Cuth, T. v. Cuth, B. ( 2021 )


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  • J-A04004-21
    
    2021 PA Super 200
    THERESA CUTH                                         IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
    OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant
    v.
    BRIAN A. CUTH
    Appellee                   No. 1203 EDA 2020
    Appeal from the Decree Entered May 1, 2020
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County
    Civil Division at No: 2015-FC-1102
    BEFORE: STABILE, J., KING, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
    OPINION BY STABILE, J.:                               FILED OCTOBER 06, 2021
    Appellant, Theresa Cuth, appeals from the May 1, 2020 decree of
    divorce. We affirm.
    On August 13, 2015, Appellant filed a complaint for divorce and
    equitable distribution against Appellee, Brian A. Cuth, after twenty-two years
    of marriage.     An appointed Master conducted a hearing on September 17,
    2017, and filed a report on August 21, 2018.           The trial court entered a
    preliminary order and decree implementing the report on August 21, 2018.
    On December 27, 2018, the trial court entered a qualified domestic relations
    order (“QDRO”) regarding Appellee’s pension from the Whitehall Township
    Police Pension Fund and Trust (the “Trust”). Under the QDRO Appellant would
    ____________________________________________
    * Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A04004-21
    receive survivor benefits under the pension if Appellee predeceased her. The
    Trust rejected the QDRO in part, stating that Appellant, as a former spouse,
    is ineligible for survivorship benefits under Appellee’s pension.1 In specific:
    Paragraph 9 of the original Pension QDRO provided that
    Appellant was entitled to a portion of the survivor benefit payable
    under the Police Pension Plan in the event that Appellee remarries
    and predeceases Appellant. The Administrator of [the Trust]
    determined that Paragraph 9 is ‘not enforceable under the Plan
    and applicable law’ and thus, that it would not be accepted.
    Trial Court Opinion, 7/20/20, at 2. Appellant refused to execute a revised
    QDRO omitting Paragraph 9 and on April 17, 2019 the trial court remanded
    the matter to the Master for creation of a new equitable distribution scheme.
    The Master conducted a hearing on July 9, 2019. Appellant maintained
    that she thought Paragraph 9 of the QDRO should be approved under the
    township’s ordinance. N.T. Hearing, 7/9/19, at 16-20. She did not, however,
    take any legal action against Whitehall Township to enforce Paragraph 9. Id.
    at 39. The parties also addressed the possibility of Appellant obtaining an
    insurance policy on Appellee’s life in lieu of a portion of the survivor benefits
    of Appellant’s pension.2 Appellant testified that a policy would cost $200 to
    $900 per month, depending on the duration and value of the policy. Id. at
    ____________________________________________
    1   See generally, Police Pension Fund Act, 53 P.S. 761, et seq.
    2 Appellant’s inability to obtain survivor benefits under Appellee’s pension was
    the only remaining equitable distribution issue. The parties agreed upon the
    division of the pension during Appellee’s post-retirement lifetime, and they
    agreed upon the division of their other assets. N.T. Hearing, 7/9/19, at 28-
    34.
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    27.   She brought no written quotes or supporting documentation to the
    hearing.   Id. at 44-46.    Appellant said she was unwilling to obtain life
    insurance on Appellee, in lieu of survivor benefits under his pension, if she
    was solely responsible for the monthly premium.          Id. at 27-28.       She
    considered $200 per month an excessive life insurance premium. Id. at 48.
    Her monthly income was $5,500.00 and her household expenses were
    approximately $2,500.00. Id. at 47-48.
    The Master issued a report which read in part as follows:
    The remand order directed the undersigned to address what
    has become an impossibility regarding contemplated division of
    [Appellee’s] pension benefits. As a corollary to the remand on this
    issue, the undersigned also was tasked with addressing possible
    ‘overpayment’ by Appellee of spousal support/alimony pendente
    lite based upon the delay from the time the preliminary order and
    decree was signed in September, 2018, and the continuing
    unresolved issues which have delayed entry of a divorce decree
    and termination of support based upon the recommendations
    made by the undersigned.
