus the only substantial asset in dispute was the husband’s beneficial interest in the real estate.
The primary question before the probate judge was whether the husband’s beneficial interest in the trust property was part of his marital estate and subject to equitable division under G. L. c. 208, § 34. The judge reasoned that the trust had “nothing, per se, to do with the marriage,” that the husband was neither settlor nor trustee, that the trust could be amended, and that the husband could be eliminated as a beneficiary. The judge then concluded that “the husband’s interest in his father’s . . . trust is not a marital asset.”
1.
Status of the husband’s interest.
Whether the husband’s interest in the trust property is part of his estate for purposes of § 34 is a question of law that we are in as good a position as the probate judge to answer. See
Lyons
v.
Lyons,
Although the legislative history of § 34 is “sketchy,” Inker, Walsh & Perocchi, Alimony and Assignment of Property: The New Statutory Scheme in Massachusetts, 10 Suffolk U.L. Rev. 1, 2 n.4 (1975), it is established that “[t]he purpose of § 34 is to ‘empower [ ] the courts to deal broadly
*214
with property and its equitable division incident to a divorce proceeding. Such broad discretion is necessary in order that the courts can handle the myriad of different fact situations which surround divorces and arrive at a fair financial settlement in each case.’ ”
Davidson
v.
Davidson,
The specific statutory term at issue here, “estate,” has been defined by this court as “all property to which [a spouse] holds title . . . whenever and however acquired.”
Rice
v.
Rice, supra
at 400. In the past, in considering whether particular interests constitute part of the property of the marital estate of a party to a divorce, this court has not been bound by traditional’ concepts of title or property. Instead, we have held a number of intangible interests (even those not within the complete possession or control of their holders) to be part of a spouse’s estate for purposes of § 34. Such interests include nonvested pension rights, see
Dewan
v.
Dewan,
*215
Beyond § 34 and Massachusetts precedents, review of the opinions of other States that have considered this or analogous questions reveals no clear consensus. See generally Note, The Trust in Marital Law: Divisibility of a Beneficiary Spouse’s Interests on Divorce, 64 Tex. L. Rev. 1301 (1986); Annot., Divorce Property Distribution: Treatment and Method of Valuation of Future Interest in Real Estate or Trust Property not Realized During Marriage,
In this case, the husband has a present, enforceable, equitable right to use the trust property for his benefit. 6 He exercised this right during the marriage by using one of the dwelling units in the property as the marital domicil. He can continue to use the property as a residence (as apparently he is doing), or he can generate income by renting his unit. The husband also has a vested right to the future receipt of a share of the legal title to the trust property. This interest is subject to divestment only if he does not survive until the trust terminates according to its terms. As the husband is only about twenty-six years old, the likelihood is that he will survive to receive his share of the title. 7 The spendthrift clause is not a bar.
The husband’s interest is unlike a mere expectancy of the type that this court has held to be outside of the divisible estate under § 34. See
Drapek
v.
Drapek,
2. Proceedings on remand. Days after the wife filed her complaint for divorce, the successor trustees and the beneficiaries voted to amend the declaration of trust essentially by naming the minor children of the husband and the children of the husband’s sister as beneficiaries, and by providing that the interests of any deceased beneficiaries shall be distributed pursuant to their respective wills or by the intestacy statutes. The husband and his sister each have two children. Therefore, the effect of this amendment was to reduce the husband’s beneficial interest in the trust from a one-half to a one-sixth interest. On remand, it will be necessary for the judge to consider the propriety of this amendment. See note 7, supra.
We leave the questions of valuation and division to the judge’s broad discretion, but for these general observations. As to valuation, the trust res is improved real estate subject to an income-producing use and of a readily quantifiable value. It obviously will not be difficult to attach a value to the husband’s interest. Regarding division, we consider significant that the wife has a relatively low earning capacity and is the primary caretaker of the children. See
Thompson
v.
Thompson,
So much of the judgment as states that the husband’s interest in the trust is not a marital asset for purposes of consideration under G. L. c. 208, § 34, is reversed. The matter is remanded to the Probate and Family Court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
So ordered.
Notes
General Laws c. 208, § 34, provides in relevant part: “Upon divorce or upon a complaint in an action brought at any time after a divorce ... the court may assign to either husband or wife all or any part of the estate of the other.”
This determination involves neither an exercise of discretion nor consideration of the enumerated § 34 factors. The statement in
Davidson
v.
Davidson,
After acknowledging decisions of this court barring a wife from recovering against her husband’s interest in a spendthrift trust (see
Barrage
v.
Bucknam,
On a related question, at least two States have held that vested remainders in land are divisible on divorce. See
McCain
v.
McCain,
See and compare the opinions of common law States and States with property division statutes that differ from § 34.
Hussey
v.
Hussey,
During the course of the marriage, the husband’s interest in the trust property expanded when his mother died. This left only the husband and his sister as beneficiaries.
The husband could be removed as a beneficiary if all beneficiaries (including himself) and the trustees assented. This fact does not detract from the conclusion that the husband’s interest is part of his divisible estate. So far as the record indicates, the husband has not yet been eliminated as a beneficiary. Were he to attempt to eliminate himself, the court would be free to consider whether his actions constituted an improper effort to frustrate the wife’s right to an assignment of property, see, e.g.,
DuMont
v.
Godbey,
