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The plaintiff husband appeals a Supreme Court judgment in a divorce case concerning equitable distribution of his pension, pendente lite arrears, mortgage payments, the wife's social worker license valuation, and counsel fees. The appellate court modified the judgment, ruling that the husband should be credited for principal mortgage payments made between April 2000 and August 2001. It also found the counsel fee award to the wife was an improvident exercise of discretion, directing its deletion. The matter was remitted for recalculation of the mortgage credit and reconsideration of the husband's pension valuation date, setting it to the commencement of a prior discontinued divorce action in September 1994.
Mesholam v. Mesholam is a workers' compensation case decided in Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York. This case addresses legal issues related to compensation claims, benefits, and court rulings.
It is commonly referenced in legal research involving workers' compensation laws in Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York.
Full Decision Text1 Pages
The plaintiff husband appeals a Supreme Court judgment in a divorce case concerning equitable distribution of his pension, pendente lite arrears, mortgage payments, the wife's social worker license valuation, and counsel fees. The appellate court modified the judgment, ruling that the husband should be credited for principal mortgage payments made between April 2000 and August 2001. It also found the counsel fee award to the wife was an improvident exercise of discretion, directing its deletion. The matter was remitted for recalculation of the mortgage credit and reconsideration of the husband's pension valuation date, setting it to the commencement of a prior discontinued divorce action in September 1994.
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