Hepburn v Hepburn
2010 NY Slip Op 08703 [78 AD3d 1001]
November 23, 2010
Appellate Division, Second Department
As corrected through Wednesday, January 19, 2011


Donna Hurst Hepburn, Respondent,
v
David Hepburn,Appellant.

[*1]Feldman and Feldman, Uniondale, N.Y. (Steven A. Feldman and Arza Feldman ofcounsel), for appellant.

Law Office of Alan Barr, P.C., Patchogue, N.Y. (Naomi Strizhevshy of counsel), forrespondent.

In a matrimonial action in which the parties were divorced by judgment dated September 16,2008, the defendant appeals from so much of an order of the Supreme Court, Suffolk County(MacKenzie, J.), dated April 13, 2010, as denied his motion to permanently stay the entry of aQualified Domestic Relations Order dated July 16, 2009, which equitably distributed certain ofhis pension benefits between the parties.

Ordered that the order dated April 13, 2010, is affirmed insofar as appealed from, with costs.

"A matrimonial settlement is a contract subject to principles of contract interpretation [and]. . . a court should interpret the contract in accordance with its plain and ordinarymeaning" (Edwards v Poulmentis, 307 AD2d 1051, 1052 [2003]; see Sieratzki v Sieratzki, 8 AD3d552, 554 [2004]; DelDuca v DelDuca, 304 AD2d 610, 610-611 [2003];Kammerer v Kammerer, 278 AD2d 282, 282 [2000]). " '[W]hen interpreting a contract,the court should arrive at a construction which will give fair meaning to all of the languageemployed by the parties to reach a practical interpretation of the expressions of the parties so thattheir reasonable expectations will be realized' " (Herzfeld v Herzfeld, 50 AD3d 851, 851 [2008], quoting Fetnerv Fetner, 293 AD2d 645, 645-646 [2002]).

Applying these principles to the matter at bar, the Supreme Court properly interpreted theparties' stipulation of settlement to provide for the equitable distribution of all of the defendant'sretirement accounts and pension benefits (see Pagliaro v Pagliaro, 31 AD3d 728, 730 [2006]; Kammerer vKammerer, 278 AD2d at 283; see also DeLuca v DeLuca, 97 NY2d 139, 146 [2001];Olivo v Olivo, 82 NY2d 202, 207 [1993]). Contrary to the defendant's contentions, itcannot be said that the plaintiff effectively waived her right to equitably share in the pensionbenefits the defendant received from his employer, to the extent that the benefits from thatpension constituted marital property (compare Kammerer v Kammerer, 278 AD2d at282-283 with Graef v Retirement Income Plan for Employees of Albemarle Corp., 166F3d 332 [1998]; see Silber v Silber, 99 NY2d 395, 404 [2003], cert denied 540US 817 [2003]; March v March, 233 AD2d 371, 372 [1996]). Dillon, J.P., Angiolillo,Hall and Roman, JJ., concur.


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