in-re-the-marriage-of-mary-k-boland-chambers-and-ryan-p-chambers-upon-the ( 2015 )


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  •                     IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA
    No. 14-0920
    Filed April 22, 2015
    IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF MARY K. BOLAND-CHAMBERS
    AND RYAN P. CHAMBERS
    Upon the Petition of
    MARY K. BOLAND-CHAMBERS, n.k.a MARY K. BOLAND,
    Petitioner-Appellee,
    And Concerning
    RYAN P. CHAMBERS,
    Respondent-Appellant.
    ________________________________________________________________
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Linn County, Sean W. McPartland,
    Judge.
    A husband appeals the district court’s refusal to add language to a QDRO
    to protect his interest in his former wife’s IPERS pension and the court’s decision
    to set aside gifts, inheritance, and premarital property to his wife. AFFIRMED AS
    MODIFIED.
    Karen A. Volz of Ackley, Kopecky & Kingery, Cedar Rapids, for appellant.
    Kodi A. Brotherson of Babich Goldman, P.C., Des Moines, for appellee.
    Heard by Vogel, P.J., McDonald, J., and Scott, S.J.*
    *Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206 (2015).
    2
    VOGEL, P.J.
    Ryan Chambers appeals the district court’s ruling in this dissolution
    proceeding, asserting the district court should have ordered certain provisions be
    included in the qualified domestic relations order (QDRO) that would protect his
    interest in his former wife, Mary Boland-Chambers’s, IPERS pension.
    Alternatively, he asks that we value the IPERS at its refund value as of the date
    of trial and order Mary to make a property equalization payment to account for
    the disparate award.    He also claims the court should not have set aside
    premarital, gifted, and inherited funds Mary received before and during the
    marriage. In addition both parties request an award of appellate attorney fees.
    Because we conclude the IPERS account should be valued at its refund value
    and included in the property distribution with an equalization payment made to
    Ryan, we modify the dissolution decree; however, we affirm the remainder of the
    decree.
    I. Background Facts and Proceedings.
    Ryan and Mary were married in 1998, and two children were born of the
    union. Mary filed a dissolution proceeding in 2012, and the case proceeded to
    trial in December 2013. In the dissolution decree entered in March 2014, the
    court decided issues of child custody, physical care, child support, and property
    division; however, only the property division issues related to the parties’
    retirement accounts and funds set aside to Mary have been raised on appeal.
    II. Scope and Standard of Review.
    We review dissolution actions de novo as they are heard in equity. In re
    Marriage of McDermott, 
    827 N.W.2d 671
    , 676 (Iowa 2013). “[W]e examine the
    3
    entire record and adjudicate anew the issue of the property distribution.” 
    Id. While we
    give weight to the findings of the district court, particularly concerning
    the credibility of witnesses, we are not bound by those findings. 
    Id. However, “[w]e
    will disturb the district court’s ruling only when there has been a failure to do
    equity.” 
    Id. (quotation marks
    and citations omitted).
    III. QDRO Language.
    Ryan appeals the district court’s rulings that rejected his request for
    certain language to be included in the QDRO that will be filed in relation to Mary’s
    IPERS account.       He is requesting language to (1) name him as Mary’s
    “contingent annuitant” in order for him to receive a 50% joint and survivor death
    benefit, (2) name him as a beneficiary with respect to the pre-retirement death
    benefits where he would receive the same percentage of death benefits as he
    would receive upon Mary’s retirement, (3) restrict Mary from requesting a refund
    from the IPERS account without his consent, and (4) provide him a share of any
    benefit increase afforded to Mary such as cost of living increases, dividends, or
    any other postretirement increase in the same proportion as he would receive
    upon Mary’s retirement. Ryan claims without these provisions, his court ordered
    interest in Mary’s IPERS account is speculative, totally dependent on Mary’s
    future actions.    He claims without these provisions, if Mary dies before
    retirement, he would receive nothing; Mary could request the refund value of her
    account prior to retirement, leaving him with nothing; Mary could elect a
    retirement option where the benefits would cease upon Mary’s death; Mary could
    select a survivor annuitant who would receive his share upon Mary’s death; and
    he would not receive his share of increases that occur over the life of the
    4
    pension. In the alternative, he requests we value the IPERS account at its refund
    value and order Mary to make a property equalization payment to account for the
    disparate award.
