Marriage of Cadena v. Fries , 378 Mont. 409 ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                             March 24 2015
    DA 14-0455
    Case Number: DA 14-0455
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
    
    2015 MT 90
    IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF:
    BRENDA JEANETTE CADENA,
    f/k/a Brenda Jeanette Fries,
    Petitioner and Appellee,
    v.
    KEVIN JOHN FRIES,
    Respondent and Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM:           District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District,
    In and For the County of Yellowstone, Cause No. DR 99-1328
    Honorable Michael G. Moses, Presiding Judge
    COUNSEL OF RECORD:
    For Appellant:
    Kathryn S. Syth, LaRance & Syth, PC; Billings, Montana
    For Appellee:
    Jeff A. Turner, Towe, Ball, Mackey, Sommerfeld & Turner, PLLP;
    Billings, Montana
    Submitted on Briefs: February 25, 2015
    Decided: March 24, 2015
    Filed:
    __________________________________________
    Clerk
    Justice Michael E Wheat delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    ¶1    Kevin John Fries (Fries) appeals from the qualified domestic relations order
    (QDRO) of the Montana Thirteenth Judicial District Court, Yellowstone County. We
    affirm, order that Cadena is entitled to reasonable attorney fees on appeal, and remand for
    determination of those fees.
    ISSUES
    ¶2    We review the following issues:
    1. Did the District Court err in its application of the law regarding division of
    Fries’ pension?
    2. Is either party entitled to attorney fees?
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶3    Brenda Cadena (Cadena) and Fries married on June 7, 1980. The marriage was
    dissolved by an order of the District Court on March 13, 2000. The order approved a
    settlement agreement that Cadena and Fries entered into on February 29, 2000. In the
    settlement agreement, Cadena and Fries had, among other things, agreed that Fries’
    Western Conference of Teamsters pension would be “equally divided between [them] as
    of the date of entry of a final decree of dissolution of marriage.” The District Court
    found that the agreement was “fair and equitable” and “not unconscionable.”
    ¶4    Neither party further addressed the division of the pension until Cadena filed a
    proposed QDRO on November 12, 2013. The pension had not fully vested or begun to
    pay out benefits by this time. In the agreement, Cadena proposed to divide the pension as
    follows:
    2
    4. DESIGNATION OF ALTERNATE PAYEE’S SEPARATE
    PERCENTAGE INTEREST IN PARTICIPANT’S BENEFITS.
    (a) The Court finds that [Fries] has earned Plan benefits that are
    community/marital property of [Fries] and [Cadena].
    (b) The Court awards [Cadena] a separate interest in [Fries’] Plan
    benefits equal to 50% of the marital property portion of [Fries’] normal
    retirement benefit accrued to the effective date of [Cadena]’s Plan benefits
    (“Alternate Payee’s Separate Percentage Interest”). The effective date of
    [Cadena]’s Plan benefits is hereinafter referred to as “Alternate Payee’s
    Benefit Commencement Date.”
    (c) Alternate Payee’s Separate Percentage Interest in [Fries’] Plan
    benefits shall be determined using the following formula: 50% multiplied
    by [Fries’] total hours of benefit service under the Plan earned from the date
    of marriage to the date of dissolution divided by [Fries’] total hours of
    benefit service earned up to Alternate Payee’[s] Benefits Commencement
    Date.
    Cadena also proposed a number of provisions specifying alternate division schemes in
    case of Fries’ death or Cadena’s death. These alternate schemes are not relevant to this
    appeal.
    ¶5    Fries objected to Cadena’s proposed QDRO, and he submitted a proposed order of
    his own. It was largely identical to Cadena’s proposed order. The differences relevant to
    this appeal are underlined in the following excerpt from Fries’ proposed order:
    4. DESIGNATION OF ALTERNATE PAYEE’S SEPARATE
    PERCENTAGE INTEREST IN PARTICIPANT’S BENEFITS.
    (a) The Court finds that [Fries] has earned Plan benefits that are
    community/marital property of [Fries] and [Cadena].
    (b) The Court awards [Cadena] a separate interest in [Fries’] Plan
    benefits equal to 50% of the marital portion of [Fries’] normal retirement
    benefit accrued to the effective date of [Cadena]’s Plan Benefits (“Alternate
    Payee’s Separate Percentage Interest”). The effective date of [Cadena]’s
    Benefits is March 13, 2000.
