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BY CHAU LAM
STAFF WRITER
August 12, 2004
Gail Ozkan's husband admitted he'd had an extramarital affair but a State
Supreme Court justice in Suffolk recently ruled that was not enough to end the
couple's 17-year marriage and refused to grant her a divorce.
"How could this be?," Ozkan, 43, of Mount Sinai, said Wednesday. "I was stunned,
actually."
But even if Ozkan had other proof that her husband, Okan Ozkan, also 43, had
committed adultery, the fact that she resumed a sexual relationship with him
after learning about his affair is tantamount to "forgiveness," Justice William
J. Kent said in his Aug. 2 decision.
"Adultery cannot be established solely by the admission or confession of the
defendant. Rather, there must be additional corroborating evidence which
supports the finding of adultery," Kent said in his four-page decision, denying
Gail Ozkan's request for divorce. "Moreover, merely the general admission by the
defendant, that he had an affair with someone other than his wife is not, by
itself, an admission that he engaged in adultery within the statutory
definition."
Like it or not, that's the law in New York State, said Pia Riverso, a
matrimonial lawyer in Uniondale. "It's unfortunate for the parties involved but
it's not a bizarre decision," Riverso said Wednesday.
Riverso and legal experts said most couples don't challenge each other on the
grounds for divorce. But in cases where there is a challenge, it is the burden
of the person seeking a divorce to show that the spouse has committed acts such
as adultery, cruelty, or desertion.
Currently, there is a move to get lawmakers in Albany to adopt a different law
-- one similar to those in states such as California and Florida -- where
grounds for divorce are as uncomplex as irreconcilable differences.
Vincent Stempel Jr., a matrimonial lawyer in Garden City and chairman of New
York State Bar Association Family Law Section, said his organization voted in
June to lobby lawmakers to make the changes.
"It's long overdue," Stempel said. "It decreases counsel fees and frees up
valuable court time."
Okan Ozkan, who owns and operates two gas stations, couldn't be reached for
comment Wednesday.
Gail Ozkan's attorney, Gloria May Rosenblum of East Islip, said Ozkan's husband
will not agree to a divorce unless she takes the settlement he's offering.
Okan Ozkan's attorney, Deborah Poulos of Hauppauge, said Rosenblum's statement
was "sour grapes" but would not say why her client didn't want a divorce.
In a phone interview, Gail Ozkan said that after she confronted her husband
about the affair, he promised to break it off and work to keep their marriage
together. But several months later she said she learned through friends that her
husband was still involved in the affair.
During the divorce proceedings before Kent, the question of whether her husband
was having an adulterous relationship came up. However, Okan Ozkan refused to
answer and invoked his Fifth Amendment right. In New York State, adultery is
considered a crime.
Tuesday night was the first time the couple saw each other since the court
decision, Gail Ozkan said. Her husband came by to take their son, 14, and
daughter, 12, out for ice cream.
"When he is here it's very tense, at best," said Gail Ozkan.
Poulos said Okan Ozkan still lives at the Mount Sinai home. Gail Ozkan said he
stays there only sporadically.
The couple talks to each other only when it's necessary, she said. She plans to
appeal Kent's decision. If that fails, she will file for divorce, again.
"I can't live like this. My children can't live like this. This is an unsuitable
life," she said.
Copyright © 2004, Newsday, Inc.