Butcher v. Butcher , 2011 Ohio 2550 ( 2011 )


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  • [Cite as Butcher v. Butcher, 
    2011-Ohio-2550
    .]
    Court of Appeals of Ohio
    EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
    JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
    No. 95758
    SALLY J. BUTCHER
    PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE
    vs.
    RONALD K. BUTCHER
    DEFENDANT-APPELLANT
    JUDGMENT:
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    Civil Appeal from the
    Domestic Relations Division of the
    Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas
    Case No. D-270637
    BEFORE: Keough, J., Stewart, P.J., and Sweeney, J.
    RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED:           May 26, 2011
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT
    Ellen S. Mandell
    55 Public Square
    Suite 1717
    Cleveland, OH 44113
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
    Raymond J. Costanzo
    Costanzo & Lazzaro
    13317 Madison Avenue
    Lakewood, OH 44107
    KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, J.:
    {¶ 1} Defendant-appellant, Ronald K. Butcher (“Husband”), appeals
    from the trial court’s judgment entry adopting the proposed qualified
    domestic relations order (“QDRO”) of plaintiff-appellee, Sally J. Butcher,
    n.k.a. Peterson (“Wife”). For the following reasons, we reverse and remand
    with instructions.
    {¶ 2} In September 2000, the parties’ marriage was terminated by a
    divorce decree that incorporated and adopted the parties’ negotiated
    handwritten separation agreement. Pursuant to the judgment of divorce, a
    QDRO was to be submitted to the trial court resolving Wife’s interest in
    Husband’s Ford Motor Company pension. Husband submitted his proposed
    QDRO to Wife; however, she did not respond to the proposal. In February
    2009, Husband moved the trial court to adopt his proposed QDRO, which the
    court adopted a week later. Upon receiving notification of the signed QDRO,
    Wife filed a motion for relief from judgment, arguing that she did not receive
    notice of Husband’s motion and proposed QDRO. Wife also requested that
    the trial court adopt her proposed QDRO. Husband filed a brief in opposition
    to Wife’s motion, arguing that his proposed QDRO should be implemented.
    {¶ 3} The parties’ motions and competing QDROs were referred to a
    magistrate. No hearing was held, as the parties agreed no questions of fact
    were at issue. The magistrate issued a written opinion recommending that
    the court grant Wife’s motion for relief from judgment and adopt Wife’s
    proposed QDRO.
    {¶ 4} The magistrate identified the issue before it as follows: “When
    minimalist language is used in a separation agreement regarding the division
    of marital pension by coverture fraction, exactly what terms can a court
    subsequently adopt in a QDRO to clarify the intent of the parties as
    evidenced in the separation agreement, without crossing over legal
    boundaries where the post-decree QDRO becomes a void modification of the
    divorce decree’s division of property[?]”
    {¶ 5} The magistrate found that a conflict in interpreting this issue
    existed between the Twelfth and Eighth appellate districts, citing Adkins v.
    Bush, Butler App. No. CA2002-05-131, 
    2003-Ohio-2781
    , and Gordon v.
    Gordon (2001), 
    144 Ohio App.3d 21
    , 
    759 N.E.2d 43
    . In resolving this conflict,
    the magistrate determined Gordon should control because it was from this
    appellate district.   In applying Gordon, the magistrate recommended that
    Wife “should have [a] marital interest, based upon the stated coverture
    fraction, in all of [Husband’s] pension benefits if real meaning is to be given to
    the parties’ agreement, that ‘all further retirement and investment accounts
    of husband shall be divided equally.’”            Accordingly, the magistrate
    recommended that Wife’s QDRO, which utilized coverture fraction and
    provided Wife with early retirement supplements, interim supplements,
    temporary   benefits,   and   pre-retirement   survivorship   benefits   under
    Husband’s Ford retirement account, be adopted.
    {¶ 6} Husband filed written objections to the magistrate’s decision, in
    which he challenged only the recommendation to adopt Wife’s proposed
    QDRO.    The trial court adopted the magistrate’s decision in its entirety,
    without a hearing. Husband now appeals, arguing as his sole assignment of
    error that the trial court erred in adopting Wife’s proposed QDRO.
    {¶ 7} The standard of review on appeal from a decision of a trial court
    adopting a magistrate’s decision is whether the trial court abused its
    discretion. O’Brien v. O’Brien, Cuyahoga App. No. 86430, 
    2006-Ohio-1729
    ,
    11. “The term ‘abuse of discretion’ connotes more than an error of law or
    judgment; it implies that the court’s attitude is unreasonable, arbitrary or
    unconscionable.” Blakemore v. Blakemore (1983), 
    5 Ohio St.3d 217
    , 219, 
    450 N.E.2d 1140
    . However, an abuse of discretion may be found when the trial
    court “applies the wrong legal standard, misapplies the correct legal
    standard, or relies on clearly erroneous findings of fact.”          Thomas v.
    Cleveland, 
    176 Ohio App.3d 401
    , 
    2008-Ohio-1720
    , 
    892 N.E.2d 454
    , 15.
