Cooper v. Cooper , 2013 Ark. App. LEXIS 787 ( 2013 )


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  •                                 Cite as 
    2013 Ark. App. 748
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION III
    No. CV-13-58
    Opinion Delivered   December 18, 2013
    LARRY COOPER
    APPELLANT         APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
    FOURTEENTH DIVISION
    V.                                              [NO. DR-2011-4346]
    HONORABLE VANN SMITH, JUDGE
    ANNETTE COOPER
    APPELLEE        AFFIRMED
    JOHN MAUZY PITTMAN, Judge
    In this divorce case, Larry Cooper appeals from the Pulaski County Circuit Court’s
    entry of two qualified domestic relations orders (QDRO) dividing his railroad-retirement
    benefits with his wife, appellee Annette Cooper. We affirm.
    The parties were married in 1963 and separated in September 2011, when appellee
    filed for divorce. At the time of the divorce, the parties owned a marital home in Sherwood
    that was unencumbered and valued at $275,000. Appellee accepted appellant’s offer at trial
    to buy her interest in the home for $130,000. The parties also owned three Scottrade
    accounts valued at $869,000. Before the temporary hearing, they had an account containing
    $135,000 and a $100,043 certificate of deposit at Regions Bank; both parties made
    withdrawals from Regions before trial. They also owned vehicles, a credit-union account,
    and life-insurance policies. During the marriage, appellant worked at Union Pacific Railroad
    and Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad. He retired before the divorce and began receiving
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    retirement benefits from both (administered by Union Pacific and distributed in one payment
    each month).
    The circuit court entered a divorce decree on May 30, 2012, granting appellee a
    divorce. It accepted the parties’ agreement concerning the marital home; ordered the
    Scottrade accounts to be divided equally; ordered appellant to pay appellee $10,135.50 to
    equalize the parties’ withdrawals from Regions Bank; awarded the $300 in the credit-union
    account to appellee (with appellant’s consent); equalized the values of the vehicles it awarded
    to the parties by directing appellee to pay appellant $7,000; ruled that each party would retain
    ownership of his or her life-insurance policy; distributed the remaining items of personal
    property; and directed appellant to pay alimony to appellee in the amount of $1,000 per
    month for twelve months.
    The circuit court addressed the retirement accounts as follows:
    26. Retirement accounts. Both parties are retired. [Appellant] was an
    employee of Union Pacific Railroad and receives a pension from Union Pacific
    Railroad as well as one from the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad.
    27. The Court orders that the parties divide, pursuant to Hisquierdo v.
    Hisquierdo, 
    439 U.S. 573
    , 
    99 S. Ct. 802
    (1979), the Defendant’s Tier 2 benefits. The
    [Appellant] worked at Union Pacific and Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad during the
    parties’ marriage and these benefits should be divided between the parties based on
    the number of years worked at the railroad and the number years of marriage. It is the
    court’s understanding that all of [appellant’s] employment with the railroad occurred
    during the parties’ marriage.
    Appellee filed a motion for reconsideration or to amend the final decree on June 15,
    2012. She asked the court to direct appellant to pay her for her share in the marital home
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    and the Regions account within thirty days and to divide the Union Pacific pension equally
    and/or to increase alimony.1
    1
    Appellee stated:
    6. Prior to the Divorce Decree [appellee] was receiving $1,374.00 per month
    in Tier 1 benefits and $543.41 per month from her Tier 2 benefits for a total
    of $1,917.41 per month. [Appellant] was receiving $2,257.00 per month in Tier
    1 benefits and $1,250.62 per month in Tier 2 benefits. In addition, [appellant]
    receives a pension from Union Pacific in the amount of $2,059.41 per month.
    [Appellant’s] monthly income totaled approximately $5,567.03 per month.
    7. After the Divorce Decree was entered the [appellant’s] Tier 1 benefits were
    reduced to approximately $315.00 per month and she lost all of her Tier 2
    benefits. [Appellant], on the other hand, kept all of his Tier 1 benefits totaling
    $2,257.00 and the Court ordered that [Appellant’s] Tier 2 benefits be divided evenly,
    which equals an amount of $625.31 per person per month. The Court
    acknowledged [appellant] was receiving a pension from the Union Pacific railroad and
    the parties testified at trial that 100% of the pension was earned during the marriage.
    However, the Court did not address the pension further or provide an award of
    [appellee’s] interest in [appellant’s] pension, meaning that [appellant] kept all of his
    pension benefits totaling $2,059.41 per month.