    […]
    It is further recommended that [Appellant] make an election
    as to securing a life insurance policy on [Appellee’s], in whatever
    form and death benefit payable she chooses, in order to secure a
    reasonable portion of the pension benefits which would be payable
    to her and which may be subject to forfeiture in the event of
    [Appellee’s] death. However, as the terms of the [pension plan]
    (interpreted by the plan administrator) will not honor [Appellant’s]
    designation to receive death benefits, it is concluded that neither
    party is at fault for this interpretation and/or change in
    circumstances and that the terms of the plan are simply what they
    are, requiring the parties to adapt accordingly. As [Appellee]
    should not have to incur additional costs based upon the terms of
    the plan, but because [Appellant] takes some risk through the
    equitable distribution award provided to her, it is recommended
    that [Appellant] make the election as to life insurance coverage
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    for [Appellee] and that [Appellee] fully cooperate with obtaining a
    physical and the taking of any and all steps necessary to permit
    [Appellant] to secure her chosen life insurance coverage for
    [Appellee]. The cost of obtaining the coverage in the first instance
    and the ongoing premiums which will be due to maintain the
    chosen life insurance coverage should be the responsibility of
    [Appellant].
    Report of the Master in Divorce, 7/29/19, at 1-5 (some capitalization omitted).
    Both parties filed exceptions to the Master’s recommended order. The
    trial court conducted a hearing on September 25, 2019. Appellant asked for
    time to procure expert testimony on the value of the survivor’s benefits she
    could no longer receive under Appellee’s pension. N.T. Hearing, 9/25/19, at
    8. Based on the expert’s valuation, Appellant would ask for an offset of that
    amount against other marital assets. Id. The trial court noted Appellant’s
    failure to develop the record at hearing before the Master:
    [Appellant’s Counsel]: So we need a – there is – in Master
    Roberts’ recommended division of assets, there’s an award to
    [Appellant] of 50 percent of the pension. There’s also an award
    to [Appellant] of the survivor benefit. There’s no numbers
    attached to that, none. In the survivor benefit issue, we need a
    number attached to that, and the only way to do that is to have it
    valued.
    THE COURT: You knew that going back in front of the
    Master. I remanded it. Why didn’t you develop the record then?
    [Appellant’s Counsel]: Because we didn’t know that Master
    Roberts was going to elect that option. You left it wide open.
    THE COURT: Two bites at the apple then.
    [Appellant’s Counsel]: It’s still before you. There is still
    jurisdiction for Your Honor to do what you intended to do in April
    of this year. There is still jurisdiction to do that now. And if you
    go back and look at your order –
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    THE COURT: I understand what my order is. It’s disturbing
    to me that we were here in April on a September order. And now,
    it’s September again, and the parties are in the same place –
    [Appellant’s Counsel]: Well, we’re not in the same place.
    THE COURT: -- as a year ago.
    [Appellant’s Counsel]: Let me further answer your question
    and suggest to Your Honor that we’re really not in the same place.
    The easiest way for Master Roberts to effectuate the
    equitable division that you ordered was simply to offset
    against another asset. That would have been done. It
    would have been clean, over.
    Instead, he requires that [Appellant] get a life insurance
    policy, but in no amount. We don’t have an amount for that, we
    don’t have a value.
    THE COURT: Why wasn’t that discussed?
    [Appellant’s Counsel]: Because we didn’t know that was
    going to be the option elected by Master Roberts. In fact, we
    argued against it because it’s time consuming among other things.
    Expensive. Subject to argument.
    Id. at 9-11 (emphasis added).3
    On December 21, 2019, the trial court entered an order denying the
    parties’ exceptions, except that it extended the date of termination of
    Appellee’s “spousal support/alimony pendente lite” (“APL”) obligation to March
    1, 2020. The court also set March 16, 2020 as the date after which the divorce
    decree could be entered. On March 4, 2020, the trial court approved a revised
    ____________________________________________
    3  The record reflects that both parties have life insurance policies. N.T.
    Hearing, 9/25/19, at 9. The policy presently at issue is an additional policy
    solely to protect Appellant if Appellee predeceases her and she receives no
    survivor benefits under the pension.
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    QDRO with Paragraph 9 omitted. Appellant’s counsel requested and received
    several delays of entry of the divorce decree so that she could procure a life
    insurance policy. The trial court entered the final divorce decree on May 1,
    2020.4 This timely appeal followed.
    Appellant presents two questions:
    1. When it divided the marital estate, did the trial court err
    in its distribution of [Appellee’s] pension by its
    floundering attempt to replace her survivor annuity—
    which would have secured her right to benefits in the
    event of his death—made without considering the
    pension’s value, the amount of life insurance required to
    protect [Appellant] from the risk that he would die first,
    and any other method of effecting equitable distribution?
