Opinion
Argued November 4, 1999
January 18, 2000
In an action for the partition of real property, the plaintiff appeals, as limited by his brief, from so much of an order of the Supreme Court, Nassau County (Mahon, J.), dated March 29, 1999, as, upon granting that branch of his motion which was for a declaration that the parties were never married, denied those branches of his motion which were, in effect, to dismiss the defendant's counterclaims and to stay disclosure of financial information until the determination of whether the parties were married.
Riebesehl, Keegan Horowitz, Garden City, N.Y. (Andrea D. Horowitz of counsel), for appellant.
Gerald Kadish, New York, N.Y., for respondent.
LAWRENCE J. BRACKEN, J.P., WILLIAM C. THOMPSON, WILLIAM D. FRIEDMANN and NANCY E. SMITH, JJ.
DECISION ORDER
ORDERED that the order is reversed insofar as appealed from, on the law, with costs, those branches of the motion are granted, the counterclaims are dismissed, and the defendant is precluded from obtaining disclosure of financial information.
As the Supreme Court correctly found, no common-law marriage could have arisen between the parties by their transient cohabitation in hotels in Pennsylvania and Washington, D.C. on several occasions from 1980 to 1988, when the plaintiff was legally married to another woman (see, e.g., Matter of Benjamin, 34 N.Y.2d 27, 30 ;Matter of Watts, 31 N.Y.2d 491, 495 ; Matter of Abbott, 189 A.D.2d 709 ;Cross v. Cross, 146 A.D.2d 302 ). Accordingly, all of the defendant's counterclaims, which were based upon this purported common-law relationship, should have been dismissed. In addition, in the absence of a showing by the defendant that a common-law marriage existed, the plaintiff should have been granted a protective order against her demands for financial disclosure (see, e.g., Cross v. Cross, 112 A.D.2d 62 ; Mari v. Strater, 91 A.D.2d 579 ;Colt v. Colt, 261 App. Div. 787 ; see also, Banon v. Banon, 270 N.Y. 484 ).
BRACKEN, J.P., THOMPSON, FRIEDMANN, and SMITH, JJ., concur.