    (c) Alternate Payee’s Separate Percentage Interest in [Fries’] Plan
    benefits, [Cadena] shall be entitled to receive a portion of the monthly
    benefit that would be payable to [Fries] at normal retirement age, which is
    equal to fifty percent (50%) of [Fries’] vested benefit in the Plan, accrued
    3
    as of March 13, 2000, calculated as if [Fries] had separated from service on
    that date with a vested benefit under the Plan.
    ¶6     Following briefing, the District Court issued a QDRO identical to Cadena’s
    proposed order, with the exception of a typographical change that is not relevant to this
    appeal. Fries appeals from the QDRO.
    STANDARDS OF REVIEW
    ¶7     The construction and interpretation of a dissolution agreement is a question of law
    that we review for correctness. In re Marriage of Bushnell, 
    2014 MT 130
    , ¶ 8, 
    375 Mont. 125
    , 
    328 P.3d 608
    . We review a district court’s conclusions of law regarding a division
    of marital assets to determine whether they are correct. Bushnell, ¶ 7. We review a
    district court’s award of attorney fees to determine whether the court abused its
    discretion. In re Marriage of Mease, 
    2004 MT 59
    , ¶ 57, 
    320 Mont. 229
    , 
    92 P.3d 1148
    .
    DISCUSSION
    ¶8     1. Did the District Court err in its application of the law regarding division of
    Fries’ pension?
    ¶9     The parties agree that the language of the settlement agreement as adopted by the
    dissolution order controls the division of the pension. Accordingly, they agree that each
    of them is entitled to half of the value of the pension at the time of dissolution. Each also
    agrees that his or her part of the pension at dissolution is to be paid to him or her as a
    portion of each scheduled benefit payment once such payments begin.1 The parties
    disagree, however, about how to determine their respective shares of each payment so
    1
    As the parties agree that their portions of the pension at dissolution should be paid to them
    when pension benefit payments begin, we do not address whether this payment timing is
    required by the settlement agreement.
    4
    that the deferred payments reflect an equal division of the value of the pension at
    dissolution.    Each of them claims that their proposed method is supported by the
    language of the settlement agreement.
    ¶10    It is well established that retirement benefits are part of the marital estate. See,
    e.g., Rolfe v. Rolfe, 
    234 Mont. 294
    , 296, 
    766 P.2d 223
    , 225 (1988). In separations or
    marital dissolutions, parties may enter into written agreements disposing of marital
    estates.       Section 40-4-201(1), MCA; Bushnell, ¶ 9.           Absent a finding of
    unconscionability, the District Court must divide property in a manner consistent with the
    terms of such an agreement. Sections 40-4-201(3) and -201(4), MCA; Bushnell, ¶ 14.
    Here, the settlement agreement specifies that “[Fries’] Teamster Retirement shall be
    equally divided between the parties as of the date of entry of a final decree of dissolution
    of marriage.” The District Court found that this was not unconscionable and neither
    party contests this finding. It is therefore our role to determine whether the District
    Court’s QDRO gives effect to this language. See Bushnell, ¶¶ 9, 14.
    ¶11    Fries contends that equal division at the time of dissolution, as required by the
    settlement agreement, requires division of each anticipated monthly benefit payment with
    respect to the vested value of the pension at the time dissolution was ordered. Put
    another way, he argues that Cadena should receive portions of the benefit payments based
    on the value of the benefit payments the couple would have been entitled to had Fries
    ended his employment on the date of their dissolution. The District Court rejected this
    approach because it claimed that it is not one of the methods of pension valuation that
    this Court has recognized. The District Court reasoned, as Cadena now argues, that this
    5
    Court has recognized two methods for valuing a pension, and that only the “time rule
    method” is appropriate in this case.
