PER CURIAM.
The sole question presented on this appeal is whether plaintiff Samuel Chernin is entitled to an order terminating his alimony obligation under
There is no dispute over the facts. The parties were married in 1958 and divorced in 1992. In their property settlement agreement incorporated in the judgment of divorce, they agreed plaintiff would pay permanent alimony of $100,000 per year until July 1, 1997, when the payment would increase to $150,000 annually. The agreement also required plaintiff to maintain $800,000 in life insurance payable to defendant for so long as plaintiff's alimony obligation remained.
In 1996, plaintiff moved to terminate his alimony retroactively based on defendant's cohabitation. Following a five-day plenary hearing, Judge Torack granted defendant's motion in part. Finding defendant was cohabiting, the judge ordered defendant to reimburse plaintiff for past overpayments going back to the date of inception of alimony in the sum of $81,200, and reduced plaintiff's ongoing alimony obligation by $12,000 annually.
Plaintiff appealed, contending the court erred in reducing his obligation instead of terminating it in accordance with the test adopted in
In an unreported opinion, we rejected plaintiff's argument that his alimony should have been terminated, noting "there was no express language in the parties' property settlement agreement that cohabitation would result in the termination of alimony."
Following the enactment of
After hearing argument, the trial court concluded the amendments to the alimony statute constituted changed circumstances. Applying the 2014 amendments to Judge Torack's earlier finding of cohabitation and accepting defendant's representation that her relationship was unchanged, the court entered an order terminating alimony based on defendant's continued cohabitation and that plaintiff, at age seventy-seven, had attained full retirement age and was "therefore presumptively entitled to the requested relief" pursuant to
Defendant appeals, contending the trial court erred in failing to give effect to the "anti-retroactivity provision" of
Because the parties contest only the law that applies to their dispute, and not the facts, our standard of review is de novo.
Although acknowledging that the parties were divorced in 1992 and defendant's cohabitation established in a plenary hearing conducted in 1996, resulting in a final order modifying the amount but not the duration of alimony, the trial court applied the 2014 amendments to
The Legislature, however, included with the 2014 amendments very specific direction regarding the date the legislation would become effective and the judgments, orders, and agreements to which it would not apply.
Reviewing the specific language chosen by the Legislature, we conclude the trial court erred in applying the 2014 amendments to this case.
The parties were divorced in 1992. Incorporated into their judgment of divorce was a property settlement agreement including a specifically bargained for clause governing the duration and amount of alimony. Plaintiff went to court in 1996 to terminate that obligation based on defendant's cohabitation. Applying the law then in effect, the court modified the amount of alimony but did not alter its duration.
Accordingly, the parties' post-judgment litigation was concluded in 1997 with the entry of a final order for a reduced amount of permanent alimony based on the alimony clause the parties bargained for in their property settlement agreement incorporated in their judgment of divorce, modified by the court in light of defendant's cohabitation in accordance with then-existing law. Because the Legislature has commanded that the 2014 amendments not be construed to modify the duration of alimony ordered or agreed upon, or to modify specifically bargained for contractual provisions incorporated into an enforceable written agreement between the parties, a judgment of divorce, or a final order concluding post-judgment litigation, all of which applied here, the court plainly erred in relying on the amendments to modify the permanent alimony previously ordered in this case.
We reject plaintiff's argument that
Because the parties agree that plaintiff limited his application to defendant's cohabitation, and counsel for plaintiff advised that plaintiff's age would, at this point, provide no basis for changed circumstances under
Because we conclude the 2014 amendments to the alimony statute are not applicable to this matter, we reverse the trial court's December 19, 2014 order terminating alimony and remand for entry of an order reinstating plaintiff's alimony obligation retroactive to that order on such terms as the court deems equitable and just. We do not retain jurisdiction.
Reversed.