    Mary first asserts the district court correctly refused to require the
    additional language in the QDRO because Ryan failed to make this request at
    trial or offer any evidence in support of his request. She points out that Ryan
    requested the court use the refund value of the IPERS account, where she asked
    the court to divide the account under “the percentage method of division” which
    uses the formula articulated in In re Marriage of Benson, 
    545 N.W.2d 252
    , 255
    (Iowa 1996).1 Mary claims Ryan did not introduce any evidence to support his
    request until after the district court ruled on the posttrial motions.
    In reviewing the record in this case, we note in the Joint Pretrial
    Statement, Mary proposed each party be awarded their own retirement accounts
    free and clear of any claim by the other party, whereas Ryan asked that the
    accounts be valued as of the date of trial and Mary be ordered to pay him an
    equalization payment in light of the fact that the value of her retirement accounts
    significantly exceeded the value of his. However, at trial, Mary changed position
    1
    The Benson court articulated a formula to be applied to defined-benefit pension plans
    in order to divide the retirement account upon the dissolution of a marriage. The formula
    is computed as follows:
    A fraction is first computed, the numerator being the number of years
    during the marriage [benefits accrued] under the pension plan . . . and the
    denominator being the total number of years . . . benefits accrued prior to
    maturity (i.e., receipt of payments upon retirement). This fraction
    represents the percentage of [the] pension attributable to the parties’ joint
    marital efforts. This figure is then multiplied by [the spouse’s] share of the
    marital assets (fifty percent). Finally this second figure is multiplied by
    [the] total accrued monthly benefit upon maturity (retirement) to calculate
    [the spouse’s] share.
    
    Benson, 545 N.W.2d at 255
    . This has come to be known as the Benson formula.
    5
    and requested her IPERS account be divided based on the Benson formula. She
    also reiterated the request in her posttrial brief. As a result of this change in
    position, Ryan, in his posttrial brief, agreed the IPERS account should be divided
    using the Benson formula but also asserted specific language should be added
    to the QDRO to protect his right to receive future benefits.
    The district court ordered the IPERS account be divided using the Benson
    formula, providing Ryan a 50% share2 of the marital portion of the account and
    ordering Mary’s counsel to draft the QDRO.         The court specifically rejected
    Ryan’s request that Mary be required to name him as a “contingent annuitant” of
    postretirement death benefits, finding instead Mary should be free to name the
    children or others as the beneficiaries, “particularly since Mary presumably will
    continue to accrue IPERS benefits after the dissolution and prior to her
    retirement.” The court did not address the other language Ryan requested be
    included in the QDRO.
    Both Ryan and Mary filed posttrial motions under Iowa Rule of Civil
    Procedure 1.904(2).     Ryan again requested the court order the proposed
    language be included in the QDRO. In response, Mary provided the court with a
    copy of the QDRO that her attorney had prepared and conceded she would be
    willing to include a provision restricting her from requesting a refund from the
    account without Ryan’s consent. However, she objected to the other provisions
    Ryan had requested be included in the QDRO and also attached a document
    2
    Mary had argued Ryan should only receive a 25% share of the martial portion of the
    account. However, Mary started her employment with the State of Iowa in 1998—the
    same year the parties were married. Thus, the entire amount of the IPERS pension was
    marital as of the date of the dissolution trial.
    6
    entitled “IPERS QDRO Instruction Packet” to her resistance for the court’s
    information. The court summarily denied Ryan’s posttrial motion on this issue.
    Ryan then requested a hearing on the entry of the QDRO where he once
    again requested the provisions be included to protect this future interest in Mary’s
    IPERS account.      At the hearing, Ryan offered, and the court accepted, the
    testimony from Greg Schochenmaier, general counsel for IPERS, who testified
    regarding the various provisions Ryan wanted included in the QDRO and what
    those provisions accomplished. In rejecting Ryan’s request again, the district
    court noted the evidence at trial regarding the retirement accounts “was not
    thorough, to say the least.” The court considered the testimony offered at the
    hearing and declined to revise its rule 1.904(2) ruling related to the distribution of
    the retirement assets. The court stated it would enter a QDRO conforming to the
    requirements of the decree upon its submission by Mary’s counsel.
