Cohen v. Cohen

609 A.2d 57, 258 N.J. Super. 24
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJune 29, 1992
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 609 A.2d 57 (Cohen v. Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohen v. Cohen, 609 A.2d 57, 258 N.J. Super. 24 (N.J. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

258 N.J. Super. 24 (1992)
609 A.2d 57

NORMAN COHEN, PLAINTIFF-RESPONDENT,
v.
WENDY COHEN, DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Argued May 13, 1992.
Decided June 29, 1992.

*25 Before Judges KING, GRUCCIO and BROCHIN.

*26 Ronald M. Abramson argued the cause for appellant (Kleeblatt, Galler & Abramson, attorneys; Ronald M. Abramson, on the brief).

Donald Friedman argued the cause for respondent (Donald Friedman, attorney; Donald Friedman and Robert A. Vort, on the brief).

The opinion of the court was delivered by BROCHIN, J.A.D.

This appeal arises in the aftermath of a bitter divorce and custody battle between defendant, Dr. Wendy Cohen, and plaintiff, Dr. Norman Cohen. Defendant Wendy Cohen established an account for her daughter under the New Jersey Uniform Gifts to Minors Act ("UGMA"), N.J.S.A. 46:38-13 et seq., naming herself as custodian. Plaintiff Norman Cohen, on behalf of his daughter, contested some of the custodian's expenditures from this account. The Chancery Division determined that the reimbursements which Dr. Wendy Cohen had taken from the UGMA account funds were inappropriate and ordered her to repay them to her daughter without interest. We affirm the Chancery Division's decision.

Drs. Norman and Wendy Cohen were married in 1970 and have one child, Jessica, born in 1972. They were divorced in 1976. Dr. Wendy Cohen was granted custody of Jessica pursuant to a settlement agreement which also provided that Dr. Norman Cohen would be responsible for $450.00 a month child support.

For several years, Drs. Wendy and Norman Cohen and Dr. Wendy Cohen's parents were engaged in litigating questions of custody and visitation. On September 27, 1988, a consent order was entered which terminated the case on conditions. More than a year later, Dr. Norman Cohen applied to terminate child support, sought reimbursement of child support from Dr. Wendy Cohen, and also sought an accounting for the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act account. The court directed Dr. Norman Cohen *27 to pay support directly to Jessica because she had become estranged from her mother, was no longer residing with her, and was attending college. The court also ordered Dr. Wendy Cohen to provide a full accounting for the account. She appealed the order. In an unpublished per curiam decision dated October 16, 1990, this court affirmed the Chancery Division's decision ordering an accounting. However, we reserved decision on whether Dr. Wendy Cohen should be surcharged.

Dr. Wendy Cohen submitted a formal accounting, moved to confirm it and sought attorneys' fees. Dr. Norman Cohen cross-moved for a judgment surcharging Dr. Wendy Cohen for some of the expenditures from the UGMA account. Jessica also joined in the motion by presenting her own certification contesting the expenditures. On June 4, 1991, the lower court entered an order disallowing $30,437.00 of expenditures for which Dr. Wendy Cohen had reimbursed herself from the UGMA account, denied pre-judgment interest, and denied attorneys' fees. Dr. Wendy Cohen appeals from this order. Dr. Norman Cohen has cross-appealed, arguing that Dr. Wendy Cohen should be charged interest on the expenditures which were disallowed.

All of the funds in Jessica's UGMA account had been contributed by Dr. Wendy Cohen. She established the account in 1979 for Jessica's benefit and named herself as custodian. During the next three years, she deposited $53,902.42 in the account. These funds earned approximately $21,565.00 of interest. As of February 1988, the total amount in the account was $75,485.42. Dr. Wendy Cohen used these funds for Jessica's benefit. She paid some of the money to schools and camps which her daughter attended, and she reimbursed herself from the UGMA account for other items of her daughter's support and for attorney's fees incurred in the litigation with her parents and husband contesting custody of Jessica.

The accounting for the UGMA account which Dr. Wendy Cohen submitted to the court is presented in two schedules. *28 The first schedule lists payments directly from the account to providers of services, mostly camps and schools, totalling $44,299.68. Dr. Norman Cohen and Jessica did not dispute Dr. Wendy Cohen's right to an allowance in that amount for those payments. The second schedule lists amounts which Dr. Wendy Cohen paid from her own funds for attorneys' fees and for Jessica's living expenses, including clothes, food, shoes, dry cleaning bills, medical insurance, and doctors' services. The attorneys' fees are those expended in Dr. Wendy Cohen's litigation with her parents and her husband for custody of Jessica. They include the fees which Dr. Wendy Cohen paid to her own attorneys and the fees which she paid to Jessica's guardian ad litem. Dr. Wendy Cohen reimbursed herself from the UGMA account for these living expenses and attorneys' fees. Dr. Norman Cohen and Jessica objected to Dr. Wendy Cohen's reimbursing herself for these expenditures.

The scheduled living expenses amount to $37,503.39. The scheduled fees for Dr. Wendy Cohen's attorneys and for Jessica's guardian ad litem amount to $37,233.33. If there had been no withdrawals, the total corpus of the UGMA account would have totalled $75,458.42. If the $44,299.68 of withdrawals which are not contested is subtracted from that total of $75,458.68, the balance is $31,158.74. That is the amount which would have remained in the account if only the uncontested items listed in Dr. Wendy Cohen's first schedule had been paid from the UGMA funds. The trial court disallowed all of the expenditures listed in Dr. Wendy Cohen's second schedule, and therefore held that she owed her daughter the $31,158.74 that would have remained in the UGMA account but for the reimbursements that were disallowed.[1]

*29 On appeal, Dr. Wendy Cohen asserts that the Uniform Gifts to Minors Act, N.J.S.A. 46:38-27(b), confers complete discretionary authority on the custodian of an UGMA account to utilize the funds for the benefit of the minor, and that that statutory grant authorized her to reimburse herself for the disputed disbursements. Dr. Norman Cohen has cross-appealed. He contends that the court erred by declining to charge Dr. Wendy Cohen interest on the reimbursements which it disallowed and by failing to award him attorneys' fees.

Resolution of this appeal depends upon the statutory powers and duties of a custodian of an UGMA account. The Uniform Gifts to Minors Act[2] provides that a gift "is irrevocable and conveys to the minor an indefeasible vested legal title to the ... money...." N.J.S.A. 46:38-17. The relevant statutory grant of authority is found in N.J.S.A. 46:38-27(b), which provides:

(b) The custodian shall pay over to the minor for expenditure by him, or expend on behalf of the minor, so much of or all the custodial property as the custodian deems advisable for the support, maintenance, education, general use and benefit of the minor in the manner, at the time or times, and to the extent that the custodian in his absolute discretion deems suitable and proper, with or without court order, with or without regard to the duty or ability of himself or of any other person to support the minor, and with or without regard to any other funds, income or property of the minor which may be available for any such purpose.

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Bluebook (online)
609 A.2d 57, 258 N.J. Super. 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-cohen-njsuperctappdiv-1992.