LYNN MARTINEZ-OLSON v. THE ESTATE OF DAN OLSON ( 2021 )


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  •       Third District Court of Appeal
    State of Florida
    Opinion filed September 1, 2021.
    Not final until disposition of timely filed motion for rehearing.
    ________________
    No. 3D20-1301
    Lower Tribunal No. 17-1825
    ________________
    Lynn Martinez-Olson,
    Appellant,
    vs.
    The Estate of Dan Olson,
    Appellee.
    An Appeal from the Circuit Court for Miami-Dade County, Maria
    Espinosa Dennis, Judge.
    Sandy T. Fox, P.A., and Sandy T. Fox, for appellant.
    Richard A. Schurr, P.A., and Richard A. Schurr and Bonnie M. Sack,
    for appellee.
    Before LOGUE, GORDO, and LOBREE, JJ.
    LOGUE, J.
    In this post-dissolution of marriage action, the Estate of Dan Olson
    sought to enforce a marital settlement agreement to recover proceeds from
    Dan’s retirement savings 401(k) plan that were distributed to Dan’s former
    wife, Lynn Martinez-Olson, as the named beneficiary under the plan.
    Because Lynn waived any entitlement to her former husband’s 401(k) plan
    proceeds under the marital settlement agreement, the Estate is entitled to
    bring this post-distribution action against Lynn to enforce the contractual
    waiver and to recover those proceeds.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    Dan Olson and Lynn Martinez married in 1998. Dan worked as a
    producer for WSVN 7 News owned by Sunbeam Television Corporation. Dan
    participated in Sunbeam’s retirement savings 401(k) plan which is governed
    by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 
    29 U.S.C. § 1001
     et seq. Dan executed a beneficiary designation form, naming
    his wife, Lynn, as the first beneficiary and his “living children” 1 as the second
    beneficiaries under the 401(k) plan.
    In 2017, Dan and Lynn divorced. A final judgment of dissolution of
    marriage    was    entered    ratifying       a   marital   settlement   agreement
    1
    Dan had two children from a prior marriage. Two additional children were
    born of the marriage between Dan and Lynn. All four children are now adults.
    2
    (“Agreement”) drafted by Lynn’s counsel and signed by the former couple.
    The Agreement provides, in relevant part:
    ARTICLE IX
    RETIREMENT
    9.1 Each party shall receive any and all benefits existing
    by reason of his or her past, present, or future employment or
    military service, including but not limited to any profit-sharing
    plan, retirement plan, Keogh plan, employee stock option plan,
    401(k) plan, employee savings plan, military retired pay, accrued
    unpaid bonuses, or disability plan, whether matured or
    unmatured, accrued or unaccrued, vested or otherwise, together
    with all increases thereof, the proceeds therefrom and any other
    rights related thereto. The other party hereby waives and
    releases any and all claims or interest therein.
    ARTICLE X
    DIVISION OF OTHER ASSETS AND LIABILITIES
    ....
    10.3 Each party shall have exclusive ownership in all
    items of property that are currently in his or her possession or
    control, and the other party waives and releases any and all claim
    or interest in such items.
    Dan died two years after the couple finalized their divorce. Prior to his
    death, Dan did not change the beneficiary on his 401(k) plan. Dan’s daughter
    from a prior marriage, Chelsea Olson, was appointed as personal
    representative of his estate. Chelsea and Lynn made competing claims to
    the proceeds from Dan’s 401(k) plan. Sunbeam ultimately distributed the
    3
    proceeds to Lynn as the named beneficiary in the plan documents pursuant
    to ERISA. 2
    Chelsea Olson, as personal representative of her late father’s estate,
    filed a verified motion to enforce the Agreement in the family law division of
    the Miami-Dade County Circuit Court. In the motion, Chelsea asserted that
    while Sunbeam was required to distribute the 401(k) plan proceeds to Lynn
    pursuant to ERISA and the plan documents, Lynn had clearly and
    unambiguously waived any and all right, title, and interest she had in the
    proceeds. Chelsea further argued that ERISA does not preclude the Estate
    from bringing a post-distribution action to enforce the contractual waiver and
    to recover the plan proceeds. Thus, Chelsea sought a court order requiring
    Lynn to turn over the proceeds to Dan’s Estate, or to his four living adult
    children. The trial court referred the matter to a general magistrate.