    We conclude there are no error preservation concerns as Ryan raised the
    issue of the requested QDRO provisions at the earliest opportunity—when he
    was made aware at trial that Mary had changed her position regarding the
    distribution of the IPERS account and was seeking for the account to be divided
    by a QDRO under the Benson formula. The specific language was included in
    Ryan’s posttrial brief and his counsel also included IPERS information to the
    court for consideration in drafting the decree. It appears either the court did not
    see the information/request or decided against the language. The court then
    continued to reject the language offered on two more occasions—in the 1.904(2)
    motion decision and the hearing on the entry of the QDRO.              See Meier v.
    Senecaut, 
    641 N.W.2d 532
    , 537 (Iowa 2002) (“It is a fundamental doctrine of
    7
    appellate review that issues must ordinarily be both raised and decided by the
    district court before we will decide them on appeal.”).
    We next consider how to equitably divide Mary’s IPERS account. Ryan
    asserts that if the IPERS account is divided with a QDRO, language must be
    added to protect his future interest. In the alternative, he requests that instead of
    dividing the IPERS account with a QDRO we use the refund value of the account
    in the property distribution settlement and order Mary to pay him a property
    settlement payment equal to his share of the account.           Mary requests the
    account be divided by a QDRO and conceded in the district court posttrial
    motions that she would agree to add language restricting her from taking the
    refund value of the account unless she first obtains Ryan’s signature—paragraph
    c “[Mary] may not request a refund without [Ryan’s] consent.” We agree the
    addition of that language would protect Ryan’s interest in the IPERS account if it
    were to be divided via a QDRO. The other three provisions Ryan requested are
    below:
    a. [Mary] shall name [Ryan] as her contingent annuitant
    under IPERS Option 4. [Ryan] shall receive a 50% joint and
    survivor death benefit payment under this option.
    b. [Ryan] shall be deemed to be a designated beneficiary
    with respect to pre-retirement death benefits under IPERS. [Ryan]
    shall be awarded the same percentage of death benefits as
    determined under the Benson formula.
    ....
    d. [Ryan] shall receive a share of any benefit increase to
    [Mary,] including cost of living, dividends or any other
    postretirement increase in the same proportion as the Benson
    formula.
    Ryan claims these provisions protect his portion of Mary’s account in the event of
    Mary’s death, either preretirement (paragraph b) or postretirement (paragraph a).
    8
    He also claims the provisions permit him to benefit from any increase in the
    account that occurs after Mary retires but before the plan ceases (paragraph d).
    It should be noted the district court did specifically consider and reject the
    provision outlined in paragraph (a) in the dissolution decree. The court stated:
    The Court agrees with Mary that Ryan’s request for an order that
    Mary name Ryan as a “contingent annuitant” under IPERS Option 4
    is not appropriate here. The Court agrees that Mary should be free
    to name the children or other beneficiaries as the beneficiary of her
    death benefits under IPERS in the circumstances here, particularly
    since Mary presumably will continue to accrue IPERS benefits after
    the dissolution and prior to her retirement.
    Ryan concedes the postretirement death benefit language under option 4, would
    restrict Mary’s choice of retirement payment options as that option has a lower
    monthly benefit amount due to the postretirement death annuity, but he claims
    without this language any interest he has in Mary’s IPERS account would
    completely disappear at the time of her death.3 Mary maintains she should be
    able to designate her postretirement death benefits to pass to whomever she
    chooses.
    As to (b)—preretirement death benefits, Schochenmaier, IPERS general
    counsel, testified:
    Q. If a Qualified Domestic Relations Order is prepared
    simply giving the alternate payee [Ryan] 50 percent of the marital
    portion and there is no provision for a preretirement death benefit,
    will the alternate payee receive anything from IPERS if the
    3
    We note per the information in the record, under Option 4, the monthly joint and
    survivor death benefit payments IPERS will make to the alternate payee cannot be
    subdivided. So if Mary is required to select Option 4 and name Ryan the alternate
    payee for the joint and survivor death benefit, she cannot split that death benefit and
    name another person to share the monthly payment with Ryan. She can only select one
    person who will receive upon her death a monthly payment equal to twenty-five, fifty,
    seventy-five, or one hundred percent of the monthly benefit amount she received during
    her retirement.
    9
    participant has not gone into pay status? A. No. The alternate
    payee would not receive anything.
