Appeal from an order of the Supreme Court, Monroe County (John M. Owens, J.), entered September 28, 2011. The order, among other things, denied plaintiffs motion for summary judgment.
It is hereby ordered that the order so appealed from is affirmed without costs.
Memorandum: After plaintiff commenced this divorce action, she moved for, inter alia, summary judgment determining that the parties’ prenuptial agreement is invalid because it was not
We agree with plaintiff that the written certificate of acknowledgment is insufficient because it does not contain the information required by Real Property Law § 303, i.e., that the person taking the acknowledgment “knows or has satisfactory evidence, that the person making it is the person described in and who executed such instrument.” Contrary to defendant’s contention, the certificate was not in “substantial compliance” with the statute, and thus the court’s reliance on Weinstein v Weinstein (36 AD3d 797, 798 [2007]) for that proposition was misplaced. In Weinstein, the language in the certificate failed to conform to the “precise language” of the Real Property Law (id.). Here, however, the certificate fails to “stat[e] all the matters required to be done, known, or proved on the taking of such acknowledgment or proof’ (§ 306). Inasmuch as the certificate is devoid of information required by the Real Property Law, we conclude that it is insufficient on its face and does not establish that the prenuptial agreement was properly acknowledged (see generally Fryer v Rockefeller, 63 NY 268, 272-273 [1875]; Garguilio v Garguilio, 122 AD2d 105, 106 [1986]; Gross v Rowley, 147 App Div 529, 531-532 [1911]).
We agree with defendant that a subsequently-filed affidavit from the notary who took defendant’s acknowledgment raises a triable issue of fact whether the prenuptial agreement was properly acknowledged. Although the dissent correctly notes that defendant does not specifically contend in his brief on appeal that the affidavit cured the defect, we conclude that such a contention is implicit in defendant’s submission of the notary’s affidavit, the only purpose of which was to cure the defect, i.e., to supply the information missing from the contemporaneously-executed acknowledgment. In addition, defendant’s attorney raised that contention at oral argument of this appeal. The issue squarely before us is thus whether defects in such an acknowledgment are subject to cure. We conclude that they are.
We recognize that there is a split of authority on the issue whether such defects may be cured, and this Court has yet to take a position. In Arizin v Covello (175 Misc 2d 453, 457 [1998]), the court held that “an unacknowledged nuptial agreement which is acknowledged on a subsequent date is enforceable in a matrimonial action as long as the subsequent acknowledgment complies with the statutory requirements of Domestic Relations Law § 236 (B) (3)” (see also Hurley v Johnson, 4 Misc 3d 616, 620 [2004]). We cited to Arizin in our decision in Filkins (303 AD2d at 934). In Filkins, however, there was no written certificate of acknowledgment attached to the parties’ prenuptial agreement, and we held that “plaintiffs attempt to cure the defect by having the agreement notarized and filed after commencement of [the] divorce action fail[ed] because the agreement was never reacknowledged in compliance with Domestic Relations Law § 236 (B) (3)” (id. at 934-935). By citing to Arizin, we implicitly endorsed the possibility that a defect in a technically improper acknowledgment accompanying a nuptial agreement could be cured (see id. at 935).
We recognize that the Second Department in D’Elia v D’Elia (14 AD3d 477, 478 [2005]) held that the defendant’s “attempt to cure the acknowledgment defect by submitting a duly-executed certificate of acknowledgment at trial was not sufficient,” but it is not clear from that decision whether there was a contemporaneous acknowledgment that was technically improper. We also recognize that the First Department in Anonymous v Anonymous (253 AD2d 696, 697 [1998], lv dismissed 93
All concur except Centra and Garni, JJ., who dissent and vote to modify in accordance with the following memorandum.