Rogers v. Rogers , 2014 Ark. App. LEXIS 225 ( 2014 )


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  •                                 Cite as 
    2014 Ark. App. 192
    ARKANSAS COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION IV
    No. CV-12-1093
    Opinion Delivered   March 19, 2014
    BROOK A. ROGERS                        APPEAL FROM THE PULASKI
    COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT,
    APPELLANT FIFTEENTH DIVISION
    [NO.DR-2004-720]
    V.
    HONORABLE RICHARD A.
    DENA A. ROGERS                                   MOORE, JR., JUDGE
    APPELLEE
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    BRANDON J. HARRISON, Judge
    Brook Rogers appeals the Pulaski County Circuit Court’s decision ordering him to
    pay Dena Rogers certain marital retirement benefits. Brook argues that the circuit court
    erred in ruling that he owed Dena $40,709.85 in retirement benefits. We reverse the
    court’s order that awarded Dena $40,709.85 and remand the case for further proceedings.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    Brook and Dena married in June 1993 and divorced in March 2005. The March
    2005 divorce decree divided their property, including individual retirement accounts.
    Approximately three years after the divorce decree was entered, orders purporting to be
    Qualified Domestic Relations Orders (QDROs) were entered. Arkansas Code Annotated
    section 9-18-101 (Repl. 2009) defines a QDRO as being a state domestic-relations order
    that creates or recognizes an alternate payee’s right to receive benefits of a participant’s
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    retirement plan.    Section 9-18-102(a) (Repl. 2009) empowers circuit courts to enter
    qualified domestic relations orders that reach “any and all retirement annuities and benefits
    of any retirement plan.”
    Some of the delay between the entry of the 2005 divorce decree and the 2008
    QDROs appears to have been attributed to protracted post-decree negotiations between
    the parties and their attorneys. In any event, about two weeks after the QDROs were
    entered, Dena filed a motion for contempt.            She alleged that Brook deposited
    approximately $84,000 of marital funds into an IRA that he opened after the divorce
    decree had been entered and that she was entitled to receive half of the money. The court
    took no action on that motion. Dena filed a second contempt motion in February 2009.
    The court held a hearing in February 2010 on contempt issues and received testimony
    about Brook opening and funding the IRA. The court ruled on the other issues raised at
    the hearing, but it specifically reserved ruling on whether Dena was entitled to some of
    the money in Brook’s retirement accounts.        The court received more evidence and
    testimony on the retirement-account issues at a child-support hearing held in May 2010.
    (More on this shortly.) In August 2012, nearly two years after the final hearing, the court
    entered a written order stating that Brook owed Dena $40,709.85 in marital retirement
    benefits. That order spawned this appeal.
    A. The Retirement Accounts
    We have mentioned an IRA account that Brook claims to have opened with non-
    marital funds after he was divorced from Dena, but a number of other accounts were
    raised in circuit court.
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    Dena owned one retirement account, a Federal Employee Retirement account,
    that was titled solely in her name during the marriage, but it is not at issue in this appeal.
    Brook held three retirement accounts solely in his name during the marriage. Specifically,
    when the divorce decree was entered he held an AT&T (later SBC) Pension Plan; an
    AT&T/SBC 401(k) Savings Plan; and a Janus Fund IRA. Dena has not challenged how
    the circuit court distributed Brook’s AT&T/SBC Pension Plan, so it is not at issue. Only
    the AT&T/SBC 401(k) plan and the Janus Fund IRA are important to this appeal. And
    the two retirement accounts created after the divorce, the 2006 USAA Roth IRA and the
    2008 USAA IRA, are at issue.
    During the hearings held in 2010, Dena argued that, shortly after the 2008 QDROs
    were entered, Brook had “moved and relocated” his AT&T/SBC 401(k) that contained about
    $112,000—and his Janus Fund retirement account that contained about $84,000—to a new
    IRA with USAA. Though the issue is muddled in the record, the bottom line appears to be
    that Brook rolled his AT&T/SBC 401(k) and his Janus Fund account into one large account—
    a USAA IRA—after the divorce was granted but before the 2008 QDROs were entered.
    The July 2008 QDRO, which addressed Brook’s AT&T/SBC 401(k) plan, showed that this
    transfer had likely occurred because the order listed USAA as the plan administrator for the
    401(k). It seems that all the money from the AT&T/SBC 401(k) and the Janus Fund account
    has remained in the USAA IRA since Brook first moved it there in May 2008. Title to the
    USAA IRA is held by the “Brook Rogers Trust.”