    2
    The Estate does not dispute that Sunbeam was required to distribute the
    proceeds to Lynn, as the named beneficiary, in conformity with the plan
    documents. ERISA requires that “[e]very employee benefit plan . . . be
    established and maintained pursuant to a written instrument” specifying “the
    basis on which payments are made to and from the plan.” 29 U.S.C §
    1102(a)(1), (b)(4). In Kennedy v. Plan Administrator for DuPont Savings &
    Investment Plan, 
    555 U.S. 285
    , 300 (2009), the Supreme Court held that an
    ERISA plan administrator, here Sunbeam, is “obliged to act ‘in accordance
    with the documents and instruments governing the plan’ . . . and ERISA
    provides no exemption from this duty when it comes time to pay benefits.”
    (quoting 
    29 U.S.C. § 1104
    (a)(1)(D)).
    4
    In response to the motion, Lynn asserted that as the first named
    beneficiary she was entitled to Dan’s 401(k) plan proceeds and that she had
    never waived entitlement to the proceeds under the Agreement. Specifically,
    Lynn argued that because the Agreement did not specify who is to receive
    the so-called “death benefits” under the 401(k) plan, the Agreement was
    insufficient to override the beneficiary designation form, which remained
    unchanged by Dan after the couple divorced.
    Following a hearing, the general magistrate entered its report and
    recommendation finding that paragraph 9.1 of the Agreement is not a waiver
    of beneficiary rights because there is no specific reference to “death benefits”
    or “death beneficiary designations” to override the 401(k) plan document
    naming Lynn as the first beneficiary. The general magistrate relied on the
    Supreme Court’s decision in Crawford v. Barker, 
    64 So. 3d 1246
     (Fla. 2011),
    in which Justice Pariente, writing for the majority, stated, in dictum, the
    following general proposition:
    Absent the marital settlement agreement providing who is
    or is not to receive the death benefits or specifying the
    beneficiary, courts should look no further than the named
    beneficiary on the policy, plan, or account. General language
    such as language stating who is to receive ownership is not
    specific enough to override the plain language of the beneficiary
    designation. Magic words are not required; however, if the
    parties wish to specify in a marital settlement agreement that a
    spouse will not receive the death benefits or wish to specify a
    5
    particular beneficiary, this should be done clearly and
    unambiguously.
    
    Id. at 1256
    .
    The general magistrate also relied upon Smith v. Smith, 
    919 So. 2d 525
     (Fla. 5th DCA 2005), where the Fifth District similarly stated:
    [W]hile it may be possible in a marital settlement agreement to
    waive one’s right as a beneficiary of insurance policies, that
    waiver can only be accomplished if the waiving party specifically
    gives up his or her rights to the “proceeds” of these
    policies.[n.1] Otherwise, one must look only to the beneficiary
    designation made by the insured and filed with the insurer.
    [n.1] Obviously, some other language such as “death benefits”
    would likely suffice.
    
    Id. at 528
    . The general magistrate also found that Florida’s revocation-on-
    divorce statute enacted after Crawford, section 732.703(2), Florida Statutes
    (2017), 3 is inapplicable to the extent that federal law, in this case ERISA,
    3
    Section 732.703(2), Florida Statutes, provides:
    A designation made by or on behalf of the decedent providing for
    the payment or transfer at death of an interest in an asset to or
    for the benefit of the decedent’s former spouse is void as of the
    time the decedent’s marriage was judicially dissolved or declared
    invalid by court order prior to the decedent’s death, if the
    designation was made prior to the dissolution or court order. The
    decedent’s interest in the asset shall pass as if the decedent’s
    former spouse predeceased the decedent. An individual
    retirement account described in s. 408 or s. 408A of the Internal
    Revenue Code of 1986, or an employee benefit plan, may not be
    treated as a trust for purposes of this section.
    6
    provides otherwise. Based on these conclusions of law, the general
    magistrate recommended that the trial court deny the Estate’s motion to
    enforce the Agreement against Lynn.
    The Estate filed exceptions to the magistrate’s finding that since the
    Agreement does not expressly state that Lynn waived entitlement to the
    “death benefits” from Dan’s 401(k) plan, Lynn is entitled to those benefits as
    the named beneficiary. The Estate asserted that if the Agreement was silent
    as to who was entitled to receive the “death benefits” of the 401(k) plan, then
    Florida’s revocation-on-divorce statute would provide the legal mechanism
    to automatically revoke Lynn’s beneficiary designation and provide a transfer
    of these benefits as if Lynn had predeceased Dan.
    The trial court sustained the Estate’s exceptions to the general
    magistrate’s report. In doing so, the trial court found, based on the clear and
    unambiguous language in the Agreement, that
    Dan did not intend, and Lynn did not expect, to have the
    proceeds of Dan’s 401(k) plan transferred to Lynn upon Dan’s
    death, as much as Lynn did not intend and Dan did not expect to
    have the proceeds of Lynn’s 401(k) plan, if any, transferred to
    Dan upon Lynn’s death.
