In Re The Marriage Of David A. Brown And Pamela S. Brown, Upon The Petition Of David A. Brown ( 2009 )


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  •                       IN THE SUPREME COURT OF IOWA
    No. 08–0948
    Filed December 18, 2009
    IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF DAVID A.
    BROWN and PAMELA S. BROWN,
    Upon the Petition of
    DAVID A. BROWN,
    Appellant,
    And Concerning
    PAMELA S. BROWN,
    Appellee.
    __________________________________________________________________
    On review from the Iowa Court of Appeals.
    Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Woodbury County,
    Mary Jane Sokolovske, Judge.
    Petitioner seeks further review of the court of appeals opinion
    affirming the district court’s order dividing the petitioner’s pension using
    the service-factor-percentage method.        DECISION OF COURT OF
    APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
    R. Scott Rhinehart of Rhinehart Law, P.C., Sioux City, for
    appellant.
    Francis L. Goodwin of Baron, Sar, Goodwin, Gill & Lohr, Sioux
    City, for appellee.
    2
    BAKER, Justice.
    Petitioner seeks further review of the court of appeals opinion
    affirming the district court’s order dividing the petitioner’s pension using
    the service-factor-percentage method.       We are asked to determine:
    (1) whether the court of appeals erred in finding the dissolution decree
    was not final until the qualified domestic relations order (“QDRO”) was
    entered and (2) whether the district court judge erred by adopting a
    QDRO that is alleged to be contrary to the specific language contained in
    the parties’ decree of dissolution. We find the court of appeals erred in
    determining the dissolution decree was not final until the QDRO was
    entered; however, its adoption of a QDRO employing the service-factor-
    percentage method was not contrary to the language of the dissolution
    decree and will be upheld.
    I.    Background Facts and Proceedings.
    David Brown and Pamela Brown were divorced on June 30, 1999.
    At the time of the dissolution, David worked for the City of Sioux City as
    a manager in the Inspection Services Department.              Through his
    employment, David has an IPERS pension plan. The dissolution decree
    approximated the value of David’s plan at $22,500.00 and awarded
    David sixty percent of the plan and Pamela forty percent of the plan. It
    then instructed the parties to submit a QDRO to the court for its
    approval.
    A proposed QDRO was not submitted until March 2007 when both
    Pamela and David filed applications for entry of a QDRO. David filed a
    resistance to Pamela’s proposed QDRO. He claimed Pamela’s proposed
    QDRO uses the service-factor-percentage method to calculate her portion
    and incorrectly awards her forty percent of the gross monthly or lump
    sum benefit at the date of distribution.       David also stated he had
    3
    prepared a proposed QDRO in 2004, which was approved by IPERS.
    This QDRO directs IPERS to pay Pamela $9,000 or forty percent of the
    total amount in David’s IPERS account on the day of dissolution plus
    any accumulated interest on that amount.
    After holding a hearing on the matter, the district court issued an
    order finding that In re Marriage of Benson, 
    545 N.W.2d 252
    (Iowa 1996),
    was controlling, the service-factor-percentage method should be used to
    divide David’s pension, and therefore, Pamela’s proposed QDRO should
    be adopted.   Pamela filed a rule 1.904(2) motion requesting the court
    correct and enlarge its order.    Pamela specifically asked the court to
    insert provisions for the payment of interest on both her preretirement
    and postretirement death benefits. She also requested the court insert
    language that prevents David from taking a lump-sum distribution of his
    retirement benefits in order to deny Pamela her share of the pension.
    David filed a resistance to Pamela’s motion. The court granted Pamela’s
    motion and inserted her proposed language into the approved QDRO.
    David subsequently filed a motion to amend, enlarge and clarify
    the district court’s orders adopting Pamela’s proposed QDRO and
    granting Pamela’s rule 1.904(2) motion. In this motion David requested
    the court hold a hearing to determine: (1) whether the court should sign
    a   QDRO   that   applies   the   service-factor-percentage   method   and
    (2) whether the approved QDRO should provide for interest on both the
    preretirement benefits and postretirement death benefits and prohibit
    David from taking a lump-sum distribution. Pamela filed a resistance to
    David’s motion asserting that the service-factor-percentage method was
    appropriate. The court overruled David’s motion.
    David appealed the district court’s ruling adopting Pamela’s
    proposed QDRO. This appeal was transferred to the court of appeals.
    4
    The court of appeals affirmed the district court’s order dividing David’s
    pension according to the service-factor-percentage method. David filed
    an application for further review.