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    1. The Janus Fund
    One critical issue was the content and value of the Janus Fund account that Brook held
    solely in his name during the marriage.      Brook testified that he started the Janus Fund
    retirement account in 1983, years before he married Dena. Dena testified at the first hearing in
    February 2010 that the Janus Fund’s value was $9,000 when she and Brook married. Brook
    argued a pre-marital value of nearly $28,000. Brook produced evidence that the Janus Fund
    account contained two separate funds—Fund No. 42 and Fund No. 43—that were
    consolidated under one account number.         At the second hearing in May 2010, Brook
    produced retirement-account statements issued about six months before the marriage showing
    that Janus Fund No. 42 was valued at $13,317.29 and Fund No. 43 (also known as the Janus
    Twenty Fund) was valued at $14,085.55.
    Brook and Dena testified that they jointly contributed around $8,000–$10,000 to
    Brook’s (consolidated) Janus Fund retirement account while married. The couple’s joint tax
    returns support the testimony because they show that Brook claimed a $2,000 IRA deduction
    in 1993, 1994, 1995, and 1996. A Janus Fund statement reported a value of $54,474 in 1996.
    And the parties agreed that the Janus Fund’s total value was around $84,000 when they
    divorced in 2005. Ultimately, the circuit court had to decide how much of the Janus Fund
    money Dena was entitled to receive.
    2. Roth IRA
    Dena also alleged at the first hearing that Brook, in 2006, had opened an $8,000 Roth
    IRA with USAA using marital funds. The evidence Dena presented to link Brook’s post-
    divorce Roth IRA to marital funds was a July 2008 QDRO and the allegation that he had
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    rolled the Roth IRA into the USAA IRA account that was opened in May 2008. The July
    2008 QDRO gave Dena a $4,000 lump-sum payment as alternate payee, but the plan
    administrator and address on the QDRO does not match the plan administrator name and
    address on the Roth USAA IRA account. It came out during the second hearing that federal
    tax regulations do not permit a person to roll over a Roth IRA into a regular IRA account,
    making Dena’s allegation that Brook had rolled over the Roth IRA into the USAA IRA
    unlikely.
    Brook told the court that he funded the Roth IRA with his separate money after the
    divorce decree was entered and produced a check he had written for $8,000. The check has
    the payor as Brook A. Rogers, Trustee the Brook A. Rogers Trust. The payee is USAA
    Federal Savings Bank. The check is dated January 2006. Regarding the July 2008 QDRO,
    he argued that it applied to the USAA regular IRA account that held the money from the
    Janus Fund and his 401(k), not to his Roth IRA. He maintained that Dena was not entitled to
    the Roth IRA money and that she should only receive one-half of the marital contributions
    made to the Janus Fund during the marriage, which was $4,000. Dena stated that a QDRO
    has never accounted for the $84,000 from the Janus Fund.
    B. Expert Witness Jim Pearson
    Dena called a certified public account, Jim Pearson, as her expert witness. Pearson was
    the only expert who appeared in the case, and he provided the court with several spreadsheets
    and flowcharts to explain why Dena was entitled to particular sums from the Janus Fund and
    Brook’s other retirement accounts, including his AT&T/SBC 401(k). On direct examination,
    Pearson testified that Dena should get $20,522.93 from the Janus Fund, a number, which at
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    the time of the final hearing, was directly traceable to the USAA IRA. Pearson based this
    figure on the growth of the contributions that Brook and Dena had made to the account while
    married. He also told the court how he calculated interest and the amount of interest Brook
    owed to Dena since the divorce. Pearson said that Dean should receive $5,010.08 ($4,000 plus
    interest) from the Roth IRA, and $9,864.66 ($7,875.85 plus interest) from Brook’s
    AT&T/SBC 401(k). According to Pearson, the total amount of Brook’s retirement benefits
    that Dena was entitled to receive was $40,658.18. This number was a stone’s throw from the
    amount the circuit court did award.