    Provision (b), requiring Mary to name Ryan as a beneficiary of any preretirement
    death benefits would provide Ryan security in his retirement funds in the event
    Mary dies prior to retirement. Without any such requirement, if Mary were to die
    prior to retirement, Ryan would lose any interest in his share of the marital
    portion of the IPERS payments.        Finally, provision (d) stating Ryan should
    receive his portion of the cost of living, and dividend increases would entitle Ryan
    to the increases in proportion to his share of the IPERS pension under the
    Benson formula.
    While the language Ryan requests, for the most part, would work to
    protect Ryan’s future interest in his share of Mary’s IPERS account, we
    determine it is more equitable in this case to value Mary’s IPERS account at the
    refund value as of the time of trial and order a property equalization payment
    from Mary to Ryan, in lieu of dividing the IPERS account via a QDRO. The
    IPERS retirement options and the circumstances of the parties could be
    drastically different by the time the parties retire. This is the alternative remedy
    requested by Ryan, and it permits the parties to finalize their asset division
    without restricting the retirement planning of either party. Because we conclude
    the IPERS account should be valued at its refund value and divided with the
    other assets in the property distribution, we modify the district court’s decree as
    will be outlined below.
    10
    IV. Gifted, Inherited, and Premarital Funds.
    Next, Ryan claims the district court should not have set aside to Mary the
    money she claimed to have received throughout the marriage as gifts from her
    parents or the inheritance she received from her grandfather. He also claims the
    court should not have set aside as premarital property the retirement account
    Mary established while working for a former employer.
    Iowa Code section 598.21(6) (2011) provides:
    Property inherited by either party or gifts received by either
    party prior to or during the course of the marriage is the property of
    that party and is not subject to a property division under this section
    except upon a finding that refusal to divide the property is
    inequitable to the other party or to the children of the marriage.
    In considering whether it would be “inequitable” to Ryan or the children if the
    gifted or inherited funds are exempt from division, we consider the following
    factors
    (1) contributions of the parties toward the property, its care,
    preservation or improvement[];
    (2) the existence of any independent close relationship between the
    donor or testator and the spouse of the one to whom the property
    was given or devised;
    (3) separate contributions by the parties to their economic welfare
    to whatever extent those contributions preserve the property for
    either of them;
    (4) any special needs of either party;
    (5) any other matter[,] which would render it plainly unfair to a
    spouse or child to have the property set aside for the exclusive
    enjoyment of the donee or devisee.
    
    McDermott, 827 N.W.2d at 679
    .
    Ryan makes no argument that Mary’s parents intended the gifts to be to
    both parties or that Mary’s grandfather intended the bequest to be to both of
    them.     See 
    id. at 678-79
    (noting “[t]he donor’s intent and the circumstances
    11
    surrounding the inheritance or gift are the controlling factors used to determine
    whether inherited property is subject to division as marital property”).        His
    argument centers solely on the assertion that Mary did not keep the inherited and
    gifted money separate from the joint funds of the family and used the funds to
    pay for family expenses. However, “it is important to note the act of placing gifts
    or inheritances received by one spouse into joint ownership and/or commingling
    the same with other marital assets is not controlling in deciding whether the
    property should be divided as a martial asset.” In re Marriage of Liebich, 
    547 N.W.2d 844
    , 851 (Iowa Ct. App. 1996).
    In the decree the district court concluded the gifts should be set aside to
    Mary, explaining,
    The Court finds and concludes that the undisputed evidence here is
    that most, if not all, of the gifts from Mary’s parents to her were
    invested in the marital property and family expenses enjoyed by the
    family. The undisputed evidence, however, establishes by clear,
    convincing and satisfactory evidence the intent to make those gifts
    to Mary. . . . Therefore, such gifts are not subject to a property
    division except upon a finding that refusal to divide the property is
    inequitable to the other party or to the children. . . . The Court
    concludes that Ryan has not met his burden of establishing that
    refusal to divide the gifted property would be inequitable to either
    Ryan or the children.
    The court likewise removed $8000 from the net assets allocated to Mary to
    account for the inheritance she received from her grandfather. Upon our de novo
    review of the record, we agree Ryan has failed to prove that it is inequitable to
    set aside to Mary the gifts and inheritance.