    8. Under this Order [appellee’s] income is reduced to $315.00 (the remainder
    of her Tier 1 benefits) plus $625.31 (half of [appellant’s] Tier 2 benefits) for a total
    of approximately $940.31 per month. [Appellant’s] income remains at $2,257.00
    (the total amount of his Tier 1 benefits) plus $625.31 (half of [appellant’s] Tier 2
    benefits) plus $2,059.41 (the undivided amount of his Union Pacific pension) for a
    total of approximately $4,941.72 per month.
    9. Based on [appellee’s] approximate income of $940.31 per month and
    [appellant’s] approximate income of $4,941.72 per month, the Court has awarded
    [appellant] a monthly income that is over 5 times what [appellee] is receiving per
    month. Additionally, the Court only awarded alimony in the amount $1,000.00 per
    month for a limited 12 months with the burden to prove that she requires additional
    alimony at the expiration of the 12 months.
    10. As noted by the Court, the parties were married for 48 years and [appellee]
    suffers from COPD, emphysema and osteoporosis. This amount of monthly income
    that has currently been awarded will not be sufficient for [appellee] to continue and
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    The circuit court granted the motion for reconsideration on July 16, 2012. It directed
    appellant to pay appellee $140,135.50 within thirty days and stated that appellee had correctly
    pointed out that it had failed to divide appellant’s Union Pacific pension. The court also
    stated: “The Court orders that this pension be divided equally between the parties and that
    any documents necessary to effectuate the division of this asset be prepared by [appellee’s]
    attorney with cooperation from [appellant] and his attorney. In all other respects, the Divorce
    Decree shall be affirmed.”
    On September 26, 2012, using the language provided by Union Pacific, the court
    entered two QDROs (for Union Pacific and for Missouri-Kansas-Texas) that stated that
    appellee was the “alternate payee.” It also provided that following the alternate payee’s
    death, any payments that otherwise would be made to the alternate payee if the alternate
    payee had survived would be made to Tim Cooper (the parties’ adult child). On October
    5, 2012, appellant filed a motion for reconsideration of the QDROs, asserting that they were
    maintain her current lifestyle in her current condition, especially after the termination
    of alimony when [appellee] will return to only receiving an income of $940.31 per
    month compared to the $4,941.72 per month that [appellant] will continue to receive.
    11. Moreover, as there is no dispute that the pension is vested and was earned
    during the course of the marriage, it is appropriate that the Union Pacific pension be
    divided equally between the parties. See Skelton v. Skelton, 
    339 Ark. 227
    , 231 (Ark.
    1999) (finding that Arkansas follows the well-established rule that retirement benefits
    earned during marriage are considered marital property subject to division. See Day
    v. Day, 
    281 Ark. 261
    , 
    663 S.W.2d 719
    (1986); Meinholz v. Meinholz, 
    283 Ark. 509
    ,
    
    678 S.W.2d 348
    (1984)).
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    not qualified under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) because of the
    inclusion of a third party, Tim Cooper. He asserted that Tim was not an “alternate payee”
    within the statute’s meaning.
    Appellant filed a second motion for reconsideration of the QDRO on the Missouri-
    Kansas-Texas Railroad pension on October 12, 2012. He stated:
    6. That no Court Order exist [sic] which Divides [appellant’s] interest in the
    Missouri-Kansas-Texas Pension Plan to support entry of a Qualified Domestic
    Relations Order giving [appellee] any portion of those proceeds.
    7. [Appellant] moves this Court to Reconsider the Qualified Domestic
    Relations Order issued in this case dividing an asset of [appellant’s] which was not
    divided in the parties Decree or in it’s [sic] Order for Reconsideration filed July 16,
    2012.
    8. That without a provision for its division, the Qualified Domestic Relations
    Order pertaining to the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Pension Plan should be withdrawn
    and vacated.
    On November 5, 2012, the trial court denied appellant’s motions for reconsideration,
    stating:
    8. The Supreme Court case, Boggs v. Boggs, 
    520 U.S. 833
    (1997) [cited by
    appellant], is inapplicable to the matter at issue here. In Boggs, the Court was
    addressing whether or not benefits of a non-participant spouse could be passed by
    testamentary devise. There was no QDRO at issue in Boggs; therefore, the Court did
    not rule on the issue of an inclusion of a third-party as an alternate payee in a QDRO.
    9. However, the Court in Boggs did discuss QDROs in dicta. In the opinion,
    the Court defines a QDRO as “a limited exception to the pension plan anti-
    alienation provision and allows courts to recognize a nonparticipant spouse’s
    community property interest in pension plans under specific circumstances.” 
    Id. at 839.