    Speaking of the proof, there was some debate over what documents Pearson had access
    to while preparing his report. Pearson undoubtedly saw some of the documents for the first
    time on cross-examination. More important to this appeal is Pearson’s statement on cross-
    examination that he had used approximately $11,000 as the starting account balance for the
    Janus Fund. He did not, however, combine the totals of Fund No. 42 and Fund No. 43
    because they were “two separate funds” in his opinion. Although the three tax returns he had
    while preparing his report only showed that the couple declared $6,000 in deductions for IRA
    contributions for Brook while married, Pearson maintained that Brook and Dena contributed
    $9,155 of marital money to the Janus Fund account in 1994, but he did not fully explain how
    he arrived at $9,155. On redirect, Pearson stated that he was confident that his calculations of
    Dena’s marital interest in the Janus Fund were accurate because the 1996 Janus Fund statement
    showing a balance of $54,474.50 was one of his “source documents.” Later, however, Pearson
    acknowledged that if he had mistakenly added a non-retirement account to his retirement
    calculation, then every subsequent retirement-related calculation would be affected.
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    C. The Circuit Court’s Ruling
    At the end of the May 2010 hearing, the court made these oral findings on the
    retirement-account issues:
    Misplaced hope that all documents would be exchanged that were
    material and apparently they were not because inadvertently or otherwise Mr.
    Rogers has based some of his argument and calculations on documents that
    were not produced . . . pursuant to the last order that was an attempt to get a
    base number of whatever was premarital. And, again, I am plowing the same
    ground figuring in what was marital contributions and the appropriate interest
    on the marital contributions and whatever the previous years’ interest as
    compounded in these retirements. The situation that we end up with is back
    [to] where we were before. Except at this point and time I have a CPA saying
    with the source documents he had he has made these calculations. And that his
    calculation if my addition is correct on the slight adjustment from his source
    document to the total that he sees is owed as marital funds is $40,709.85[,]
    [w]hich is adding $51.67 to the total on the first page of Plaintiff’s Exhibit 14 [.]
    Mr. Rogers contends that there were situations involved where non or
    premarital funds were added into the calculations that should have been
    excluded or deducted. He contends that everybody got their IRA funds
    although the decree states there is $7,000.00 that was owed over to the Plaintiff
    at the time of the decree. No evidence one way or the other where those funds
    are. And, again, one of the problems is that we have taken different funds
    merged, rolled, and so forth into other accounts.
    The only cohesive calculation and paper trail that has been produced
    here has been from [Dena]. [I]f I haven’t helped [Brook] mark his exhibits, he
    wouldn’t even have a record in this case. The situation of proving anything as a
    nonmarital asset is charged to the Defendant who claims it to be nonmarital.
    These accounts existed during marriage and were either merged or rolled into
    other accounts during or post decree. . . . I have attempted with what I think is
    unusual patience to allow everybody the opportunity to get whatever document
    before one another to try to compute an accurate amount. . . . [Y]et today some
    document that Mr. Rogers thinks is a key document is produced that was not
    produced before, and he states that it wasn’t available to him or didn’t have it
    prior. Obviously he got it prior to our hearing today, and the same should have
    been given if he wanted it considered.
    So it appears to me from the proof today, from the testimony that I have
    received, that the proper amount that is due to Dena Rogers is the $40,709.85.
    And Mr. Rogers you can throw your hands up and so forth.
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    ....
    The order of the Court is there is owed that amount pursuant to the
    previous decree, the QDROs, all orders that have been entered in this matter.
    One of the problems is that even after the time and before the retirement funds
    were divided, these funds were commingled, were rolled, and funded into other
    accounts.
    The court’s final written order states: “[Brook] owes [Dena] as marital retirement
    benefits the sum of $40,709.85. This amount shall be transferred to [Dena] by Qualified
    Domestic Relations Order within ten (10) days of entry of this order.”
    II. Analysis
    Brook’s appellate argument boils down to the contention that Pearson’s calculation of
    the marital retirement benefits was wrong and the court’s award to Dena is likewise mistaken
    because the court relied upon Pearson’s opinion when it awarded her $40,709.85.
    Here are the particular mathematical errors that Brook alleges that Pearson and the
    court made below and which require us to reverse:
    • Pearson’s beginning balance of non-marital funds was wrong
    because he started with $11,533.66 when he should have started
    with between $27–28,000 based on the money in Funds No. 42
    and 43 in the Janus Fund account. In other words, Pearson
    mistakenly decided to treat Funds No. 42 and 43 as separate
    accounts rather than one account. In Brook’s view, Pearson’s
    initial error adversely affected his subsequent calculations, all of
    which the circuit court in turn mistakenly relied on.
