MICHAEL A. MAIRS, Respondent, v CAMILLE MAIRS, Appellant
Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, Third Department
June 18, 2009
61 A.D.3d 1204 | 878 N.Y.S.2d 222
The parties were married in 1981 and have seven children. Plaintiff (hereinafter the husband) is an ophthalmologist with his own private practice while defendant (hereinafter the wife) is a tenured math professor employed at the Community College of Philadelphia. In 2002, the husband commenced this action for divorce and, prior to trial, the parties reached a partial stipulation resolving some, but not all, of the issues that divided them. Among those that remain were the degree to which the wife should share in the husband’s medical practice and medical license, the amount and duration of maintenance, the value of each party’s educational degree, as well as the husband’s medical license, and the amount to be paid by the parties for the support of their children. The wife also sought payment by the husband of the fees charged by her counsel and the expert witness, as well as an order extending the husband’s obligation to share in the payment of the children’s numerous extracurricular activities. After a three-day trial, Supreme Court issued a judgment that, among other things, granted the husband a divorce and ordered him to pay the wife 15% of the value of his medical license and medical practice.1 It also directed the husband to pay $400 per week in maintenance to the wife for seven years, child support in the amount of $1,260 per week, $18,000 of the wife’s counsel’s fees, 50% of the expert witness fees, and a portion of the college expenses incurred by the parties’ eldest child. Finally, it required the husband, as a guarantee against his obligations under the judgment, to maintain a $200,000 life insurance policy with the wife listed as the primary beneficiary. The wife now appeals.
The wife takes issue with almost every aspect of Supreme Court’s decision and, in particular, claims that in its judgment the court failed to fully take into account the sacrifices and
In deciding the extent to which a spouse should share in the value of a marital asset, among the factors to be considered are the length of time the parties were married, their respective age and health, the ability of each to earn an income now and in the future, any direct or indirect contributions made by the nontitled spouse in the effort to obtain the asset, the asset’s value and the degree to which it appreciated during the marriage and any tax consequences that will occur upon the assets distribution (see
On the facts presented, we are of the view that the wife is entitled to more than 15% of the value of the husband’s license to practice medicine and his medical practice. We reach this conclusion by noting that, in particular, during this long-term marriage, the husband not only successfully completed his undergraduate studies and attended medical school, he also earned his medical degree and completed both his internship and residency, after which he was able to establish a successful medical practice. While the husband pursued his medical career, the wife not only gave birth to the parties’ seven children, but cared for them, managed the household and earned a salary that, for a time, was the principal source of the family’s income. She relocated the family from Utah to Philadelphia and later to New York for the express purpose of allowing the husband to pursue his medical studies and obtain his medical license. When the husband entered private practice, the wife, in addition to her maternal obligations, continued to work—commuting on a regular basis to Philadelphia—and managed the practice, assuming the responsibility for the preparation of all invoices and
While Supreme Court placed a value on the husband’s educational degrees at $1,493,000, it adopted the opinion of the expert retained by the parties that the practice had a value of $12,000 and that the wife’s distributive share amounted to $1,800. The expert, while acknowledging that the practice annually had gross revenues in excess of $500,000, initially placed its value at $93,000, after allowing for a full discount on the total amount alleged by the husband to be owed on a loan made to the practice by a local hospital. The expert then reduced that amount to account for the tax implications that would occur if the practice were sold. While we accept Supreme Court’s determination that the tax impact generated by the sale of the practice was fairly considered in this valuation, we do not agree that the full amount of the loan—$190,830—should be included in determining the practice’s fair market value. In that regard, we note that in the 12 years that this debt has been in existence, not one payment has been made against its principal and the promissory notes evidencing the existence of this legal obligation only amount to $104,000.3 As a result, we find that while it was appropriate to consider this loan as a liability to be counted against the value of the practice, the amount used to discount its value should be that represented by the face value of the promissory notes—$104,000 (see Charland v Charland, 267 AD2d 698, 700-701 [1999]). Given that the expert has acknowledged reducing his estimate of the practice’s value by the full amount claimed to be owed on this loan, the value of the practice for distributive purposes should be increased by $86,830 to $98,830, with the wife receiving a 25% distributive share.4
We find no abuse of discretion in Supreme Court’s imposition of a 4.2% interest rate imposed on the amount the husband owes the wife for her share of the marital assets. “[T]he man
As for maintenance, Supreme Court directed that the husband pay the wife $400 per week for seven years, or $20,800 annually. The determination of an appropriate maintenance award requires a “delicate balanc[e] of each party’s needs and means” (Matter of Shreffler v Shreffler, 283 AD2d 679, 680 [2001]; see Brzuszkiewicz v Brzuszkiewicz, 28 AD3d 860, 862 [2006]) and consideration of the relevant statutory factors (see
While we do not agree with the wife’s claim that Supreme Court should have imputed certain income to the husband in its
The wife also takes issue with the percentages employed by Supreme Court against the parties’ combined income in determining the amount to be paid for child support. While it included all of the parties’ income in this calculation, Supreme Court used 35% as the percentage to be applied against the first $80,000 of combined income, but reduced the percentage to 25% for any income over $80,000.8 Supreme Court found that applying the statutory percentage to all of the parties’ income, including that in excess of $80,000, would result in an “unjust or inappropriate” award (
As for Supreme Court’s determination that the husband should receive a $250 weekly credit against his child support obligations “for overpayments of child support, extracurricular activities and college expenses,” we note, as conceded by the husband, that there can be no such offset and that this part of the order must be vacated (see Matter of Taddonio v Wasserman-Taddonio, 51 AD3d 935, 936 [2008]; Baraby v Baraby, 250 AD2d 201, 205 [1998]). In addition, because the husband will be required to pay additional maintenance, as well as a significant sum for the wife’s distributive share of the marital assets, we refuse to revisit Supreme Court’s decision that the husband is no longer required to contribute towards the payment of the children’s extracurricular activities or that he pay any more of the expert witness fees or the wife’s counsel fees (see
We are of a different view as to Supreme Court’s decision regarding the payment of the children’s college expenses. In that regard, the court only required the husband to pay half of a loan taken by the wife to defray expenses incurred by their oldest daughter for her first two years in college. This finding, which also served to absolve the husband from any responsibility for any college expenses incurred by any of the remaining six children, appears to be at odds with the court’s own observa-
Finally,
Mercure, J.P., Lahtinen and Malone Jr., JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is modified, on the law and the facts, without costs, by (1) increasing the value of plaintiff’s medical practice to $98,830, (2) ordering plaintiff to pay 25% for defendant’s share of the enhanced earnings from plaintiff’s medical license and medical practice, (3) ordering plaintiff to obtain a declining term life insurance policy with an initial face value of $500,000, (4) increasing plaintiff’s maintenance obligation to $500 per week until 2012, (5) vacating the provision for a $250 weekly credit against plaintiff’s child support obligation, (6) striking
