Kahn v. Kahn

147 Misc. 2d 954, 559 N.Y.S.2d 103, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 343
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 27, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 Misc. 2d 954 (Kahn v. Kahn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kahn v. Kahn, 147 Misc. 2d 954, 559 N.Y.S.2d 103, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 343 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1990).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

David B. Saxe, J.

In this action the plaintiff wife seeks to have the court [955]*955impose upon the defendant husband a preliminary injunction restraining the defendant from divesting the marital property in his control, or from placing these assets at risk of loss. She further asks the court to direct defendant to liquidate high-risk investments in such manner as would be required of a fiduciary.

Plaintiff in the present action is 51 years old and an elementary school teacher. Defendant is 52 and is a self-employed investor with a net worth in excess of $10,000,000; he has been a partner at Lehman Brothers, and was a senior vice-president at E. F. Hutton & Co. In addition, he is a director of three public companies, Telcon USA, MA/CON, and of Lloyds of London, at which he is also a part of a syndicate. Plaintiff alleges that in order to participate in this syndicate defendant has pledged the couple’s entire net worth and posted a letter of credit in the approximate amount of $100,000. The defendant, as conservator of his incapacitated father’s affairs, supervises securities investments which exceed $20,000,000; defendant supervises his own securities accounts of $5,000,000.

The parties have been married 32 years, and are the parents of four grown children. During the marriage the parties had as their residences a 12-room cooperative apartment on Park Avenue with an estimated fair market value of $3,000,000, and a home in Locust Valley, New York, with a fair market value of over $2,000,000. Both properties are held solely in defendant’s name, and plaintiff contends that the defendant has borrowed $1.5 million from his parents, pledging the house and apartment as security for these loans.

During the pendency of a matrimonial action, particularly one where large sums of money are involved, there may be a risk that one spouse will secrete, transfer or dissipate assets so as to preclude an equitable distribution of that property following the dissolution of the marriage. In an effort to stop the potentially improper transfers or dissipation of these assets, and to, in effect, maintain the status quo during this period, the court has the authority to impose restraints upon the parties, the most significant of which being the preliminary injunction. In exercising its powers of restraint the court looks to the types of assets involved, which may create a disparity in the treatment of assets that can generally be expected to remain relatively stable over the pendency of the action and assets such as publicly traded stocks, securities and commodities which by their nature are volatile.

[956]*956The defendant in the present action has spent his professional life as an investment banker and he is therefore familiar with the volatility and risks of the investment world. In addition, he sits on the boards of several large corporations.

But, the circumstance the court must deal with at present is one in which the defendant has a different role. Here, he is not an investment banker or director who has been voluntarily entrusted assets by faceless investors to whom he owes a fiduciary obligation with a standard of care and conduct to invest wisely; at issue here is defendant’s control of a considerable amount of resources which are in dispute in a matrimonial action in which he is a party, and these assets will ultimately be the subject of a determination by the court as to its division between the spouses under the equitable distribution statute. The plaintiff requests the imposition of a fiduciary obligation upon the husband with respect to his dealing with these marital assets during the pendency of the divorce action. The proponent of this standard readily admits that this request is a novel one. It is necessary for the court to examine the development of restraints upon asset control that can be imposed at the discretion of the court.

With the advent of equitable distribution the court would routinely restrain abnormal dispositions of the parties’ assets as an automatic right. In Froelich-Switzer v Switzer (107 Misc 2d 814 [1980]), the plaintiff wife had made an application to the court for a temporary restraining order to restrain her husband from disposing of his assets pending a determination of the motion for a temporary restraining order seeking the same relief. The court held (at 815) that "neither party may alienate, hypothecate or otherwise dispose of or encumber any asset or any interest therein, except in the normal course of business or personal affairs.” The court in Froelich-Switzer had as its goal the maintenance of the "financial status quo of both parties, as it existed at the time of the commencement of the action” (supra, at 815). However, this type of approach has not generally been followed.

The court no longer imposes blanket restraints as a matter of right, but the power to restrain is stated in the leading case Leibowits v Leibowits (93 AD2d 535 [2d Dept 1983]), where the Appellate Division upheld restraints against the plaintiff wife preventing her from disposing of marital property during the pendency of the divorce action. The court found that Domestic Relations Law § 234 gives the court presiding over a matrimonial action the authority to impose injunctive restraints upon [957]*957the ability of a spouse to dispose of assets during the pendency of the action. The court in Leibowits, relying on the Domestic Relations Law, reasoned that since section 234 gave the court power to compel one spouse to turn over property to the other, the court also has the power to grant the lesser relief of restraining a spouse from disposing of property.

However, interim restraints such as the ones requested by the plaintiff in the present action have not been routinely made available. The court requires that the application be supported by a showing that the spouse to be restrained is attempting to, or threatens to, dispose of marital assets so as to impair the movant’s ability to obtain proper relief at the dissolution of the marriage. The court in Steinberg v Steinberg (87 AD2d 782 [1st Dept 1982]) required "an adequate showing that defendant is seeking to dispose of marital assets so as to prejudice her right to an equitable distribution of such assets.” Plaintiff wife had failed to make this showing in regard to artwork she contended her husband, Saul Steinberg, was trying to dispose of.

More recently, in Guttman v Guttman (129 AD2d 537 [1st Dept 1987]) the court vacated an injunction barring the defendant husband, a successful commodities broker, from mortgaging his separate property, a summer house in Long Beach, New York. The court required that restraints on property transfers "be supported by proof that the spouse to be restrained is attempting or threatening to dispose of marital assets so as to adversely affect the movant’s ultimate rights in equitable distribution” (supra, at 539).

In this case, the defendant has been in complete control of the marital assets throughout a long and prosperous marriage. In order to obtain a preliminary injunction the plaintiff must produce evidentiary substantiation for her contention that the defendant is transferring or otherwise improperly disposing of assets.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
147 Misc. 2d 954, 559 N.Y.S.2d 103, 1990 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kahn-v-kahn-nysupct-1990.