    The Court also recognizes that QDROs “are exempt from both the pension plan
    anti-alienation provision . . . and ERISA’s general preemption clause.” 
    Id. at 846.
           This Court’s reading of the Boggs opinion does not support the proposition that
    [appellee] would be unable to pass her interest in the pension plans to a third-party
    of her choosing.
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    10. [Appellant] also relies on a case decided by the state appellate court in
    California, In re Marriage of Shelstead, 66. Cal. App. 4th 893 (1998). While the court
    in Shelstead invalidated a devise to a third-party that was made in a QDRO, the court
    made the following statement: “We stress the narrowness of our decision. Our
    holding concerns only the order before us today. We do not decide . . . that any
    testamentary devise contained in a QDRO is invalid.” 
    Id. at 904–905.
    11. Most significantly, the decision in Shelstead is in no way binding on this
    Court, and the California court’s interpretation of ERISA is not a primary source of
    law which must be followed by this Court.
    In this order, the circuit court also denied appellant’s second motion for
    reconsideration of the QDRO concerning the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad. It rejected
    appellant’s claim that it had not previously ordered the division of that pension, stating:
    14. However, as stated above, the Decree, entered on May 30, 2012,
    specifically stated that [appellant] receives a pension from Union Pacific and from
    Missouri-Kansas-Texas and that those benefits were to be divided equally among the
    parties. While it is correct that the Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad pension is not
    specifically named in the Order of Reconsideration, filed on July 16, 2012, the Order
    of Reconsideration stated that, “[i]n all other respects, the Divorce Decree shall be
    affirmed.”
    15. Further, it is the understanding of this Court that both pension plans were
    earned during the marriage and that [appellant] receives the payments from both
    pensions in a single payment. Based on these facts, it is unreasonable that the pensions
    would be divided differently.
    16. Therefore, this Court has previously ordered the division of the Missouri-
    Kansas-Texas pension plan, and as such, the QDRO related to that plan was proper,
    and [appellant’s] Motion is denied.
    Appellant then pursued this appeal.
    We review traditional equity cases on both factual and legal questions de novo on the
    record, but will not reverse a finding of fact by the trial court unless it is clearly erroneous.
    Allen v. Allen, 
    99 Ark. App. 292
    , 
    259 S.W.3d 480
    (2007). We do not defer to the trial
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    court’s determinations of law. 
    Id. When the
    issues on appeal do not involve factual
    questions but rather the application of a legal doctrine, we determine whether the appellee
    was entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Spears v. ReconTrust Co., N.A., 
    2013 Ark. App. 272
    .
    Appellant argues in his first point that Tim’s designation as the recipient of appellee’s
    benefits if she predeceases appellant prevents the QDROs from being in compliance with
    ERISA’s requirements. ERISA is a comprehensive federal statutory scheme designed to
    protect the interests of employees and their beneficiaries in employee benefit plans. Boggs
    v. Boggs, 
    520 U.S. 833
    , 845 (1997). It contains a preemption clause providing that its
    provisions preempt any state law relating to an employee-benefit plan. 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a)
    (2006). ERISA also contains an anti-alienation or spendthrift provision, stating, “Each
    pension plan shall provide that benefits provided under the plan may not be assigned or
    alienated.” 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(1) (2006). Congress included the spendthrift provision to
    protect employees and their dependents from the participant’s financial improvidence and
    to ensure benefits were available upon retirement. See Guidry v. Sheet Metal Workers National
    Pension Fund, 
    493 U.S. 365
    , 376 (1990).
    Soon after ERISA’s enactment, courts struggled with whether the transfer of pension
    benefits incident to a divorce was a prohibited assignment or alienation. To address this
    issue, Congress amended ERISA in the Retirement Equity Act of 1984 (REA). Ablamis v.
    Roper, 
    937 F.2d 1450
    (9th Cir. 1991). Congress sought to protect the rights of nonemployee
    spouses and dependents by allowing state courts to make equitable divisions of property in
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    a divorce or dissolution and provision for support of dependents. 
    Id. It did
    not permit all
    interspousal transfers of pension benefits upon divorce, however. It declared that the transfers
    of pension benefits between spouses in a divorce context were prohibited alienations within
    the meaning of the anti-alienation provision, but set forth a limited exception to the rule if
    the order is determined to be a QDRO. 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(A). Thus, a court may
    divide spousal rights in pension benefits through the mechanism of a QDRO and award the
    nonemployee spouse her appropriate share of those benefits if the domestic-relations order
    is a “qualified” one as defined in the REA. Consistent with this language, Congress added
    an exception to the preemption provision, stating that it would not apply to QDROs. 29
    U.S.C. § 1144(b)(7).