    {¶ 8} It is well settled that pension and retirement benefits are marital
    assets subject to equitable division upon a divorce. R.C. 3105.171; Hoyt v.
    Hoyt (1990), 
    53 Ohio St.3d 177
    , 178, 
    559 N.E.2d 1292
    . A trial court cannot
    modify or amend a marital property division incident to a divorce or
    dissolution decree, absent expressed consent by the parties.                  R.C.
    3105.171(I).   This prohibition is jurisdictional.       See, e.g., McKinney v.
    McKinney (2001), 
    142 Ohio App.3d 604
    , 608, 
    756 N.E.2d 694
    .
    {¶ 9} To effectuate the division of pension and retirement benefits, the
    domestic relations court enters a QDRO, which is an order that “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 benefit payable
    with respect to a participant under a plan * * *.”         Employee Retirement
    Income Security Act of 1974, Section 206(d)(3)(B)(i)(I).        Ordinarily, it is
    issued subsequent to and separate from the decree of divorce itself. A QDRO
    is therefore merely an order in aid of execution on the property division
    ordered in the divorce decree dividing retirement or pension assets.
    McKinney at 608. If the QDRO is consistent with the decree, it does not
    constitute a modification, which R.C. 3105.171(I) prohibits, and the court does
    not lack jurisdiction to issue it. 
    Id.,
     citing Tarbert v. Tarbert (Sept. 27, 1996),
    Clark App. No. 96-CA-0036.
    {¶ 10} In this case, the dispute centers around the meaning of the
    divorce decree and separation agreement on which the QDRO would issue.
    When parties dispute the meaning of a clause in their separation agreement,
    a trial court must first determine whether the clause is ambiguous. Adkins
    at 26.    A clause is ambiguous where it is subject to more than one
    interpretation. 
    Id.,
     citing Weller v. Weller (1996), 
    115 Ohio App.3d 173
    , 179,
    
    684 N.E.2d 1284
    . A trial court has broad discretion in clarifying ambiguous
    language by considering the parties’ intent and the equities involved. 
    Id.
     If
    the decree and separation agreement are ambiguous regarding the division of
    Husband’s retirement and pension accounts, the court can properly clarify
    their meaning without violating the prohibition of R.C. 3105.171(I). Gordon
    at 24; Adkins at 26.
    {¶ 11} However,   if the terms in the separation agreement are
    unambiguous, a trial court may not clarify or interpret those terms. Adkins
    at 27, citing In the Matter of Leonhart v. Nees (Aug. 20, 1993), Erie App. No.
    E-93-03; Sowald & Morganstern, Domestic Relations Law (2002) 438, Section
    9:48. “‘Further, where there is no uncertainty, but only an absence in the
    agreement of a provision about a particular matter, the court must not
    construe as included something intended to be excluded nor make the
    contract speak where it was silent.’” Adkins at 27, quoting Sowald &
    Morganstern.
    {¶ 12} Therefore, the question before this court is whether the QDRO
    adopted by the trial court is a modification or clarification of the separation
    agreement. If it is a modification, then the QDRO is void because the trial
    court did not have jurisdiction to make a modification. See R.C. 3105.171(I).
    However, if it is a clarification, we must determine whether the trial court
    abused its discretion in adopting Wife’s proposed QDRO.
    {¶ 13} The relevant portion of the parties’ separation agreement is
    Section 3(C), entitled “Pension, Retirement, Stocks, Bonds, etc.” The crux of
    this appeal involves subsection (b), which provides:
    {¶ 14} “Husband has further retirement benefits through Ford Motor
    Company. All further retirement & investment accounts of Husband shall
    be divided equally (all accounts but Tesphe).          Date of termination of
    marriage is the court’s journalization date.     Wife’s interest in Husband’s
    pension of retirement accounts shall be secured through a separate order
    upon Husband’s employer.”
    {¶ 15} Wife contends that an equal division of the Ford retirement
    account includes pre-retirement survivorship benefits, early retirement
    supplements, interim supplements, and temporary benefits, and that the
    account should be divided by coverture fraction. In support of her argument,
    Wife maintains that Hoyt is the controlling authority to guide us with our
    decision. However, the procedural posture of Hoyt is distinguishable from
    the case before us. In Hoyt, the Ohio Supreme Court reviewed a trial court’s
    decision dividing marital property and established guidelines for courts to
    consider when dividing retirement and pension benefits in a divorce action.
    {¶ 16} In the case before us, the Butchers entered into a separation
    agreement where they agreed on the division of marital assets. From the
    record, we glean that both parties and their attorneys, over a course of
    various pretrials, negotiated the division of marital property, including
    pension and retirement accounts. The trial court did not determine how the
    marital property should be divided and did not utilize any guidelines
    established by Hoyt. Accordingly, we do not find Hoyt helpful. The parties
    negotiated the division of their marital property and that agreement was
    memorialized in the separation agreement adopted by the divorce decree.