    2. Did the trial court err when it relieved [Appellee] of the
    obligation of paying alimony pendente lite prior to the
    completion of the divorce litigation?
    Appellant’s Brief at 6.
    These questions challenge the trial court’s equitable distribution
    scheme, set forth in orders rendered final by the divorce decree. Our review
    is limited; we will not reverse unless we find an abuse of discretion or error of
    law. Nagle v. Nagle, 
    799 A.2d 812
    , 818 (Pa. Super. 2002), appeal denied,
    
    820 A.2d 162
     (Pa. 2003). “An abuse of discretion is not found lightly, but only
    upon a showing of clear and convincing evidence.” McCoy v. McCoy, 
    888 A.2d 906
    , 908 (Pa. Super. 2005). “To assess whether the trial court abused
    its discretion, we must determine whether the trial court misapplied the law
    ____________________________________________
    4  According to the trial court’s July 20, 2020 opinion, the life insurance policy
    finally took effect on May 11, 2021. Trial Court Opinion, 7/20/20, at 12.
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    or failed to follow proper legal procedure.” Hayward v. Hayward, 
    868 A.2d 554
    , 558 (Pa. Super. 2005). “Further, we measure the circumstances of the
    case against the objective of effectuating economic justice between the parties
    and achieving a just determination of their property rights.” 
    Id.
    In support of her first argument, Appellant cites DeMarco v. DeMarco,
    
    787 A.2d 1072
     (Pa. Super. 2001), in which this Court considered the proper
    valuation of the husband’s police pension. The trial court considered expert
    evidence and chose to value the pension as if the husband retired on his fiftieth
    birthday (he was fifty-two as of the trial). 
    Id. at 1074-75
    . The DeMarco
    Court concluded that the record did not support an arbitrary selection of age
    fifty as a retirement date, especially since the husband had already worked
    past that age. 
    Id. at 1080
    . Significantly, for purposes of analyzing the instant
    case, the pension did not include survivor benefits.      The wife nonetheless
    obtained an insurance policy on the husband’s life, and the trial court awarded
    alimony to wife to cover the premiums. 
    Id. at 1081
    . The DeMarco Court
    vacated the alimony award, concluding it had no relation to the factors
    specified in 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 3701, governing alimony awards. Id. The Court
    also noted that, if the husband died before age seventy (presumably the age
    at which the term life insurance policy expired), but after retirement, the wife
    would receive some of the pension plus the lump sum life insurance payout.
    This Court concluded that the monthly alimony income from husband, plus the
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    J-A04004-21
    possibility of wife receiving her marital portion of the pension in addition to a
    life insurance payout, constituted a “double award.” Id.
    Appellant argues that DeMarco supports her case insofar as the Court
    did not rule that an order directing the husband to pay life insurance premiums
    was “erroneous per se.” Appellant’s Brief at 37. We agree that nothing in
    DeMarco prohibits the result Appellant seeks.           The question remains,
    however, whether the trial court acted within its broad discretion in declining
    to order Appellee to assist Appellant with the premiums. To that end, Appellee
    cites DeMarco as support for his argument that benefits not included within
    a pension plan should not be considered for purposes of equitable distribution.
    Appellee also cites Maloney v. Maloney, 
    754 A.2d 36
     (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2000), appeal denied, 
    775 A.2d 810
     (Pa. 2001), in which the Borough of
    Yeadon (joined as an additional party in the divorce action) challenged a trial
    court order holding the Borough in contempt and directing it to comply with a
    QDRO pertaining to the pension of the husband, a retired Borough police
    officer. The husband died before the order was implemented. Id. at 38. Wife
    received 50% of the husband’s pension until his death, and nothing thereafter,
    as the Borough contended that the wife as an ex-spouse was not entitled to
    survivor’s benefits under the ordinance governing the pension plan. Id. The
    Commonwealth Court reversed the order of contempt, holding that the
    ordinance did not provide survivor’s benefits to an ex-spouse.        Id. at 39.
    Appellee relies on Maloney as additional support for his argument that
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    benefits not included in a pension plan are not properly part of an equitable
    distribution scheme.
    We find DeMarco and Maloney instructive but not conclusive. Here,
    as in DeMarco, it is possible that Appellant will receive her marital portion of
    Appellee’s pension during his post-retirement lifetime plus a life insurance
    payout if he predeceases her before the end of the term of the policy. The
    DeMarco Court treated this as a double payment, and the DeMarco Court’s
    rationale therefore supports the trial court’s decision to leave Appellant
    responsible for the premiums. Similarly, the Commonwealth Court’s analysis
    in Maloney supports a conclusion that a benefit not included in a pension plan
    need not be considered in an equitable distribution scheme.5 In other words,
    neither of these cases supports a conclusion that the trial court abused its
    broad discretion by directing Appellant to obtain and pay for a life insurance
    policy.
    Furthermore, Appellant has failed to make a case for any viable
    alternative to the life insurance policy. Her arguments for an offset rest not
    on evidence of record, but on evidence she wishes to produce after a remand
    from this panel. Appellant claims she has retained an actuary to value the
    ____________________________________________
    5 Commonwealth Court decisions do not bind this Court, but we may consider
    them as persuasive authority. Petow v. Warehime, 
    996 A.2d 1083
    , 1189
    n.1 (Pa. Super. 2010), appeal denied, 
    12 A.3d 371
     (Pa. 2010).
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    J-A04004-21
    survivor benefit she cannot receive, and she argues for an offset6 against other
    marital assets based on the expert’s valuation.       According to the evidence
    Appellant wishes to produce on remand, Appellee’s monthly pension would
    have been lower had he and Appellant remained married, and had he elected
    the survivorship benefit for her. Appellant argues the trial court abused its
    discretion because Appellee can receive a higher monthly pension and bear
    no responsibility for the insurance premiums.
    We conclude that Appellant is not entitled to a remand to seek an offset.
    Appellant, as demonstrated above, produced no pertinent evidence at the July
    ____________________________________________
    6   The DeMarco Court wrote:
    Pennsylvania law provides two methods to distribute a
    pension when dividing the assets of a marital estate. The first
    method, immediate offset, awards a percentage of the marital
    portion of the value of the pension to the party earning it and
    offsets the marital value of this pension with other marital assets
    at the time the estate is divided. This method is preferred where
    the estate has sufficient assets to offset the pension, because it
    does not require the court to retain jurisdiction indefinitely. The
    second method, deferred distribution, generally requires the court
    to retain jurisdiction until the pension is collected, at which point
    the pension is divided according to the court's order. This method
    is more practical where the parties lack sufficient assets to offset
    the marital value of the pension.
    We have recognized that neither distribution scheme will be
    appropriate to all cases. Rather, the trial court must balance the
    advantages and disadvantages of each method according to the
    facts of the case before it in order to determine which method
    would best effectuate economic justice between the parties.
    DeMarco, 
    787 A.2d at 1077
     (internal citations and quotation marks omitted)
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    9, 2019 hearing. This despite the Master’s report following an earlier hearing,
    held September 27, 2017:
    The largest marital asset aside from the real property is
    [Appellee’s] defined benefit pension. As no specific value was
    ascertained for same and because the asset is not likely
    readily subject to an offset, it is recommended by the
    undersigned that the marital portion of [Appellee’s] defined
    benefit pension be divided on a 50/50 basis pursuant to a [QDRO]
    Report of the Master in Divorce, 8/21/18, at 15 (emphasis added). Thus, this
    matter already has undergone two hearings at which Appellant could have
    produced evidence of the value of Appellee’s pension. At the second hearing,
    Appellant was aware that the Trust would not pay survivor benefits to a former
    spouse. Yet, at the July 9, 2019 remand hearing she produced no evidence
    of the value of the survivorship benefit and no evidence of the cost of a life
    insurance policy to replace the value of the survivorship benefit. Appellant
    testified that she believed the Trust was wrong to reject Paragraph 9, but she
    had taken no legal action to challenge the Trust’s position. Appellant further
    testified that she believed $200 per month—the lowest premium she could
    find for a term insurance policy on Appellee’s life—was excessive.         She
    nonetheless failed to produce evidence in support of any alternative.
