New York Post

NY GEM WARFARE

40G engage ring finally returned

- By REBECCA ROSENBERG

A man’s five-year fight to get his $40,000 engagement ring back after his relationsh­ip crashed and burned finally came to an end last week after a judge ordered his defiant ex-fiancée to return it.

Rodney Ripley, 54, proposed to former American Red Cross staffer Jennifer Rutten, 50, on the Brooklyn Bridge on Dec. 5, 2011, with a 3-carat cushion-cut stone set in a Tacori ring.

Ripley, of Wisconsin, proposed to Rutten in New York because she was working and living here at the time. But the couple split less than a year later without getting hitched and Ripley asked for the ring back.

“I was dealing with the aftermath of Hurricane Sandy and he started harassing me,” Rutten said of her ex’s requests for the ring.

Ripley sued her in Manhattan Supreme Court and Rutten’s attorneys tried many maneuvers to keep the stunning sparkler.

Her lawyer, William Costigan, argued that the ring was worth less than $13,000 — far below the $25,000 civil-court threshold, according to Manhattan court papers.

But a receipt, filed by Ripley’s attorney, Bruce Connolly, showed his client had paid $39,057.10 for the ring and had it insured for $40,000.

According to New York law, if no marriage occurs, the ring must be returned — and the reasons for the breakup are irrelevant, Connolly told The Post.

Rutten also tried to cling to the bling by arguing that she split town in 2013, returning to Milwaukee, Wis., where the couple had originally met — and, consequent­ly, where Manhattan didn’t have jurisdicti­on.

Finally, Rutten accused Ripley in a 2017 deposition of being cruel to her during their courtship.

“From what I recall, he became angrier, he became more typically abusive, emotionall­y abusive,” she said. “I was angry, I didn’t want to return it.”

But no evidence was produced to back up her claims, and a judge finally granted Ripley’s motion for summary judgment.

“Here the undisputed facts show that the ring was given in contemplat­ion of marriage and that marriage did not occur,” Justice Robert Reed wrote in an Aug. 27 decision. “Thus, Ripley is entitled to the return of the ring.”

Rutten has 45 days to return the diamond dazzler or pay her ex $39,057.10, the order states.

“We were always certain that both the law and the facts were on our client’s side,” said Connolly. “I’m sure the court’s decision will bring our client closure from what has been a lengthy and emotionall­y draining process.”

Costigan and Rutten didn’t immediatel­y return a request for comment.

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