    ....
    [I]n the present case, the [Agreement] specifically dictates who
    is to receive the proceeds of the 401(k) plan at issue. The
    [Agreement] provides under Article IX, “RETIREMENT” that both
    Dan and Lynn, not only have exclusive ownership over their own
    7
    401(k) plans, but also the right to receive all increases thereof,
    proceeds therefrom and rights thereto.[4]
    The trial court further concluded, relying upon recent cases from
    several state and federal jurisdictions, that Dan’s estate is not precluded from
    seeking enforcement of the Agreement “simply because Dan forgot to fill out
    a form.” Accordingly, the trial court ordered Lynn to turn over all proceeds
    received from Dan’s 401(k) plan to the Estate’s counsel within ten days of its
    order. Lynn appealed this order.
    ANALYSIS
    “We review a trial court’s decision to accept or reject a general
    magistrate’s report and recommendations for an abuse of discretion.”
    Lascaibar v. Lascaibar, 
    156 So. 3d 547
    , 549 n.1 (Fla. 3d DCA 2015). The
    trial court “is free to reach a conclusion of law, contrary to that of a master,
    which he [or she] considers in the exercise of his [or her] judicial discretion
    produces a more equitable solution to the issues posed for decision.”
    Mounce v. Mounce, 
    459 So. 2d 437
    , 437 (Fla. 3d DCA 1984) (citation
    omitted).
    “A marital settlement agreement and a deferred compensation fund are
    both contracts and subject to contract interpretation principles. Where the
    4
    (Emphasis in original).
    8
    terms of a contract are clear and unambiguous, the parties’ intent must be
    gleaned from the four corners of the document.” Crawford, 
    64 So. 3d at
    1255–56 (noting that courts are “to view settlement agreements as well as
    the terms of beneficiary-designated policies, plans, or accounts as contracts
    and to apply the plain language of those documents”).
    Lynn asserts that the Agreement failed to specify who was to receive
    the “death benefits” under Dan’s 401(k) plan and as such any waiver under
    the Agreement constitutes a general release, which is insufficient to override
    the beneficiary designation form. The Estate responds that both Dan and
    Lynn unambiguously waived any claim or interest, including the right to
    receive proceeds, from the other’s 401(k) plan. We must look to the plain
    language of the Agreement to determine whether Lynn waived entitlement
    to Dan’s 401(k) plan proceeds.
    The Agreement provides the following specific waiver:
    9.1 Each party shall receive any and all benefits existing
    by reason of his or her past, present, or future employment . . .
    including but not limited to any . . . retirement plan . . . 401(k) plan
    . . . whether matured or unmatured, accrued or unaccrued,
    vested or otherwise, together with all increases thereof, the
    proceeds therefrom and any other rights related thereto. The
    other party hereby waives and releases any and all claims or
    interest therein.
    (emphasis added). This provision clearly mentions Dan’s 401(k) plan.
    According to the Supreme Court’s decision in Crawford, “when the
    9
    settlement agreement mentions the disputed policy or plan, the question
    then becomes whether the language in the settlement agreement is specific
    enough to override the predissolution beneficiary.” 
    64 So. 3d at 1253
    . As
    mentioned earlier, the Supreme Court in Crawford generally stated:
    . . . absent the marital settlement agreement providing who
    is or is not to receive the death benefits or specifying who is to
    be the beneficiary, courts should look no further than the named
    beneficiary in the separate document of the policy, plan, or
    account. General language in a marital settlement agreement,
    such as language stating who is to receive ownership, is not
    specific enough to override the plain language of the beneficiary
    designation in the separate document. The spouse, who owns
    the policy, plan, or account following the dissolution of marriage,
    is otherwise free to name any individual as the beneficiary;
    however, if the spouse does not change the beneficiary, the
    beneficiary designation in the separate document controls.
    
    Id. at 1248
    .
    Here, the plain language of paragraph 9.1 under the Agreement is
    specific enough to override the beneficiary designation form. The Agreement
    references the disputed 401(k) plan and the “proceeds therefrom.” The
    Agreement further specifically and unequivocally provides that Dan and Lynn
    “shall receive any and all benefits” of his or her own 401(k) plan, including
    “all increases thereof, the proceeds therefrom and any other rights related
    thereto,” of which the other party “waives and releases any and all claims or
    interest therein.” This is not the general language, merely stating who is to
    10
    receive ownership of the plan, disapproved of by the Supreme Court in
    Crawford.