    In addition, the district court awarded the value of a premarital IRA to Mary
    and then also removed it from the net assets allocated to Mary. A district court
    “may not separate [a premarital] asset from the divisible estate and automatically
    12
    award it to the spouse that owned the property prior to the marriage. Instead,
    property brought to the marriage by each party is merely one factor among many
    to be considered under section 598.21.” In re Marriage of Fennelly, 
    737 N.W.2d 97
    , 102 (Iowa 2007) (quotation marks and internal citations omitted).
    Again, Ryan’s argument is that Mary failed to protect this premarital
    property through a prenuptial agreement and also failed to establish the value of
    this account at the time of the marriage. He claims she received the lion share of
    the marital property including the house, the more valuable car, and the
    household furnishing, while he only received an older vehicle, the proceeds of a
    four-wheeler, some household furnishings, and the dogs.
    While Mary did receive more assets in light of the decree awarding her the
    marital home, she also received the majority of the liabilities, including multiple
    encumbrances against the house and loans that were incurred to operate the
    parties’ now defunct dog kennel business. Mary did not contribute to this IRA
    over the course of the marriage, and it is logical to conclude the account
    increased in value as a result of market conditions during the fourteen-year
    marriage. In In re Marriage of Hass, 
    538 N.W.2d 889
    , 893 (Iowa Ct. App. 1995),
    our court noted:
    An additional factor in dividing appreciated property acquired before
    the marriage is whether the appreciation which occurred during the
    marriage was fortuitous or due to the efforts of the parties. An
    equitable property division of the appreciated value of the property
    should be a function of the tangible contributions of each party and
    not the mere existence of the marital relationship. Where the
    accumulated property is not the product of the joint efforts of both
    parties, or where, as here, one party brings property into the
    marriage, there need not necessarily be a division. This is
    especially true where the marriage was of short duration.
    13
    (Quotation marks and internal citations omitted.) Here, the IRA was funded with
    only premarital assets and increased in value only as a result of market
    conditions and not through the tangible contributions of either party during the
    marriage. We therefore conclude it is not inequitable to set aside this account to
    Mary as premarital property.
    Likewise, Ryan’s premarital IRAs should also be set aside to him. With
    the addition of the refund value of Mary’s IPERS account, Mary was awarded a
    net value of $111,493.65 in joint assets, and Ryan is now awarded $27,566.50
    after subtracting out to Ryan his Morgan Stanley IRA worth $1187.00 and his
    TransAmerica IRA worth $4885.00. In order to achieve equity as to the property
    distribution between the parties, we modify the decree to require Mary to pay to
    Ryan a property equalization payment of $41,963.58. The payment should be
    made within one year of the issuance of procedendo, and it may be made
    through the payment of cash or the transfer or roll-over of Mary’s retirement
    funds.
    We therefore affirm the court’s decision to set aside to Mary the gifts, the
    inheritance, and the premarital IRA; however we modify the property distribution
    to set aside to Ryan his premarital IRAs and to award him a property equalization
    payment to account for the IPERS account awarded to Mary. We value the
    account at its refund value as of the date of the dissolution trial.
    V. Attorney Fees.
    Both parties request an award of appellate attorney fees.          “Appellate
    attorney fees are not a matter of right, but rather rest in this court’s discretion.” In
    re Marriage of Sullins, 
    715 N.W.2d 242
    , 255 (Iowa 2006).               “In determining
    14
    whether to award appellate attorney fees, we consider the needs of the party
    making the request, the ability of the other party to pay, and whether the party
    making the request was obligated to defend the decision of the trial court on
    appeal.”   In re Marriage of Applegate, 
    567 N.W.2d 671
    , 675 (Iowa Ct. App.
    1997). Having considered these factors, we award Ryan $2000.00 in appellate
    attorney fees.
    VI. Conclusion.
    We modify the court’s dissolution decision to award Mary’s IPERS account
    to her, and value it at its refund value as of the time of trial for purposes of the
    property distribution. We affirm the court’s decision to set aside to Mary the gifts,
    the inheritance, and the premarital IRA; however, we modify the property
    distribution to set aside to Ryan his premarital IRAs.      Finally, we modify the
    dissolution decree to order Mary to pay to Ryan a property equalization payment
    of $41,963.58 to be made within one year of the issuance of procedendo, and it
    may be made through the payment of cash or the transfer or roll-over of Mary’s
    retirement funds.
    Costs in this case are assessed one-half to each party.
    AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.