Cohen v. Cohen

120 A.D.3d 1060, 993 N.Y.S.2d 4
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedSeptember 11, 2014
Docket303123/09 -------12807 12806 12805 12804 12803 12802 12801 12800 12799
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 120 A.D.3d 1060 (Cohen v. Cohen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cohen v. Cohen, 120 A.D.3d 1060, 993 N.Y.S.2d 4 (N.Y. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

Judgment, Supreme Court, New York County (Barbara Jaffe, J.), entered May 9, 2013, to the extent appealed from, dissolving the parties’ marriage, granting plaintiff physical and legal custody of the parties’ child, directing plaintiff to pay defendant non-durational maintenance of $26,000 per month, and directing plaintiff to continue to maintain defendant’s two $300,000 life insurance policies and to purchase and maintain a $2.5 million life insurance policy naming defendant as sole beneficiary, unanimously modified, on the law and the facts, to reduce the amount of non-durational maintenance to $22,500 per month and to reduce the amount of life insurance that plaintiff is required to purchase to $1 million, and otherwise affirmed, without costs. Appeals from, orders, same court and Justice, entered on or about April 16, 2012, May 7, 2012, June 14, 2012, August 14, 2012 and February 5, 2013, unanimously dismissed, without costs, as subsumed in the appeal from the judgment. *1061 Order, same court (Matthew F. Cooper, J.), entered on or about May 30, 2013, which awarded defendant attorneys’ fees in the sum of $175,000, unanimously affirmed, without costs.

Plaintiff husband, now 79, is a United States citizen. In or around 1990, he established, for his security and investment transactions, Scone Investments, a limited partnership in which he is a general partner. In the mid-1990s, he created the Scone Foundation, which provides financial awards and prizes to artists and archivists.

In 1996, while living in France, plaintiff met defendant wife, now 54, and they moved in together. Defendant, a documentary film maker and assistant director, was a citizen of Belgium and France. In 1998, defendant became pregnant and stopped working. On April 30, 1999, plaintiff created the Second Stanley Cohen Irrevocable 1999 Family Trust (1999 Trust), primarily for the benefit of defendant and their issue, although his daughter from a previous marriage is also a beneficiary.

On June 7, 1999, the parties executed a prenuptial agreement in France, which provided that upon marriage, each party’s premarital property would remain his or her separate property, that property titled in individual names acquired during the marriage would be the property of the person in whose name it was titled, and that jointly titled property acquired during the marriage would be jointly owned marital property. The parties married on June 14, 1999, and on July 10, 1999, their son was born.

In 2001, Scone Investments purchased two apartments in the Galleria, an apartment building in Manhattan. A third apartment in the building was later purchased. In 2002, the 1999 Trust purchased a 4,000-square-foot apartment in Paris.

During the marriage, the parties moved to the United States. They separated in 2006, but plaintiff continued to provide defendant with financial support. Plaintiff commenced this divorce action in March 2009. In a prior appeal (93 AD3d 506 [1st Dept 2012]), this Court affirmed the order of the trial court that held that the French prenuptial agreement was valid.

After a 2011 on-the-record “agreement” was vacated, the parties proceeded to trial in 2012. The trial was bifurcated, with specific days reserved for testimony regarding custody and other days for testimony about finances. Although defendant was cross-examined during the financial phase of the trial, on May 18, 2011, in the midst of her cross-examination on custody issues, she left New York and returned to Paris. The attorney for the child requested that defendant’s testimony on custody be stricken because she was not cross-examined. Plaintiff’s at *1062 torney requested that all of defendant’s testimony, including testimony on finances, be stricken. Defendant’s counsel asked for time to permit defendant to appear again. The court provided defendant’s counsel with an opportunity to explain her absence, and adjourned the trial to June 6, 2012.

Despite the three-week adjournment, defendant did not return to court, claiming that she was under doctor’s orders not to travel. The court refused defendant’s request for a further adjournment or to allow her to appear via Skype, and ended the trial on June 7, 2013. The court drew an adverse inference against defendant with respect to custody issues based on her failure to complete her cross-examination, but refused to default her or to strike her testimony in its entirety.

On the record before us, the court properly vacated the parties’ 2011 on-the-record agreement. To be enforceable, an open court stipulation must contain all of the material terms and evince a clear mutual accord between the parties (see CPLR 2104; Bonnette v Long Is. Coll. Hosp., 3 NY3d 281, 286 [2004]; Thome v Alexander & Louisa Colder Found., 70 AD3d 88, 103-104 [1st Dept 2009], lv denied 15 NY3d 703 [2010]). The 2011 on-the-record agreement was too incomplete and indefinite to be enforceable, and was merely a non-binding agreement to agree (see Joseph Martin, Jr., Delicatessen v Schumacher, 52 NY2d 105, 109 [1981]; Bernstein v Felske, 143 AD2d 863, 865 [2d Dept 1988]). The parties disagreed whether the proposal included a waiver of maintenance and they did not finalize the details of the transfer of the 1999 Trust. Other material terms were never agreed upon, and the agreement was subject to the consummation of future conditions and additional agreements.

The agreement also lacked consideration (see Whitmore v Whitmore, 8 AD3d 371 [2d Dept 2004]). Accepting defendant’s consent to the divorce in exchange for the financial payments would have been against public policy (see Charap v Willett, 84 AD3d 1003 [2d Dept 2011]). In any event, the parties unambiguously agreed that “whether we hammer out the agreement or not, the divorce will go forward uncontested.” There is no merit to defendant’s claim that her decision to avoid a public trial on fault grounds constituted consideration because it would have brought up embarrassing and difficult questions for plaintiff concerning his financial dealings.

The court correctly precluded defendant from introducing evidence of French law on equitable distribution at trial. There is no need for extrinsic evidence because the parties’ prenuptial agreement unambiguously precludes equitable distribution (see Van Kipnis v Van Kipnis, 11 NY3d 573, 579 [2008]). Contrary to *1063 defendant’s apparent contention, while the trial court previously held that the parties’ prenuptial agreement was enforceable in New York because it was validly executed under French law, it did not rule that French law would apply to the ancillary divorce issues to be tried in this New York action; nor did this Court so rule in affirming the trial court’s order.

The court properly considered all the circumstances and the best interests of the child in awarding plaintiff sole legal custody (see Eschbach v Eschbach, 56 NY2d 167 [1982]). While the child reported initially that he wanted to move to Paris and live with defendant, and the forensic expert expressed some concern about plaintiffs parenting, the expert also testified as to some serious concerns about defendant, including her suicide attempts and her rigidity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
120 A.D.3d 1060, 993 N.Y.S.2d 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-cohen-nyappdiv-2014.