    ¶12    Cadena and the District Court are correct in noting that we have recognized two
    pension valuation methods.      In re Marriage of Swanson, 
    2004 MT 124
    , ¶¶ 21, 26,
    
    321 Mont. 250
    , 
    90 P.3d 418
    . Where the value of a pension is apportioned and distributed
    at the time of dissolution, we have required the use of the “lump sum method.” This
    method requires valuation of the plan based on the present value of expected future
    payments.    Swanson, ¶ 22; see In re Marriage of Hochhalter, 
    2001 MT 268
    , ¶ 32,
    
    307 Mont. 261
    , 
    37 P.3d 665
    . Where, on the other hand, the spouses will each receive a
    portion of anticipated monthly payments that have not yet begun, we have required the
    parties to use the time rule method. This method divides any future monthly payments in
    proportion to the quotient of the time employed during marriage and the total time
    employed before retirement. Swanson, ¶ 23; 
    Rolfe, 234 Mont. at 298
    , 766 P.2d at 226.
    ¶13    While we have required district courts to use one of these two valuation methods
    when equitably dividing a pension that is part of the marital estate, we have not
    foreclosed the use of other valuation methods when parties divide a marital estate by
    agreement. See, e.g., In re Marriage of Spawn, 
    2011 MT 284
    , ¶¶ 10-12, 
    362 Mont. 457
    ,
    
    269 P.3d 887
    (considering valuation methods in the context of equitable distribution);
    Swanson, ¶¶ 21, 26 (same); 
    Rolfe, 234 Mont. at 300
    , 766 P.2d at 227 (same). Instead, the
    parties are limited only to whatever conscionable methods they can agree upon. See
    § 40-4-201, MCA; Bushnell, ¶ 14 (holding that absent unconscionable terms, a settlement
    agreement controls division of property in a dissolution); cf. Kortum-Managhan v.
    6
    Herbergers NBGL, 
    2009 MT 79
    , ¶ 45, 
    349 Mont. 475
    , 
    204 P.3d 693
    (“every individual
    enjoys the fundamental freedom to contract, which allows parties to craft terms
    governing their private conduct”). Thus, the District Court and Cadena are incorrect
    when they concluded that Fries’ proposed valuation method must be rejected because it
    was not one of the two accepted equitable division valuation methods.
    ¶14    Instead, Fries’ method must be rejected because it does not give effect to the terms
    of the settlement agreement. That is, it would not result in equal division of the pension
    at the time of dissolution. There are three conceptual components to the value of the
    pension, given that the pension has yet to fully vest or to begin paying benefits and that
    the value of the pension is to be divided at one time and paid in the future. First, there is
    the vested monetary value of the pension at dissolution, based on the employer and
    employee contributions and any growth – from interest or otherwise – to the date of
    dissolution. Second, there is interest that may accrue on the value of the pension between
    dissolution and when benefit payments are made. See Spawn, ¶ 15; 
    Rolfe, 234 Mont. at 298
    -99, 766 P.2d at 226. Third, there is potential for growth or loss in value that is
    attributable to sources other than interest. This may include, for example, growth from
    increased contributions or losses due to termination or early retirement. See Spawn, ¶ 13;
    
    Rolfe, 234 Mont. at 298
    , 766 P.2d at 226.
    ¶15    Here, Fries’ proposed method would at most divide the first component, while
    apportioning the second and third to Fries alone. Fries argues that this gives effect to the
    settlement agreement, equally dividing the pension at dissolution. He implies that the
    settlement agreement’s language “as of the date of entry of a final decree of dissolution
    7
    of marriage” means that the parties intended to forego division of the second and third
    conceptual components, as they concern potential future increases and decreases in value
    not attributable to pre-dissolution employment and not otherwise part of the pension’s
    value at dissolution. This is incorrect.
    ¶16    Equal division of an amount to be paid in deferred installments requires equal
    division of any interest that may accrue during deferral. Each “spouse is entitled to
    increases or accruals on her [portion] because of the delay in receiving those payments.”
    
    Rolfe, 234 Mont. at 298
    , 766 P.2d at 226; accord 1 Barth H. Goldberg, Valuation of
    Divorce Assets, § 9:14, 910 (rev. ed. 2005). Given the time value of money, the value of
    half the vested portion of the pension at dissolution, paid at some point in the future is, in
    reality, less than the value of the same amount paid at dissolution. Thus, by apportioning
    half the vested value of the pension at dissolution to Cadena and specifying that the same
    amount is to be paid when monthly benefit payments begin, Fries’ method excludes
    Cadena from the interest on her share and apportions something less than half of the
    value of the pension at dissolution to Cadena. Only by apportioning interest accrued
    during deferral to each spouse can the pension at dissolution be equally divided at one
    time and paid at a time in the future.