    II.     Standard of Review.
    We review dissolution cases de novo. In re Marriage of Sullins, 
    715 N.W.2d 242
    , 247 (Iowa 2006). “ ‘Although we decide the issues raised on
    appeal anew, we give weight to the trial court’s factual findings,
    especially with respect to the credibility of the witnesses.’ ” 
    Id. (quoting In
    re Marriage of Witten, 
    672 N.W.2d 768
    , 773 (Iowa 2003)). “Precedent is of
    little value as our determination must depend on the facts of the
    particular case.”   In re Marriage of White, 
    537 N.W.2d 744
    , 746 (Iowa
    1995).
    III.    Discussion and Analysis.
    In this case, we are asked two questions: (1) whether the court of
    appeals erred in finding the dissolution decree was not final until the
    QDRO was entered and (2) whether the district court judge erred by
    adopting a QDRO that is contrary to the specific language contained in
    the parties’ decree of dissolution.
    A.     Finality of Dissolution Decree.       In upholding the district
    court’s QDRO utilizing the service-factor-percentage method, the court of
    appeals found the parties’ decree unresolved at the time the district court
    received the parties’ proposed QDROs in 2007 because QDROs were
    never submitted to the decretal court for approval in 1999. Despite not
    having been raised by either party, the court of appeals found the entire
    decree was not final, including the division of the pension, and was still
    subject to change in this appeal.         Unlike in Sullins and Benson, the
    leading cases in this area of law, this is not a direct appeal of the
    dissolution decree. Neither of the parties appealed the court’s division of
    5
    their marital property in 1999.      It is well established that the divorce
    decree was therefore final and settled all rights and interests of the
    parties in the property of one another.       Carr v. Carr, 
    185 Iowa 1205
    ,
    1211, 
    171 N.W.2d 785
    , 787 (1919); see also Franklin v. Bonner, 
    201 Iowa 516
    , 519, 
    207 N.W. 778
    , 780 (1926) (“There can be no question that a
    decree rendered in a divorce case is a finality as to all matters which
    were at issue, or which it was the duty of either party to present before
    the case went to final decree.”).
    According to Iowa Code section 598.21(7), property divisions made
    in a divorce decree are not subject to modification.                  Iowa Code
    § 598.21(7) (2007) (“Property divisions made under this chapter are not
    subject to modification.”). The dissolution court’s property division can
    only be challenged on direct appeal, In re Marriage of Johnson, 
    299 N.W.2d 466
    , 467–68 (Iowa 1980); thereafter property rights are afforded
    some sense of permanency and are not subject to modification by the
    court absent fraud, duress, coercion, mistake or some other grounds
    that would justify changing the decree.        In re Marriage of Knott, 
    331 N.W.2d 135
    , 136–37 (Iowa 1983). There is no indication of fraud, duress,
    coercion or mistake in this case. As a general rule, “the property division
    in a marriage dissolution decree is self-executing with respect to the
    creation of new title or ownership interests.”       Sieren v. Bauman, 
    436 N.W.2d 43
    , 45 (Iowa 1989).          All property awarded the parties in a
    dissolution becomes theirs the moment the decree is final. 
    Id. This principle
    is not entirely true as applied to pension divisions.
    Because    of   certain   anti-alienation   restrictions   in   the    Employee
    Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) and the federal tax code, a
    QDRO must be filed for every pension division undertaken pursuant to a
    divorce. See generally Rohrbeck v. Rohrbeck, 
    566 A.2d 767
    , 768–71 (Md.
    6
    1989).   In Iowa, this QDRO must comply with Internal Revenue Code
    section 414(p) and Iowa Code section 97B.39, as well as the Iowa
    administrative rules. See 26 U.S.C. § 414(p) (2006), Iowa Code § 97B.39,
    Iowa Admin. Code r. 495–16.2. We have never decided whether a QDRO
    is a necessary part of the judgment of dissolution or if it should be
    regarded as supplemental to the divorce proceeding. The Iowa court of
    appeals, however, has stated:
    [W]e believe the issuance of a QDRO following a final decree
    for dissolution of marriage does not constitute an unlawful
    modification of property awarded under the original decree.
    ....
    ERISA does not require a QDRO to be part of the
    actual judgment in a case. It does, however, define several
    requirements which must be met before an order will be
    considered to be a QDRO.
    In re Marriage of Bruns, 
    535 N.W.2d 157
    , 161–62 (Iowa Ct. App. 1995)
    (citations omitted).