    Indeed, the general language in the settlement agreement in Crawford
    provided that the husband “shall retain retirement money” under a deferred
    compensation plan. As the trial court properly noted in the order under
    review:
    The distinction between the present case and Crawford is clear
    and obvious. In Crawford the marital settlement agreement
    included only general language as to who is to receive ownership
    of the deferred compensation plan, but failed to identify who was
    to receive the proceeds of the deferred compensation plan.
    Crawford noted that while a party may waive one’s right as a
    beneficiary, that waiver can only be accomplished if the waiving
    party specifically gives up his or her rights to the proceeds of the
    plan.
    We agree with the trial court’s sound analysis. The argument that the
    Agreement is not specific enough to override the beneficiary designation
    form because the words “death benefits” were not used is unconvincing. See
    Crawford, 
    64 So. 3d at 1256
     (noting that “[m]agic words are not required” in
    a marital settlement agreement in order to specify who is to receive the
    proceeds or benefits of a policy, plan, or account). We decline any invitation
    11
    to rewrite the Agreement, which was freely and voluntarily entered into by
    Dan and Lynn.5
    Likewise, in Smith, the marital settlement agreement generally
    referenced a retirement plan and provided, “Husband shall receive as his
    own and Wife shall have no further rights or responsibilities regarding these
    assets.” The Fifth District concluded:
    [T]he marital settlement agreement did not mention a
    disposition of the proceeds of the plans and accounts, and the
    decedent never changed the beneficiary designations. Under
    these circumstances, courts “need look no further than the plain
    language of the policy” to determine who the decedent intended
    as beneficiary of the proceeds.
    
    919 So. 2d at 528
     (emphasis added) (quoting In re Estate of Dellinger, 
    760 So. 2d 1016
    , 1017 (Fla. 4th DCA 2000)). Here, in contrast, the Agreement
    expressly mentions the “proceeds” of the disputed 401(k) plan. 6
    5
    We also note the Supreme Court used the words “death benefits” and
    “proceeds” interchangeably in Crawford. 
    64 So. 3d at 1249
     (“. . . in the
    absence of specific reference in the agreement to the proceeds (or death
    benefits), the recipient is determined by looking only to the designated
    beneficiary.”); 
    id. at 1257
     (“. . . the settlement agreement in this case did not
    specify that Manuel Crawford was to receive the proceeds, or death benefits,
    of the deferred compensation fund.”).
    6
    Notably, in Smith, the court also used the terms “proceeds” and “death
    benefits” interchangeably throughout its opinion. See id. at 527 (“The
    agreement, however, made no mention of the proceeds or death benefits of
    the policies and plans.” (emphasis in original)); id. at 528 n.1 (noting that a
    “waiver can only be accomplished if the waiving party specifically gives up
    12
    In addition to the specific waiver of the 401(k) plan proceeds, and as
    the trial court properly found, the Agreement also contained a general waiver
    provision: Dan and Lynn “shall have exclusive ownership in all items of
    property that are currently in his or her possession or control, and the other
    party waives and releases any and all claim or interest in such items.”
    Accordingly, based on the plain language of the Agreement, Dan and
    Lynn intended to receive all rights and benefits, including the proceeds, from
    their respective 401(k) plans and unambiguously waived any and all claims
    or interests in the other’s 401(k) plan. See Crawford, 
    64 So. 3d at
    1256–57.
    In further support of her entitlement to Dan’s 401(k) plan proceeds,
    Lynn attempts to argue that Florida’s revocation-on-divorce statute is
    expressly preempted by ERISA. As noted earlier, following the Supreme
    Court’s decision in Crawford, in 2012 the Legislature enacted Florida’s
    revocation-on-divorce statute to address the effects of a dissolution of
    marriage upon a pre-dissolution beneficiary designation form executed in
    favor of a former spouse. But that issue is not raised here.
    The definitive question here is whether Lynn waived entitlement to the
    proceeds paid over to her as the named beneficiary by private agreement—
    his or her rights to the ‘proceeds’ of these policies” and “[o]bviously, some
    other language such as ‘death benefits’ would likely suffice”).
    13
    not by operation of law. Therefore, in holding that Lynn waived her
    entitlement to the disputed 401(k) plan proceeds under the Agreement, we
    are not required to delve into statutory interpretation or venture into the
    thicket of ERISA preemption. 7 Because the marital settlement agreement
    clearly provides that Dan and Lynn shall receive the proceeds from their
    respective 401(k) plan and specifically waive any entitlement to such
    proceeds from the other’s plan, application of Florida’s revocation-on-divorce
    statute is not required, and we therefore express no view as to its validity.