    ¶17    Equal division of a pension to be paid in deferred installments also requires equal
    division of any gains or losses occurring during deferral that are not solely attributable to
    the merits of one spouse. See 
    Rolfe, 234 Mont. at 298
    , 766 P.2d at 226. There is some
    value to the pension at dissolution that is not represented by the vested monetary value at
    that time. There can be some risk of loss due, for example, to early retirement or
    8
    termination of the employee spouse following dissolution. This negatively impacts the
    value of each spouse’s share. Additionally, there is a possibility of gain attributable to
    sources other than interest, like the vesting of employer contributions and increased
    contributions due to non-merit pay raises. This positively impacts the value of each
    spouse’s share. Such gains are also at least partially attributable to and cumulative of
    employment services performed before dissolution.           See 
    Rolfe, 234 Mont. at 298
    ,
    766 P.2d at 226; see also Goldberg, Valuation of Divorce Assets at § 9:5, 806; Susan J.
    Prather, Comment, Characterization, Valuation, and Distribution of Pensions at Divorce,
    15 J. Am. Acad. Matrim. Law. 443, 459 (1998) (“[T]he greater-value later years would
    not have been possible without the lesser-value earlier years. We cannot say the years
    after the marriage were more valuable than the years during the marriage.”). Neither the
    post-dissolution potential for loss or gain is represented in the vested monetary value of
    the pension at dissolution, yet each is part of the value of the pension at dissolution. Only
    by apportioning this post-dissolution potential to each spouse can the value of the pension
    at dissolution be equally divided and paid at a point in the future.
    ¶18    Fries’ proposed method would only divide the vested value of the pension at the
    time of dissolution. It would not divide the interest or potential post-dissolution losses or
    gains earned during deferral. As such, Fries’ proposed method would not equally divide
    the pension as of the dissolution, as required by the settlement agreement.            Thus,
    although it did so for the wrong reasons, the District Court was correct in rejecting Fries’
    proposed method.
    9
    ¶19    Similarly, the District Court correctly adopted Cadena’s proposed method, but it
    did so for the wrong reasons. As expressed in the passage quoted above, Cadena’s
    proposed method can be described by the following equation:
    1 Marriage Employment Time
    Cadena s Payment Share =      ∗                        ∗ Total Payment.
    2   Total Employment Time
    This is the time rule method, as we have adopted it in Rolfe and successive cases. See
    Swanson, ¶ 23; 
    Rolfe, 234 Mont. at 298
    , 766 P.2d at 226. Because the time rule method
    is the accepted equitable division valuation method for dividing deferred benefits, the
    District Court adopted Cadena’s proposed method.           This reasoning was incorrect.
    Adoption was correct, though, since Cadena’s method gives effect to the language of the
    settlement agreement by equally dividing all three conceptual components of the pension.
    Under the time rule method, “the extent of the marital interest is determined as of the date
    of the dissolution.” Spawn, ¶ 15 (quoting 
    Rolfe, 234 Mont. at 298
    , 766 P.2d at 226).
    However, the method necessarily takes interest and other post-dissolution gains or losses
    into account because “the benefit factors to be applied . . . are those in effect at
    retirement.” Spawn, ¶ 15 (quoting 
    Rolfe, 234 Mont. at 298
    , 766 P.2d at 226). Because
    Cadena’s proposed method gives effect to the settlement agreement – equally dividing
    the pension as of the date of dissolution and paying each spouse their share of this
    division at some point in the future – the District Court was correct to adopt it in its
    QDRO.
    10
    ¶20    2. Is either party entitled to attorney fees?
    ¶21    The District Court, after hearing arguments from each party, decided not to award
    attorney fees to either party. The parties agree that this was an abuse of discretion since
    the settlement agreement required the District Court to award attorney fees to the party
    prevailing in this action. The parties disagree, however, about to whom fees should be
    awarded as each contends that he or she is the prevailing party.
    ¶22    Section 40-4-110(1), MCA, provides that a court may, at its discretion, order
    either party to pay attorney fees related to maintaining or defending a dissolution
    proceeding. Where, however, a settlement agreement provides for payment of attorney
    fees, that agreement will control over § 40-4-110(1), MCA. Mease, ¶ 57. Here, the
    settlement agreement entered by Fries and Cadena states:
    Each party agrees to be solely responsible for his or her attorney fees,
    appraisal costs, and any other charges associated in any manner with this
    proceeding. However, should any action, other than to modify child
    support, be commenced in the future to enforce, modify or interpret any
    provision contained herein, the Court, as costs of suit, shall award
    reasonable attorney fees and costs [to] the prevailing party.
