Zelnik v. Zelnik

169 A.D.2d 317, 573 N.Y.S.2d 261, 1991 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10408
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 25, 1991
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 169 A.D.2d 317 (Zelnik v. Zelnik) 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
Zelnik v. Zelnik, 169 A.D.2d 317, 573 N.Y.S.2d 261, 1991 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10408 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Sullivan, J. P.

In this matrimonial action the parties cross-appeal from a judgment terminating the marriage, awarding the wife physical custody of their nine-year-old daughter—the only issue of the marriage—determining issues of equitable distribution and providing for maintenance and child support. Married on September 15, 1979, each for the second time, the parties separated in December 1982, although there were several subsequent periodic but unsuccessful attempts at reconciliation.

The parties, now 46, met in September 1973 through their employment at Yves St. Laurent Clothing and Shirt Company (Yves St. Laurent), which eventually expanded to become [322]*322Bidermann Industries U.S.A., Inc. (Bidermann), a clothing manufacturer grossing $250,000,000 per year and subsidiary of Bidermann, S.A., a large French clothing concern. At the time, the husband was an assistant to Maurice Bidermann and the wife Yves St. Laurent’s creative director, in charge of advertising, public relations and promotion. Both earned approximately $30,000 annually. She had previously worked for Revlon in the marketing and promotion of new products. He had previously held an executive position with Pierre Cardin. As a result of their romantic relationship, the wife terminated her employment with Bidermann. The husband subsequently became president of Yves St. Laurent and, later, Bidermann.

After leaving Yves St. Laurent, the wife, with some success, engaged in the free-lance writing of fashion and social articles but eventually had to give this up when the full responsibility of raising their daughter fell on her. She was also hindered in her writing by the need to devote time and attention to the operation of two real estate properties which the husband had acquired. It is not disputed that for a substantial part of their life together the husband was away from home on business matters.

In September 1975, before they began to live together, the parties leased an apartment in their joint names. In September 1976, at a time when they were living together but before the marriage, the husband, at the wife’s urging, purchased approximately 60 acres in Esopus, New York for $95,000. On June 29, 1979, 2 Vi months before their marriage, the husband purchased, as a family residence, a house at 36 Grove Street in Manhattan for $435,000, making a $50,000 down payment. Two months later, on August 29, 1979, the husband was divorced from his first wife, from whom he had been long separated. The parties were married 2 Vi weeks later.

With the assistance of architects, the wife developed a plan to merge a vacated rental unit at the Grove Street house into the owner’s living area, thereby creating a triplex. She hired a designer and supervised the construction, which cost between $300,000 and $350,000. One unit is currently rented; the other, the triplex, some 3,500 square feet consisting of three bedrooms, kitchen, dining room and basement, is currently occupied by the wife and child. The wife’s appraiser valued the Grove Street house at approximately $1,800,000 as of August 15, 1988 and concluded that the renovation had increased its value; the husband did not submit an appraisal of his own. The property is subject to a 25-year, $862,500 varia[323]*323ble rate mortgage, obtained in 1984, which assumed an earlier $400,000 mortgage.

Several years after the purchase of the Esopus property and during the marriage, the parties began to operate a horse farm there. The wife was significantly involved in the effort to place it on a professional footing; she brought in a horse trainer and helped develop a plan for financing; she suggested an architect for the construction of a horse barn and contributed to the building plans. Over 10 years, the Esopus farm was, by 19 separate deed transactions, expanded to 416 acres.

The management of the farm, especially the enormous sums expended on the construction of a "state of the art” horse barn, complete with hair dryers for the horses, olympic-size riding arena, viewing and office space and a $30,000 manure-removing machine, was a source of concern to the wife. During the years 1983 through 1984, the farm’s operating expenses were running at approximately $50,000 monthly. By 1984, the financial drain caused the husband to take out a second mortgage on the Grove Street house, although, at another point, he justified the refinancing with the comment, "[Financially, things [are] bad.” In any event, the husband continued to invest money in the Esopus property. He estimated that he spent $1.4 million in purchasing horses for which he received "a couple of hundred thousand dollars.” Another $200,000 was expended on a reconstruction of the farmhouse. The horse trainer spent lavishly. The appraised value of the Esopus farm, as of the time of trial in November 1988, was $2,660,000. In a March 1985 financial statement, the husband valued the Esopus horse farm at $3,285,200.

Eventually, the husband and Maurice Bidermann had a falling out, leading ultimately to the husband’s termination of his employment with Bidermann on October 31, 1987. The husband testified that in October 1987 he received $4,570,000 in payment of his stock interest in Bidermann, S.A., and other companies. This was confirmed by letter from his counsel to the wife’s attorney. According to the husband, he received a 10% interest in Bidermann, S.A., as a "promise” in 1973, prior to the marriage. He was unable, however, to produce any document evidencing this transaction and conceded that a 1982 employment agreement with Bidermann contained no such promise.

During the trial, the wife fortuitously received a copy of the parties’ 1987 joint tax return, signed only by the husband, [324]*324from the Internal Revenue Service, which requested her signature. This document showed a sale of the stock by the husband to Maurice Bidermann for $8,000,000. Other documents subsequently admitted in evidence confirmed the sale and price. Recalled to the stand, the husband testified that, in addition to the $4.5 million received on account of the sale of the Bidermann, S.A., shares, he was also to receive $1.5 million in "severance” as well as a $2 million "consulting fee”. He further testified that since he did not receive either the severance or consulting fee he brought suit against Bidermann, which was settled in March 1988.

The husband also testified that the stock was worth $1 million in September 1979 but, despite its increase in value after September 1979 due to Bidermann’s acquisition of the Ralph Lauren line, its value dropped to "near zero” by the end of 1982 as the result of a threatened bankruptcy of Bidermann, S.A. The husband insisted that the stock regained its $1 million value during the period between 1982 and 1986. After extended testimony on the subject and a request by the wife’s counsel that she be allowed to serve interrogatories in France, as well as the court’s observation as to the husband’s contention that he became the owner of the stock in the 1970’s that "[tjhere has been no proof either way because we do not have either the stock or the stock book or records of any law firm or any records of Bidermann which would show us,” the husband abruptly conceded that his stock interest in Bidermann, S.A., was marital property.

The record indicates that, throughout the marriage, the husband earned a sizeable income, which declined somewhat with the onset of this litigation. In 1980, he earned $322,000, in addition to which Bidermann contributed $1,600 monthly towards his housing costs.

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Bluebook (online)
169 A.D.2d 317, 573 N.Y.S.2d 261, 1991 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 10408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zelnik-v-zelnik-nyappdiv-1991.