The wife, in her proposed rationale, took the position that a disposition of the husband's interest in the 2004 trust should not be made on an “if and when received” basis. Relying, in part, on Krintzman v. Honig, 73 Mass.App.Ct. 1124, 901 N.E.2d 730 (2009) (a case decided pursuant to Appeals Court rule 1:28), she asserted that such an approach is inappropriate (and essentially constitutes an illusory division) when it could enable the trustees to make distributions in a manner that would prevent her from obtaining the value of the marital asset to which she is entitled. The majority makes note of what it considers machinations on the part of the trustees to discontinue trust payments to the husband on the eve of the divorce filing in an effort to paint the husband's interest as remote and speculative where it never had been previously.