    The more pertinent question, which is one of first impression for this
    Court, is whether Dan’s estate can bring this state law action against Lynn,
    as the named beneficiary, to enforce a contractual waiver after distribution
    of the ERISA-governed 401(k) plan proceeds. This inquiry was left for
    another day by the Supreme Court in Kennedy. 
    555 U.S. at
    299 n.10 (“Nor
    do we express any view as to whether the Estate could have brought an
    action in state or federal court against [the named beneficiary] to obtain the
    benefits after they were distributed.”). Since then, several state and federal
    appellate courts have been called upon to answer it. The Eleventh Circuit
    7
    As the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals wisely observed, “any court forced to
    enter the ERISA preemption thicket sets out on a treacherous path.”
    Gonzales v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 
    901 F.2d 446
    , 451–52 (5th Cir. 1990).
    14
    Court of Appeals did so in MetLife Life and Annuity Company of Connecticut
    v. Akpele, 
    886 F.3d 998
     (11th Cir. 2018).
    In MetLife, the Eleventh Circuit held that, while “a party who is not a
    named beneficiary of an ERISA plan may not sue the plan for any plan
    benefits,” (which is not the case here), that party may sue the plan
    beneficiary to recover those benefits, “but only after the plan beneficiary has
    received the benefits.” 
    Id. at 1007
    . In reaching this decision, the Eleventh
    Circuit relied upon a sister appellate court’s decision, Estate of Kensinger v.
    URL Pharma, Inc., 
    674 F.3d 131
     (3d Cir. 2012), 8 which held that once the
    benefits were distributed to the designated beneficiary, ERISA is no longer
    implicated. 
    Id. at 137
     (“[T]o the extent that ERISA is concerned with the
    expeditious payment of plan proceeds to beneficiaries, permitting suits
    against beneficiaries after benefits have been paid does not implicate any
    8
    In Estate of Kensinger, the Third Circuit held that an estate can sue a former
    spouse to enforce a contractual waiver and to recover disputed ERISA-
    governed 401(k) plan proceeds after the plan administrator distributes the
    proceeds to the former spouse as the named beneficiary. 
    674 F.3d at 132
    .
    15
    concern of expeditious payment or undermine any core objective of ERISA.”)
    (emphasis in original).9
    In line with MetLife, Kensinger, and other analogous decisions, 10 the
    Estate asserts that ERISA does not preempt post-distribution suits against
    named beneficiaries to enforce a contractual waiver of plan proceeds. We
    agree and approve the growing body of case law supporting the Estate’s
    position that it can sue to recover the proceeds after they are distributed by
    the ERISA plan administrator pursuant to the plan documents.
    9
    Courts have recognized three important ERISA objectives: “(1) simple
    administration of plans; (2) avoiding double liability for plan administrators;
    and (3) ensuring that beneficiaries receive funds promptly.” MetLife, 886
    F.3d at 1007 (citing Kennedy, 
    555 U.S. at 301
    ).
    10
    See, e.g., Andochick v. Byrd, 
    709 F.3d 296
    , 301 (4th Cir. 2013) (holding
    that “ERISA does not preempt post-distribution suits against ERISA
    beneficiaries”); Appleton v. Alcorn, 
    728 S.E.2d 549
    , 550 (Ga. 2012) (holding
    that a decedent’s estate could bring a post-distribution suit alleging breach
    of contract against the decedent’s former spouse to enforce a contractual
    waiver of her right to retain proceeds of decedent’s employer-provided
    401(k) plan); Sweebe v. Sweebe, 
    712 N.W. 2d 708
    , 712 (Mich. 2006)
    (“[W]hile a plan administrator must pay benefits to the named beneficiary as
    required by ERISA, this does not mean that the named beneficiary cannot
    waive her interest in retaining these proceeds. Once the proceeds are
    distributed, the consensual terms of a prior contractual agreement may
    prevent the named beneficiary from retaining those proceeds.”); Pardee v.
    Pers. Representative for Est. of Pardee, 
    112 P.3d 308
    , 312–16 (Okla. Civ.
    App. 2004) (holding that an estate may enforce a common law waiver against
    a named beneficiary because the “pension plan funds were no longer entitled
    to ERISA protection once the plan funds were distributed”).
    16
    CONCLUSION
    Because the trial court is not bound by the general magistrate’s
    conclusions of law, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in
    rejecting the magistrate’s erroneous interpretation of the Agreement and
    sustaining the Estate’s exceptions. Lynn Martinez explicitly waived any
    entitlement to the proceeds of Dan Olson’s 401(k) plan under the marital
    settlement agreement. Therefore, the Estate is entitled to bring this action
    against Lynn to enforce that contractual waiver and to recover the plan
    proceeds.
    Affirmed.
    17