    However, the “minimalist language” used in the separation agreement
    regarding the division of Husband’s Ford retirement account has caused the
    controversy in this matter.
    {¶ 17} The trial court indicated that a conflict among appellate districts
    exists in resolving the issue of “minimalist language” contained in separation
    agreements. See Adkins and Gordon.
    {¶ 18} Husband urges this court to follow the Adkins decision, where the
    Twelfth District was faced with an identical issue. In Adkins, the parties’
    separation agreement simply provided that:         “Wife shall receive 1/2 of
    Husband’s pension through his employer.” The Adkins trial court adopted
    Wife’s proposed QDRO, which provided pre- and post-retirement benefits,
    supplements, and survivorship benefits.        On appeal, the Adkins court
    concluded that because the “minimalist language contained in the inartfully
    drafted separation agreement” was not ambiguous, the trial court abused its
    discretion in extending or modifying the agreement.         
    Id.
     at 28.    “That
    agreement provides simply that [wife] is to receive one-half of [husband’s]
    pension through his employer.       There is nothing ambiguous about that
    clause. The QDRO proposed by [wife] and adopted by the trial court tried to
    ‘fill in the gaps’ left by Section V of the parties’ separation agreement by
    allowing [wife] to share in any pre-retirement and post-retirement benefits
    that [husband] may acquire or had acquired, and by providing [wife] with
    survivorship benefits. However, these provisions of the QDRO do not simply
    clarify or construe an ambiguity in the parties’ separation agreement, but,
    instead, amend or modify the agreement, which is not permitted.” 
    Id.
    {¶ 19} However, the trial court in this case relied on this court’s holding
    in Gordon and found that when minimalist language is used, the trial court is
    authorized to clarify the parties’ separation agreement to reflect the intent of
    the parties. In Gordon, the trial court was asked to clarify a term that was
    inadvertently left out of the separation agreement and QDRO, but the parties
    intended to include. This court held that “the magistrate’s intent was merely
    to clarify a point that had been inadvertently left out of the order. The court
    used the survivorship rights as part of the calculation of the appellant’s and
    appellee’s shares of the marital estate. Therefore, by granting the appellee’s
    relief from judgment and reissuing a new order in the spirit of what had been
    the intent of the two parties, the actions of the lower court were simply to
    clarify a mistake made in the earlier order.” Id. at 25.
    {¶ 20} In Gordon, it appears that extrinsic facts and evidence were
    presented to the trial court so it could determine the intent of the parties at
    the time the separation agreement was executed. In dividing the parties’
    marital assets, the Gordon trial court used the survivorship rights as part of
    the calculation.   Therefore, it appeared that the parties intended that
    survivorship rights would be awarded to the Wife.          Accordingly, it was
    proper to clarify the term that was inadvertently left out of the decree.
    {¶ 21} In the instant case, we do not have an inadvertent mistake that
    simply needs to be added or clarified; rather, the trial court was requested to
    interpret the separation agreement and “fill in the gaps.” Moreover, the trial
    court did not conduct a hearing to determine the intent of the parties at the
    time the separation agreement was executed. A hearing would have allowed
    for a more meaningful appellate review of the “inartfully drafted separation
    agreement.” Adkins, supra.
    {¶ 22} Although the trial court found that a conflict exists among
    appellate districts, we do not find such conflict. The issue in Gordon was
    whether the trial court could clarify a provision that was mistakenly left out
    of the QDRO and separation agreement, whereas Adkins resolved whether
    the trial court could interpret the separation agreement to determine the
    parties’ intent regarding what benefits should be awarded under the pension.
    The issues in these two cases are distinguishable and accordingly, there is
    no conflict.
    {¶ 23} The case before us resembles the facts in Adkins and we find it
    persuasive.    The unambiguous language in the separation agreement
    provides that the parties agreed to divide Husband’s Ford retirement account
    equally. The QDRO adopted by the trial court “filled in the gaps” left in the
    parties’ separation agreement.   But the QDRO adopted by the trial court
    does not simply clarify or construe an ambiguity in the separation agreement;
    rather, it expands and modifies the agreement, which is prohibited by R.C.
    3105.171(I). Accordingly, we find that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to
    approve a QDRO that provides Wife with early retirement supplements,
    interim supplements, temporary benefits, and pre-retirement survivorship
    benefits, absent any showing the parties intended for Wife to share in such
    benefits. The QDRO adopted by the trial court is rendered void.
    {¶ 24} Judgment reversed and case remanded to the trial court with
    instructions to conduct an evidentiary hearing to determine the intent of the
    parties at the time of execution of the separation agreement as to how
    Husband’s Ford retirement account should be divided, and to adopt a QDRO
    reflecting such intent.
    It is ordered that appellant recover from appellee costs herein taxed.
    The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    It is ordered that a special mandate be sent to said court to carry this
    judgment into execution.
    A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to
    Rule 27 of the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, JUDGE
    MELODY J. STEWART, P.J., and
    JAMES J. SWEENEY, J., CONCUR