You apparently missed the OP's question about making a claim against his wife's "higher earning potential" due to the education she received during the marriage, which I quoted right before I provided the excerpt from Berger. The summary of the law, as provided by Berger and as quoted above, describes the extent to which you can make a claim against a spouse's advanced degree within the context of divorce. Yes, you can also read the cases cited in Berger through the links I provided if you want more detail. I doubt that his wife's "advanced training", whatever it is, would qualify as the type of degree for which you could make an equitable claim under Berger and the cases it cites, but we don't have the details and that is the governing law.