    • The $11,155.88 shown in Pearson’s worksheet as a marital
    contribution in 1994 was incorrect because there was no
    accounting of where that money came from and the parties’
    testimony contradicts Pearson’s conclusion that a marital
    contribution equaling $11,155.88 was made in 1994. This means,
    according to Brook, that Pearson’s total marital contribution value
    ($19,155.88) was also incorrect because the couple’s joint tax
    returns, and their testimony at the hearing, reflect that they did
    not contribute more than $10,000 to the account while married.
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    • Pearson used the July 2008 $4,000 QDRO to calculate Dena’s
    interest in Brook’s Roth IRA when the Roth IRA was created
    after the divorce with non-marital funds. The account that the
    QDRO applied to was the regular USAA IRA, so if anything the
    $4,000 QDRO should apply to that account.
    Equity cases are reviewed de novo and “a complete review of the evidence and record
    may take place as part of the appellate review to determine whether the trial court clearly erred
    in either making a finding of fact or in failing to do so.” Duncan v. Duncan, 
    2011 Ark. 348
    , at
    8, 
    383 S.W.3d 833
    , 838. A circuit court’s findings of fact may not be set aside unless they are
    clearly erroneous. 
    Id. A finding
    of fact is clearly erroneous when, although there is evidence
    to support it, we have a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made. 
    Id. If testimony
    or documentary proof shows a questionable basis for an expert’s opinion, then the
    issue becomes a credibility call that the fact-finder must make. See Winn v. Winn Enters., Ltd.
    P’ship, 
    100 Ark. App. 134
    , 
    265 S.W.3d 125
    (2007).
    Brook and Dena seem to agree on one thing: the circuit court relied on Pearson’s
    expert opinion in deciding how much money Dena should receive as marital retirement
    benefits. We agree, and must therefore side with Brook’s contention that the court erred
    by awarding more than $40,000 in retirement benefits to Dena based on Pearson’s
    calculations. To start, there was no evidence that Brook funded his $8,000 Roth IRA
    with marital funds. The proof was to the contrary; he submitted (unrebutted)
    documentary proof that he opened the account, after the divorce, with his separate
    money.    Because the Roth account was opened after the divorce and with Brook’s
    separate money, the court erred when it included the Roth IRA money (Pearson’s
    “figured interest on $4,000”) in its calculation of what Brook owed Dena under the
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    divorce decree. Moreover, we conclude that there was an insufficient basis to apply the
    $4,000 2008 QDRO to the Roth IRA account because the address and plan administrator
    listed on that QDRO did not match the Roth IRA account information.
    Turning to the Janus Fund, there is no evidence of record to support Pearson’s
    calculation of the value of non-marital money in the Janus Fund in 1993. The starting
    non-marital amount Pearson used for the year 1993 was $11,533.66—a number that is not
    close to any numerical figure in any Janus Fund-related document or the other documents
    in the record we have. In contrast, Brook produced specific statements from the Janus
    Fund, one from December 1992 (Fund No. 42) and one from January 1993 (Fund No.
    43), showing in 1993, but before the parties were married that year, that the Janus Fund
    had approximately $27,400 in it. While the Janus Fund retirement money was in two
    different funds (Nos. 42 and 43), both funds had the same Janus Fund account number;
    and that consolidated account number existed when the couple divorced.             Because
    Pearson’s starting non-marital balance for the entire Janus Fund account was clearly
    incorrect, his related calculation of Brook’s marital contribution to the Janus Fund account
    ($19,155.88) was also mistaken. Given these errors, we hold that the court’s award to
    Dena was likewise clearly erroneous. We do so with some empathy, for the circuit court
    was patient and attentive while presiding over what turned out to be a protracted and
    difficult case.
    Nevertheless, we reverse the circuit court’s retirement-benefits award of
    $40,709.85 to Dena and remand this case for proceedings consistent with the 2005 divorce
    decree and the parties’ interests.
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    Reversed and remanded.
    WHITEAKER and WOOD, JJ., agree.
    Robertson Law Firm, PLLC, by: Robert “Chris” Oswalt, for appellant.
    Stephen Cobb, for appellee.
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Document Info

Docket Number: CV-12-1093

Citation Numbers: 2014 Ark. App. 192, 432 S.W.3d 704, 2014 WL 1058304, 2014 Ark. App. LEXIS 225

Judges: Brandon J. Harrison

Filed Date: 3/19/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/19/2024