    A QDRO is any judgment, decree, or order made pursuant to a state domestic-
    relations law that (1) “creates or recognizes the existence of an alternate payee’s right to, or
    assigns to an alternate payee the right to, receive all or a portion of the benefits payable with
    respect to a participant under a plan,” and (2) “relates to the provision of child support,
    alimony payments, or marital property rights to a spouse, former spouse, child, or other
    dependent of a participant.” 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(B). “Alternate payee” is defined as “any
    spouse, former spouse, child, or other dependent of a participant.” 29 U.S.C. §
    1056(d)(3)(K).
    Appellant contends that Tim is not an “alternate payee” because he is an adult child
    and is no longer dependent upon appellant. He states that ERISA does not define “child”;
    therefore, the IRS definition, which “clearly defines child as under the age of 19 or under
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    the age of 24 if they’re a full-time student,” applies. He adds: “It is clear from the wording
    of the statute that only dependents of the participant would be considered alternate payee and
    therefore be eligible to receive any benefit from the plan.” Other than referring to his
    counsel’s argument at the October 31, 2012 hearing, appellant cites no authority for these
    assertions. We will not consider an argument on appeal that has no citation to authority or
    convincing legal argument, nor will we research or develop an argument for an appellant.
    
    ReconTrust, supra
    .
    It is true that Congress did not intend to classify state court orders effecting
    testamentary transfers as QDROs. In 
    Boggs, supra
    , the United States Supreme Court held
    that ERISA preempts state law permitting a predeceasing nonemployee spouse to transfer
    undistributed pension benefits by testamentary 
    instrument. 520 U.S. at 842
    –54. Unlike the
    case before this court, however, Boggs did not concern a domestic-relations order. We agree
    with the trial court’s conclusion that the California Court of Appeals’s decision in Shelstead
    v. Shelstead, 
    78 Cal. Rptr. 2d 365
    (Cal. Ct. App. 1998), is not on point because the domestic-
    relations order in that case simply gave the non-employee spouse the right to name a
    “successor in interest.” 
    Id. at 366.
    In the absence of any authority to support appellant’s
    argument, we affirm on this point.
    In his second point, appellant contends that the QDRO for the Missouri-Kansas-
    Texas Railroad was an impermissible modification of the divorce decree because it was
    entered more than ninety days after the divorce decree and because Arkansas Code
    Annotated section 9-12-315 (Repl. 2009) does not authorize a division of marital property
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    after the divorce decree has been entered, in the absence of fraud or other grounds for relief
    from the original judgment. We disagree.
    Arkansas Rule of Civil Procedure 60(a) provides that a court may modify or vacate
    a judgment, order, or decree within ninety days of its filing “[t]o correct errors or mistakes
    or to prevent the miscarriage of justice.” Under subsection (b), it may correct clerical
    mistakes at any time. Subsection (c) authorizes the setting aside of a judgment after ninety
    days for circumstances not applicable here.
    The trial court’s entry of a QDRO past the ninety-day deadline found in Rule 60(a)
    was not an improper modification of the decree in this case. Trial courts have an inherent
    power to enter orders correcting their judgments where necessary to make them speak the
    truth and reflect actions accurately. Harrison v. Bradford, 
    9 Ark. App. 156
    , 
    655 S.W.2d 466
    (1983). However, this power is confined to correction of the record to make it conform to
    the action that was actually taken at the time, and does not permit a decree or order to be
    modified to provide for action that the court, in retrospect, should have taken but which,
    in fact, did not take. Jones v. Jones, 
    26 Ark. App. 1
    , 
    759 S.W.2d 42
    (1988).
    In this case, the trial court ruled that in the divorce decree, it had attempted to make
    an equal division of all of appellant’s retirement benefits. It is clear to us that the QDRO did
    not alter the decree but, instead, interpreted it and clarified the meaning of the provision
    dividing appellant’s retirement benefits. Entering an order to interpret the decree and to
    enforce its terms falls squarely within the trial court’s authority to make the record speak the
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    truth. Hapney v. Hapney, 
    37 Ark. App. 100
    , 
    824 S.W.2d 408
    (1992); Ford v. Ford, 30 Ark.
    App. 147, 
    783 S.W.2d 879
    (1990). Accordingly, we reject this argument.
    Affirmed.
    HARRISON and WYNNE, JJ., agree.
    Wallace, Martin, Duke & Russell, PLLC, by: Dale B. Duke, for appellant.
    No response.
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