The instant appeals present an issue which has been the subject of considerable debate, to wit, under what circumstances and to what extent will a nontitled spouse be entitled to share in the appreciation in value of separate property which appreciation occurred from the inception of the marriage to the date of the commencement of the divorce action (see, Domestic Relations Law § 236 [B] [1] [d] [3]). More specifically, the appeals raise the question of whether a nontitled spouse’s contributions as a homemaker and parent are entitled to recognition by the court in awarding said spouse a share of the appreciated value of the other spouse’s separate property.
The parties were married on November 15, 1969 in the State of New York. For several years prior to the marriage defendant had been involved in a family-owned corporation entitled Unity Stove Company (Unity), which was engaged in the wholesale supply of kitchen parts and appliances. Defendant had received 25% of the outstanding stock of Unity in 1957 as a gift from his father and another 25% in 1972, during the parties’ marriage, also as a gift. In 1982, after the initiation of the instant divorce proceeding, defendant became Unity’s sole shareholder by reason of the corporation’s redemption of the outstanding shares held by defendant’s brother. Defendant also possessеs an interest in H & SP Realty, Inc. which holds title to the real estate holdings of Unity.
Prior to the parties’ marriage, plaintiff had been working as a registered nurse at Mount Sinai Hospital for approximately one year but terminated her employment upon her marriage to defendant. For the first six months of their marriage, plaintiff worked full time in defendant’s business. For six months thereafter, plaintiff worked part time as a private duty nurse at Doctor’s Hospital. Upon the birth of the parties’ first of two children in 1972, рlaintiff ceased working outside the home and concentrated her efforts on being a homemaker and parent. In addition to her contributions as a homemaker and parent, however, plaintiff conferred with Unity’s customers on several occasions, entertained her husband’s business associates, attended business conventions with her husband and assisted in other business-related social events.
Plaintiff commenced the instant divorce proceeding in 1981.
While we agree with Special Term insofar as it determined that defendant’s interests in Unity and related companies constituted "separate property” (see, Wegman v Wegman,
At the outset, it is significant to note that the provisions of the equitable distribution statute permit a nontitled spouse, in certain instances, to share in the value appreciation of separate property which occurred during the marriage. This principle is reflected in one of the statute’s definitions of separate property contained in Domestic Relations Law § 236 (B) (1) (d) (3), which provides: "property acquired in exchange for or the increase in value of separate property, except to the extent that such appreciation is due in part to the contributions or efforts of the other spouse” (emphasis added).
The italicized statutory language has presented the courts with the task of ascertaining the legislative intent behind the phrase "contributions or efforts”. As a general rule, the courts have uniformly agrеed that where the nontitled spouse makes
On appeal, the First Department in Jolis (supra), with a lone Justice dissenting, agreed that the omission of the quoted
In recent cases, trial and appellate courts have expressed a more liberal interpretation of Domestic Relations Law § 236 (B) (1) (d) (3). In Wood v Wood (
The rationale of Wood v Wood (supra) has been adopted and applied in a number of subsequent cases (see, Nolan v Nolan,
It is clear that this latter interpretation of Domestic Relations Law § 236 (B) (1) (d) (3) is more in keeping with the legislative intent behind the equitable distribution statute. When equitable distribution was enacted into law, then Gover
Viewed from this perspective, it would be untenable to conclude that the Legislature intendеd a construction of the meaning of a nontitled spouse’s "contributions or efforts” which would exclude his or her services as a homemaker and parent and thereby limit the statutory exception to direct contributions in the form of money and/or active management of a separate property asset. Certainly, nonremunerated services of a nontitled spouse to the joint marital enterprise in the form of homemaking, raising children and providing the moral, psychic and emotional support necessary to sustain the other spouse in coping with the vicissitudes of life outside the home, thus enabling the other spouse to concentrate his or her efforts successfully in the furtherance of the economic interests of the marital partnership, are no less important or valuable than direct contributions made by the nontitled spouse to enhance the value of separate property (see, Brennan v Brennan,
A cautionary word is warranted at this point to emphasize that a nontitled spouse must establish that his or her direct or indirect contributions to the marital relationship were causally related to the enhancement of the separate property asset so as to warrant an award of a percentage of the appreciation in value of the separate property asset. Thus, in Rubin v Rubin (
As a corollary to the above analysis, it is significant to note that certain "passive” separate property assets appreciate in value as a result of factors which are not in any way attributable to the efforts of either spouse. For example, bank accounts, portfolio investments, unmanaged real estate holdings, works of art and the like, as a general rule, appreciate in value because of random market fluctuations rather than as a result of active management or financial contributions by either spouse. This active-passive distinction with regard to separate prоperty assets was discussed by Justice O’Connor in Conner v Conner (
Interestingly, this active-passive distinction was recognized by the First Department in Jolis v Jolis (
In a more recent case, the Third Department, in Nolan v Nolan (
Thus, under this analysis, passive appreciation of a separate property asset during the marital relationship would not be subject to a claim by the nontitled spouse whereas an increase in value in such asset due to the direct or indirect contributions or efforts of the nontitled spouse would be considered marital property and subject to such a claim (see also, Roffman v Roffman,
Turning to the facts of the instant case, we concludе that plaintiff’s indirect contributions as a homemaker and mother to the parties’ two children over the 12-year period of the marriage warrant an award of a percentage of the appreciation, if any, of defendant’s separate property interest in Unity and related companies which occurred from the inception of the parties’ marriage to the date of the commencement of the instant divorce proceeding. In addition tо these indirect contributions, plaintiff is entitled to be credited for the direct contributions during the marriage, however minimal, which she made to the business in the form of conferring with customers, entertaining clients and attending conventions and trade shows (see, Wegman v Wegman,
With respect to the remaining issues presented by the instant appeal and cross appeal, we find that the direction in the judgment that defendant continue to pay the carrying charges on the marital premises until its sale is not an open-ended obligation such as would be improper under 22 NYCRR 699.9 (f) (6), as the judgment explicitly refers to and incorporates the earlier pendente lite order of Judge Wood, dated February 26, 1981, where those specific amounts determined to constitute the carrying charges are set out. As the mone
However, the award of medical and dental expenses for the children is in the nature of an open-ended obligation and was improper under 22 NYCRR 699.9 (f) (6) (see, Armando v Armando,
Further, we find that under the facts of this case, particularly given defendant’s age and the age of his children, Special Term erred in failing to direct defendant to obtain and keep in effect a life insurance policy for the benefit of the children. Therefore, we find it equitable that the cash surrender value of the old policy, which apparently has been allowed to lapse, be divided between the parties.
Finally, it was error to have awarded attorney’s fees solely on the basis of the affirmations of counsel without first conducting a hearing. Where attorney’s fees are challenged, the opposing spouse is еntitled to a hearing, not only to examine into the financial conditions of the parties, an issue which, in this case was thoroughly examined at trial, but also as a "meaningful way of testing the [attorney’s] claims relative to time and value” (see, Sadofsky v Sadofsky,
Mangano, O’Connor and Weinstein, JJ., concur.
Judgment modified, on the law and the facts, by (1) amending subdivision (a) of paragraph "seventh” of the findings of fact by adding thereto, after the word "defendant”, the follow
