Debra Goldman,
Respondent,
v.
Scott Goldman,
Appellant,
Phyllis Gelman,
Intervenor-Respondent.
2000 NY Int. 70
At issue on this appeal is whether a mortgage taken on one spouse's interest in a tenancy by the entirety while a divorce action was pending survived after entry of a judgment of divorce and award of the property to the other spouse. We hold that it did.
On October 24, 1985, plaintiff Debra Goldman and her
husband defendant Scott Goldman acquired a house as tenants by
the entirety. In December 1990, plaintiff commenced an action
The Goldmans were ultimately divorced by a judgment entered in October 1994, which awarded defendant exclusive title to the marital home. Although defendant had learned of Gelman's mortgage shortly after it was recorded in 1991, he failed to notify the trial court of its existence while the divorce action was pending, and the court made no special provision for it when equitably distributing the marital property.
Defendant subsequently moved to discharge Gelman's mortgage on the property, and Gelman moved for leave to intervene and in opposition to defendant's motion to discharge her mortgage. Supreme Court granted defendant's motion to discharge Gelman's mortgage, concluding that the mortgage interest had been extinguished by the judgment of divorce. The court also granted Gelman's motion for leave to intervene and stayed the discharge of the mortgage pending appeal. The Appellate Division reversed, over the dissent of two Justices. Defendant now appeals to this Court as of right. We affirm.
A tenancy by the entirety is a form of real property
ownership available only to parties married at the time of the
conveyance (Kahn v Kahn, , 43 NY2d 203, 207). As tenants by the
Although plaintiff here conveyed the mortgage after
filing for divorce, she nevertheless continued to hold an
interest in the property as a tenant by the entirety until the
final divorce decree (id., at 207). Thus, plaintiff was legally
entitled to mortgage her interest in the tenancy during the
pending divorce action. In turn, Gelman acquired a contingent
interest in all the rights plaintiff possessed at the time of
conveyance (V.R.W., Inc., v Klein, 68 NY2d,
We reject defendant's argument that reinstating
Finally, we note that 22 NYCRR 1400.5, effective November 1993, now requires attorneys to seek court approval and to notify the other spouse before obtaining a security interest in marital property (Procedure for Attorneys in Domestic Relations Matters [22 NYCRR] 1400.5).
Accordingly, the order of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs.