Court Opinion

ID: 8211900
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-05 15:03:40.944464+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:42:06.582799
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

                                   No. 21-2007
                              Filed October 5, 2022

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF LORI A. HILL
AND MARSHALL R. HILL

Upon the Petition of
LORI A. HILL,
      Petitioner-Appellee,

And Concerning
MARSHALL R. HILL,
     Respondent-Appellant.
________________________________________________________________

       Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Woodbury County, Steven J.

Andreasen, Judge.

       Marshall Hill appeals the entry of an amended order for military retired pay.

AFFIRMED.

       Janell K. Bock of Goosmann Law Firm, PLC, Sioux City, for appellant.

       Amanda Van Wyhe of Van Wyhe Law Firm & Mediation Center, PLC, Sioux

City, for appellee.

       Heard by Bower, C.J., Tabor, J., and Doyle, S.J.*

       *Senior judge assigned by order pursuant to Iowa Code section 602.9206

(2022).
                                          2

DOYLE, Senior Judge.

       Marshall Hill appeals the entry of an amended order for military retired pay

(MRPDO). He contends the order impermissibly modifies the property-division

provisions of the decree dissolving his marriage to Lori Hill. Finding the order

consistent with the decretal court’s intent, we affirm.

       I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

       Marshall and Lori were married for twelve years. The property divided in

their 2013 dissolution decree includes pension benefits Marshall is entitled to

receive from his employment with the United States Postal Service and the Iowa

Air National Guard. Marshall worked for both employers throughout the parties’

twelve-year marriage. He was employed by the post office full-time and worked

part-time for the Iowa Air National Guard. At some point, he took leave from the

post office to work full-time for the military. The decretal court noted he had

recently resumed full-time with the post office. Because Marshall was not fully

vested at the time of dissolution and the value of his retirement benefits was

unknown, the district court awarded Lori a percentage of each pension, to be

calculated under the method as explained in In re Marriage of Benson, 545 N.W.2d

252, 255–57 (Iowa 1996), when Marshall retires. The decree states that “[u]nder

the Benson formula, Lori is entitled to one-half of Marshall’s monthly benefits

multiplied by a fraction of which the numerator is 12 and the denominator is the

number of years covered by the plan up to maturity (retirement).” The decree

directs Lori’s attorney to “prepare Qualified Domestic Relations Orders [QDRO]

that are acceptable to the plans’ administrators and, under the Benson formula,
                                            3

award Lori one-half of the military and postal retirement benefits accrued during

the parties’ 12 years of marriage.”

       In August 2015, two years after entry of the dissolution decree, the parties

consented to and signed proposed orders related to Marshall’s federal employee

and military retirement benefits. The MRPDO orders:

       The Petitioner [Lori], former spouse, is awarded a percentage of the
       member’s [Marshall] disposable military retired pay, to be computed
       by multiplying 50% times a fraction, the numerator of which is 12
       years (the length of time the parties were married and the
       Respondent was in the military), divided by the member’s total
       number of years of service in the military prior to retirement.

It also provides the district court with

       continuing jurisdiction to modify the retirement benefit payments or
       property division[1] specified herein or award damages, as it
       determines equitable, if the Respondent [Marshall] should waive
       military retired pay in favor of disability payments or take any other
       action either actively or passively (such as receipt of severance pay,
       bonuses or an early out payment, or waiver or conversion of any
       portion of his military service into state or federal civil service time
       without the consent of the Petitioner [Lori], or the election to take
       combat related special compensation) which reduces the amount the
       Petitioner [Lori] is entitled to receive.

And it states that if either party violates the order, “the court may award attorneys’

fees to the other (non-violating) party.”

       In October 2015, Lori received a letter from the Defense Finance and

Accounting Service (DFAS) acknowledging receipt of her application for payment

of a portion of Marshall’s retired pay. The DFAS cautioned Lori that it could later

1We note that a “provision in the pension order purporting to retain jurisdiction to
modify the property division in the dissolution decree . . . is not enforceable.” In re
Marriage of Erlandson, 973 N.W.2d 601, 607 (Iowa Ct. App. 2022).
                                          4

reject her application and require a clarifying order if Marshall’s duty status

changed.

       In November 2020, the DFAS informed Lori that it required a clarifying order

that calculates her share of Marshall’s retired military pay based on reserve points

rather than years of service. “[T]he Reserve National Guard Retirement System

accounts for time spent in the military in terms of points.” Villars v. Villars, 277

P.3d 763, 766 (Alaska 2012).2

       In June 2021, Lori moved for entry of a modified QDRO3 “as required by

DFAS which gives the numerator of the retirement calculation formula in terms of

[Marshall]’s retirement points.” Lori stated that the information she had about

Marshall’s military service history and reserve points4 only showed the reserve

points Marshall accrued through September 2012 and he failed to respond when

she tried to obtain current information. She asked the court to require that Marshall

2   These retirement points are based on a member’s activities “and do not
necessarily accrue based solely on the length of service or reserve duty service.”
Woodson v. Saldana, 885 A.2d 907, 910 (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 2005). Marshall
testified that he receives an annual point credit summary two or three months after
the anniversary of his enlistment. The most current information at the time of the
hearing showed Marshall has accrued 6085 service points during his thirty years
of service. Marshall receives fifteen points each year for his service in the Iowa
Air National Guard. He also receives one point each day he is on active duty. The
number of service points Marshall earns each year fluctuates, ranging from 65 on
the low end to a high of 366.
3 “[M]any attorneys and courts use the term QDRO to refer to any qualified order.

This usage is a mistake, for other types of qualified orders are needed to obtain
disbursement from other types of plans. In particular, a QDRO is not sufficient to
authorize payment of military retirement benefits . . . [which] requires its own
unique type of qualified order.” Villars, 277 P.3d at 766 n.1 (alterations in original)
(quoting 2 Brett R. Turner, Equitable Distribution of Property § 6:2, at 8 (3d ed.
2005)). See also Jones v. Jones, No. 03-20-00417-CV, 2021 WL 4173887, at *4
(Tex. App.—Austin Sept. 15, 2021).
4 “Reserve points” and “retirement points” are used interchangeably throughout the

litigation.
                                          5

produce the documentation requested by the DFAS and enter a new MRPDO that

gives the numerator of the retirement calculation formula in terms of Marshall’s

retirement points, as the DFAS required. She also asked that Marshall reimburse

her for attorney fees and costs.

         After a hearing, the district court entered an amended order awarding Lori

         a percentage of the member’s disposable military retired pay, to be
         computed by multiplying 50% times a fraction, the numerator of
         which is the total number of reserve points accrued for the member
         from October 2001 through July 31, 2013[5] (the length of time the
         parties were married and the Respondent [Marshall] was in the
         military) divided by the member’s total number of reserve points at
         the time of retirement or when the pension distribution amount is
         calculated by the military.

         II. Amended MRPDO.

         Marshall challenges the amended MRPDO. He contends that the amended

MRPDO does not comply with the provisions of the decree and thus results in an

impermissible modification of the property distribution. We review his claims de

novo. See In re Marriage of Morris, 810 N.W.2d 880, 885 (Iowa 2012).

         “Under Iowa law pensions are characterized as marital assets, subject to

division in dissolution actions just as any other property.” Benson, 545 N.W.2d

at 255. The division of such property is not subject to modification. See Iowa Code

§ 598.21(7) (2021).     But an order directing a pension plan to pay retirement

benefits to a former spouse “is not itself a property settlement, but is merely a

method of effectuating the property division contained in a dissolution decree and

may be modified later without affecting the finality of the underlying decree.” In re

Marriage of Veit, 797 N.W.2d 562, 564 (Iowa 2011). Because the district court

5   Marshall accrued 3081 retirement points during the marriage.
                                          6

retains authority to interpret and enforce its prior decree, see Morris, 810 N.W.2d

at 886, the question is whether the amended MRPDO conforms to the provisions

of the decree related to the division of Marshall’s military pension.

       Here the decree awarded Lori 50% of Marshall’s military retirement benefits

that accrued during the marriage. Although the decree and the original MRPDO

calculate that award using Marshall’s years of service, the DFAS will not accept an

MRPDO using years of service as a numerator. The DFAS instead directs the

parties to obtain a clarifying order that calculates Lori’s benefits based on

Marshall’s reserve points. Because Marshall’s reserve points accrue differently

than years of service, he claims that Lori will receive a greater share of his pension

if her benefit is calculated under the amended MRPDO.

       Although the total number of reserve points will remain unknown until his

retirement, Marshall calculated Lori’s benefit under each method using a

hypothetical retirement date of September 2020.6 His calculations show that Lori

would receive about $139 more per month under the calculation using reserve

points than she would receive under the calculation using years of service.

Marshall claims that substituting reserve points for years of service in the

calculation differs from the decree and thus impermissibly modifies the property

division.

6 Marshall testified at the November hearing that he was required to retire at age
sixty, some eight years and five months after the date of the hearing. He testified
his health was good and he planned on staying in the military until he was sixty—
“I will as long as I can.” He also testified his military retirement benefits terminate
upon his death. If he died prior to retirement, Lori would not be entitled to any part
of his military pension.
                                          7

       Iowa appellate courts have not addressed whether the marital portion of

retirement benefits earned by military reservists or Guard members should be

calculated on the basis of time rather than points. A Maryland court noted:

       Other courts and commentators that have specifically considered
       this question have concluded that the marital portion of such benefits
       must be based on retirement points. See, e.g., Faulkner v. Goldfuss,
       46 P.3d 993, 1003 (Alaska 2002) (“[W]here the value of retirement
       benefits is not directly related to the length of employment—such as
       when retirement benefits will be determined by the number of points
       earned as a result of the nature and frequency of the service
       rendered—the coverture fraction should be modified so that the
       numerator becomes the number of points earned during the period
       of coverture, and the denominator becomes the total number of
       points earned”); Bloomer v. Bloomer, 927 S.W.2d 118, 121 (Tex.
       [App.] 1996) (“[The] trial court should have characterized [reservist’s]
       military retirement benefits by comparing his points accrued while
       married to the total accrued points”); In re Marriage of Beckman, 800
       P.2d 1376, 1379–80 (Colo. [App.] 1990) (“‘Use of a simple years of
       service computation rather than recognition of the point system will,
       in some situations lead to inequitable conclusions. The greatest
       potential for distortion of the marital share of the benefit occurs in
       situations, where the member of the military retirement system
       switches from regular component to reserve component service’”)
       (quoting W. Troyan, “Procedures for Evaluating Retirement
       Entitlements Under Non–ERISA, Retirement Systems for Marriage
       Dissolution Actions,” in 3 J.P. McCahey, ed., Valuation & Distribution
       of Marital Property § 46.34(1) (1990)); [In re Marriage of] Poppe, 158
       Cal. Rptr. 500, 503–04 [(Cal. Ct. App. 1979)] (“[T]he basis upon
       which apportionment was made, years of service during the marriage
       before separation compared to ‘qualifying’ years in service, bears no
       substantial rational relationship to the amount of the pension”
       because the amount of reservist’s retirement benefit was a function
       of the total points earned for various activities, rather than simply his
       length of service).

Woodson,     885     A.2d    at   913;    accord     Hasselback     v.    Hasselback,

No. 06AP-776, 2007 WL 549461, at *2–4 (Ohio Ct. App. Feb. 22, 2007) (finding

“that in an instance such as this where the value of the retirement benefit is not

directly related to the length of employment, but rather is dependent on the number

of points earned during service, the coverture fraction should be modified to reflect
                                          8

the number of points earned during the marriage and the total number of points

earned, rather than reflect the number of years of service during the marriage and

the total number of years of service”). While the time-basis Benson formula is an

appropriate mechanism to determine the marital portion of retirement benefits in

most cases, it does not work here. We agree with the courts cited above that when

a military member’s retirement pay is not strictly a function of the length of military

service, the appropriate formula—and formula mandated by the DFAS—is

retirement points earned during the marriage divided by the total retirement points

earned. That is the formula the district court utilized here in modifying the MPRDO.

But does the modification impermissibly alter the decretal property division? We

think not.

       To interpret the dissolution decree, we consider the intent of the district

court. See In re Marriage of Tinker, 902 N.W.2d 819, 821 (Iowa Ct. App. 2017).

“In determining the intent of the district court, we look to the language of the

decree.” Id. at 822. As with any written instrument, we construe the decree “in

accord with its evident intention as expressed in the ‘four corners’ of the

document.” Id. The plain language of the decree provides that Lori be awarded

one-half of the military benefits “accrued during the parties’ 12 years of marriage.”

(Emphasis added.) Furthermore, the decree ordered the QDROs be “acceptable

to the plans’ administrators.” It is apparent the district court did not have the DFAS

points formula available to it when drafting the decree. As a result, the court

utilized the Benson method. And so, the Benson formula was reflected in the

original MRPDO.       Much to everyone’s chagrin, the Benson formula is not

acceptable to the DFAS.
                                           9

       After the hearing, the district court concluded that it was the decretal court’s

intent to award Lori “one-half of all military pension benefits that accrued during

the marriage.”    We agree.     The reserve points Marshall accrued during the

marriage accurately reflect the military retirement benefits he accrued during the

marriage. His years of service do not. See Beckman, 800 P.2d at 1379–80. So,

using points rather than years in the division formula does not conflict with, but

follows, the decretal court’s intent to equally divide the military benefits accrued

during the marriage. We therefore conclude there is no impermissible modification

of the property division. We affirm the district court.

       III. Appellate Attorney Fees.

       Both parties request an award of their appellate attorney fees. Such an

award rests in our discretion and is based on the merits of the appeal, the parties’

needs, and their ability to pay. See In re Marriage of Sullins, 715 N.W.2d 242, 255

(Iowa 2006). After considering the appropriate factors, we decline to award either

party appellate attorney fees. The parties are responsible for their own attorney

fees. Court costs are taxed to Marshall.

       AFFIRMED.