    The present appeal and the underlying action concerned interpretation and enforcement
    of the settlement agreement. Thus, by the plain language of the agreement, the prevailing
    party is entitled to attorney fees.
    ¶23    Fries is not the prevailing party in this case. See Hart v. Hart, 
    2011 MT 102
    ,
    ¶¶ 28-29, 
    360 Mont. 308
    , 
    258 P.3d 389
    . He, therefore, is not entitled to attorney fees.
    The District Court was correct when it decided not to award attorney fees in his favor.
    11
    ¶24   Recognizing this, Cadena argues that she was the prevailing party and that she is
    entitled to fees. However, Fries notes that this court cannot award fees in favor of
    Cadena because she did not raise this issue in a cross-appeal. We agree.
    ¶25   We have held that an appellee cannot independently raise the issue of attorney fees
    in the absence of a cross-appeal or, for that matter, any “matters separate and distinct
    from those sought to be reviewed by the appellant.” Laudert v. Richland Cnty. Sheriff’s
    Dep’t, 
    2000 MT 218
    , ¶ 46, 
    301 Mont. 114
    , 
    7 P.3d 386
    (quoting Johnson v. Tindall,
    
    195 Mont. 165
    , 169, 
    635 P.2d 266
    , 268 (1981)); accord Rouse v. Anaconda-Deer Lodge
    Cnty., 
    250 Mont. 1
    , 9, 
    817 P.2d 690
    , 695 (1991); Robertson v. Robertson, 
    180 Mont. 226
    ,
    232, 
    590 P.2d 113
    , 116-17 (1978). We have also stated that “a party must cross-appeal if
    the party seeks to change any part of the judgment below,” City of Missoula v. Robertson,
    
    2000 MT 52
    , ¶ 19, 
    298 Mont. 419
    , 
    998 P.2d 144
    (2000), and that “[a] respondent who
    has not cross-appealed may not seek a determination of the amount involved more
    favorable to him than that made by the court below.”          
    Johnson, 195 Mont. at 169
    ,
    635 P.2d at 268. While the issue of attorney fees was raised on appeal by Fries, Cadena
    may only argue against an award in Fries’ favor in the absence of a cross-appeal.
    Seeking an award of fees in favor of herself would require Cadena to “seek[] to
    change . . . part of the judgment below” and “seek a determination . . . more favorable to
    [her].” This is not allowed in the absence of a properly filed cross-appeal. City of
    Missoula, ¶ 19; 
    Johnson, 195 Mont. at 169
    , 635 P.2d at 268.
    ¶26   While we cannot consider whether Cadena is entitled to attorney fees incurred in
    the District Court, a cross-appeal is not necessary for this Court to award attorney fees
    12
    incurred on appeal. See Chamberlin v. Puckett Constr., 
    277 Mont. 198
    , 210, 
    921 P.2d 1237
    , 1244 (1996). Cadena is the party prevailing in this appeal. Pursuant to the
    settlement agreement, she is entitled to reasonable attorney fees on appeal.        Before
    attorney fees can be awarded, however, there must be some proof introduced into the
    record concerning the amount and reasonableness of the fees. Mease, ¶ 58. We therefore
    order that Cadena is entitled to reasonable attorney fees on appeal and remand to the
    District Court for determination of those fees.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶27    Cadena’s proposed method of distributing the pension accurately reflected the
    division required by the settlement agreement. For this reason, the District Court was
    correct to adopt Cadena’s proposed QDRO. It was also correct not to award attorney fees
    in favor of Fries. For these reasons, we affirm. As the prevailing party in this appeal and
    pursuant to the settlement agreement, Cadena is entitled to reasonable attorney fees on
    appeal. We remand to the District Court for determination of those fees.
    /S/ MICHAEL E WHEAT
    We Concur:
    /S/ MIKE McGRATH
    /S/ PATRICIA COTTER
    /S/ JIM RICE
    /S/ BETH BAKER
    13