529 Accounts Are Not Your Divorce Piggybank

Alan R. Feigenbaum ●

New York Law Journal, January 10, 2025 —

Matrimonial law is derived from judicial decisions (i.e., “caselaw”) and statutes. As well intentioned and precise as those statutes and the caselaw interpreting them, are and can be, the fact remains that how matrimonial courts apply the law is by and large case specific.

This is a long-winded way of saying that because each matrimonial case tends to depend upon its own unique set of facts, courts are often compelled to reexamine and reevaluate the legislative intent underlying the statutory framework otherwise known as the Domestic Relations Law (the “DRL”).

That brings us to Justice Edmund M. Dane’s recent decision in LKF v. MTF, 2024 NY Slip OP 24312 (Sup. Ct., Nassau Cty. 12/9/2024), which addresses the “novel issue” of “how to classify a 529 account under the Automatic Orders” and “whether or not a party’s post-commencement withdrawal of money from a 529 account to pay their own counsel fees violates” the Automatic Orders.

Preliminarily, as the decision explains, a “529 Account is a type of investment account that someone can use for higher education savings (emphasis added).” See www.nysaves.org. In general terms, inter alia, the Automatic Orders, codified at Section 236 of the DRL, prohibit transfers/withdrawals/sales/encumbrances of various assets while a divorce action is pending absent written consent of the parties or a court order.

Notably for purposes of this discussion, with regard to the restraint on the transfer of assets such as real estate, personal property, cash accounts, stocks, mutual funds, bank accounts, cars, and boats, there is a carve out for transfers made “in the usual course of business, for customary and usual household expenses or for reasonable attorney’s fees” in connection with the divorce action.

Read more on our website.

Divorce Law Ends 2023 on a High Note

New York Law Journal, December 11, 2023 ●

Alan R. Feigenbaum ●

This author started off the New Year in January 2023 with an article showcasing a decision by the Honorable Jeffrey S. Sunshine that demonstrated excellence in the practice of matrimonial law.

As 2023 comes to a close, given the state of world affairs, I find myself searching for any remaining vestiges of humanity. If I have to return to matrimonial jurisprudence to find vestiges of humanity, so be it.

Against that admittedly bleak backdrop, which I do not believe is overstated considering what has transpired in our world over the last few months, I felt my confidence in the willingness and dedication of our courts to do what is right, and what is just, sparked by Judge Edmund M. Dane’s Nov. 14, 2023 decision in T.H. v. G.M., 2023 NY Slip Op 51267(U).

T.H. brings us back to the standards under which a divorcing person may seek temporary exclusive use and occupancy of a home, which results in the physical separation of parents during divorce. As a general matter (excluding cases involving alarming threats of harm/extreme emotional abuse) there must be competent proof of physical violence or damage to property to justify the remedy of temporary exclusive use and occupancy. Failing that, if one spouse has an alternative residence, and his/her return to the home would cause strife, the exclusive use remedy may also be available.

A restrictive view of domestic violence has regrettably permeated matrimonial jurisprudence into following a litmus test of sorts that asks this: does the person seeking the exclusive use remedy have a black eye, or something equivalent?

Read more on our website.