    Given the limited evidence before him, the Master concluded that the
    life insurance policy was the best means of replacing the survivor benefit she
    would have received had the parties remained married.         And, given that
    Appellant’s monthly income was approximately $3,000.00 more than her
    household expenses, the Master deemed a $200 per month policy affordable.
    - 11 -
    J-A04004-21
    The trial court agreed, and in its December 31, 2019 order directed Appellant
    to obtain an insurance policy with Appellee’s cooperation.
    Given this Court’s rationale in DeMarco, and given the sparse evidence
    of record, for which Appellant is at fault, we discern no basis upon which we
    can conclude that the trial court committed an error of law or an abuse of
    discretion. Appellant’s first argument lacks merit.
    Next, Appellant claims the trial court erred in terminating APL 7 prior to
    the completion of this appeal. Appellant relies on DeMasi v. DeMasi, 
    597 A.2d 101
    , 104 (Pa. Super. 1991), appeal denied, 
    629 A.2d 1380
     (Pa. 1993),
    in which this Court held that, when an appeal is pending on matters of
    equitable distribution, APL continues throughout the appeal.         Appellant’s
    reading of DeMasi is correct, but her reading of the record is not. The order
    in question, which the parties and the court referred to throughout this matter
    as “APL,” or “support,” or “APL/support,” is a support order. It was entered
    by the Northampton County Domestic Relations Division, in accord with
    Pa.R.C.P. No. 1920.31(a)(2).8 It was made a part of the record in this divorce
    ____________________________________________
    7  Section 3702 of the Domestic Relations Code governs APL. 23 Pa.C.S.A.
    § 3702.
    8 Rule 1910.2, governing venue of support actions, authorizes the transfer of
    a support action to the county of a pending divorce action. Pa.R.C.P. No.
    1910.2(c). Given its order terminating support, the trial court clearly assumed
    jurisdiction over the support proceeding. We observe, however, that the
    certified docket does not reflect the receipt of a transferred action or
    consolidation of this action and the support action.
    - 12 -
    J-A04004-21
    proceeding during the September 27, 2017 hearing before the Master. N.T.
    Hearing, 9/27/17, at 11, Exhibit D-5.          Acknowledging this, Appellant cites
    Pa.R.C.P. No. 1920.31(d) that an existing support order becomes an APL order
    upon entry of a final decree in divorce. Pa.R.C.P. No. 1920.31(d) (“Upon entry
    of a decree in divorce, an existing order for spousal support shall be deemed
    to be an order for alimony pendente lite if any economic claims remain
    pending.”)
    For several reasons, we are unable to grant relief.         First, Appellant
    cannot salvage her argument under 1920.31(d) because the support order
    was terminated prior to entry of the divorce decree.          Thus, there was no
    existing support order to be converted into APL under Rule 1920.31(d).
    Second, there is no indication in the record that Appellant ever sought APL.
    Appellant filed a complaint pursuant to Rule 1910.4 in Northampton County,
    but by her own acknowledgement did not seek APL in that complaint. She
    also acknowledges that she never sought APL in this divorce action.9 This
    ____________________________________________
    9   Appellant protests that she could not have claimed APL in this divorce
    proceeding because the procedural rules prohibit it: “A divorce complaint shall
    not include claims for child support, spousal support, and alimony pendente
    lite. Instead, claims for child support, spousal support, and alimony pendente
    lite shall be raised in the domestic relations section by filing a complaint
    pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. No. 1910.4.” Pa.R.C.P. No. 1920.31 (a)(2). We observe
    that Appellant filed this divorce action in 2015, and the rules were amended
    in 2018 to prohibit an APL claim in a divorce action. “As amended, Pa.R.C.P.
    No. 1930.21 precludes parties from raising claims for […] alimony pendente
    lite as counts in a divorce action.” Pa.R.C.P. No. 1930.21, Explanatory
    Comment – 2018. Regardless, nothing in the record indicates that Appellant
    filed for APL in the trial court.
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    results in waiver: “The failure to claim […] alimony pendente lite […] prior to
    the entry of a final decree of divorce or annulment shall be deemed a waiver
    of those claims.” Pa.R.C.P. No. 1920.30(c).
    Decree affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 10/6/2021
    - 14 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 1203 EDA 2020

Judges: Stabile

Filed Date: 10/6/2021

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/21/2024