Appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court (Hughes, J.) granting defendant a divorce and ordering equitable distribution of the parties’ marital property, entered September 1, 1999 in Schoharie County, upon a decision of the court.
Plaintiff and defendant, married in 1972, are the parents of four emancipated children. At the time of trial, defendant was 48 years old, in good health, earning approximately $37,000 a year by operating a construction business out of the parties’ barn. Plaintiff, then 55 years of age, characterized herself as being in poor health by reason of high blood pressure, a sciatic nerve injury and an accidental injury to her right knee. She testified that she worked as a teacher’s aide, earning a salary of approximately $14,000 per year. Throughout the course of this marriage, it was undisputed that defendant paid the taxes, utilities, insurance and general expenses of the marital residence. Shortly before the commencement of this action, plaintiff withdrew the entire balance of the parties’ checking and savings accounts and transferred a debt of $5,800 from her personal credit card to a jointly owned credit card which defendant ultimately repaid.
This action was commenced in April 1998 with defendant counterclaiming for divorce. As a result of a settlement conference in March 1999, the parties agreed to a division of property and the payment of $100 per week in maintenance. Under the terms thereof, defendant was to retain the marital residence in exchange for paying plaintiff $77,000; he would also keep model cars and books he acquired during the marriage as well as two vehicles, a 1994 van and a 1992 truck, with plaintiff
At a contempt hearing, Supreme Court vacated the stipulation and ordered the action to proceed to trial. At the conclusion thereof, the court ordered defendant to pay $75 per week in maintenance to plaintiff until she attains the age of 65, remarries, cohabits with an unrelated male or either party dies. As to the equitable distribution of marital assets, the court reduced the $77,000 distributive award to plaintiff by the transferred credit card debt, the loss of counsel fees for the aborted closing and her removal of money from the parties’ joint savings and checking accounts, as well as the value of marital assets that she removed from the marital residence subsequent to the stipulation. Plaintiff appeals.
First reviewing the award of maintenance, we note that the amount and duration thereof is a discretionary determination left to the trial court (see, Petrie v Petrie,
However, an award of maintenance must “be effective as of
Addressing next the award pertaining to both the marital residence and motor vehicles, we note that the traditional valuation of a marital residence would be by expert appraisal (see, Walasek v Walasek,
Reviewing the challenge to defendant’s estimate of the value of his model car collection and of the items taken by plaintiff, defendant’s familiarity with these items and their current value, neither challenged with rebuttal testimony nor by cross-examination, made him competent to testify to these matters, leaving the weight to be accorded to such testimony with Supreme Court (see, Kennedy v Kennedy,
We do not agree with Supreme Court’s reduction of plaintiff’s distributive award for counsel fees related to the aborted closing since an evidentiary hearing must first be held at which
Cardona, P. J., Spain, Mugglin and Lahtinen, JJ., concur. Ordered that the judgment is modified, on the law, without costs, by reversing so much thereof as ordered equitable distribution of the marital property; retroactive maintenance is awarded to plaintiff and matter remitted to the Supreme Court for further proceedings in accordance with this Court’s decision; and, as so modified, affirmed.