    In Rohrbeck, the Maryland Court of Appeals further explained how
    a QDRO affects the finality of a divorce decree. 
    Rohrbeck, 566 A.2d at 774
    –75. The Rohrbeck court distinguished between QDROs that aid in
    the enforcement of previously entered final orders and QDROs that are
    required to be prepared and submitted as part of the court’s final
    judgment. 
    Id. The court
    stated:
    To be final and conclusive . . . [a] ruling must
    necessarily be unqualified and complete, except as to
    something that would be regarded as collateral to the
    proceeding. It must leave nothing more to be done in order
    to effectuate the court’s disposition of the matter. In the first
    instance, that becomes a question of the court’s intention:
    did the court intend its ruling to be the final, conclusive,
    ultimate disposition of the matter?
    7
    
    Id. at 774.
    Ultimately, the Rohrbeck court decided the district court had
    made it clear that the ruling it entered would not be final and complete
    until the QDROs were submitted and signed.          
    Id. The court
    further
    explained that the QDROs submitted to the district court in that case
    were not merely perfunctory in nature, but were intended to resolve
    significant disagreements between the parties, such as whether the ex-
    spouse would receive survivor benefits. 
    Id. at 775
    n.6.
    The Rohrbeck court recognized that there may be situations in
    which a QDRO is intended to be collateral to the judgment.
    [W]here a QDRO is needed to enforce an earlier entered
    support order, it obviously cannot be part of the underlying
    judgment. Even when the QDRO is required to effectuate a
    disposition . . . there may be circumstances where the need
    for the order may not be apparent at the time the judgment
    is entered or where an order entered as part of a judgment
    has to be modified later because some deficiency in it
    precludes it from being accepted as a QDRO. We therefore
    expressly recognize the ability of a party otherwise entitled to
    a QDRO to obtain one as an aid to enforcing a previously
    entered judgment.
    
    Id. at 774.
    The Browns’ divorce decree states “A separate Qualified Domestic
    Relations Order should be entered in such regard. The parties should
    submit such an order to the Court for its signature.” Based upon the
    language of the dissolution court’s decree and the overall property
    division, we determine this QDRO is supplemental and not a part of the
    underlying decree.
    This finding is in line with our previous cases concerning
    supplemental orders to enforce property divisions. In Welp, we held that
    a supplemental order intended to enforce the court’s earlier dissolution
    decree dividing the parties’ property did not render the marriage
    dissolution unresolved. In re Marriage of Welp, 
    596 N.W.2d 569
    , 572–73
    8
    (Iowa 1999). In that case, we reiterated “that a ‘final decree is the one in
    which the marriage is terminated.               If review of the provisions of that
    decree is desired, appeal must be taken within 30 days of its entry.’ ” 
    Id. at 572
    (quoting In re Fenchel, 
    268 N.W.2d 207
    , 209 (Iowa 1978)).
    Accordingly, after the appeal period has passed, the parties may appeal
    the supplemental order, but they may not appeal provisions in the
    original decree. 
    Id. at 573.
    The Browns’ divorce decree was final when entered. Any appeal to
    change the language of the district court’s division of the pension plan
    was required to be filed in 1999, not 2008. 1
    B. Pension Plans. Pension plans are divisible marital property.
    
    Sullins, 715 N.W.2d at 247
    . There are two types of private pension plans:
    defined-benefit plans and defined-contribution plans.                    
    Benson, 545 N.W.2d at 254
    .            Both types of plans may be funded through
    contributions made either solely by the employer (noncontributory plan),
    or contributions by both the employer and the employee (contributory
    plans). 
    Id. IPERS is
    a defined-benefit plan. 
    Sullins, 715 N.W.2d at 249
    ;
    see also Iowa Code § 97B.49A(3) (“For each active or inactive vested
    member retiring on or after July 1, 1994, with four or more complete
    years of service, a monthly benefit shall be computed which is equal to
    one-twelfth of an amount equal to the applicable percentage of the three-
    year average covered wage multiplied by a fraction of years of service.”).
    1In January of 2004, David also filed a petition to modify the divorce decree to
    eliminate spousal support due to his remarriage, the death of the parties’ youngest son,
    Pamela’s full-time employment, and Pamela’s long-term relationship with another
    individual. A trial was held on the matter. The district court overruled David’s petition.
    David appealed and the court of appeals affirmed the judgment of the district court.
    9
    Both David and the State of Iowa contribute to his IPERS plan; therefore,
    it is a contributory defined-benefit plan. 
    Benson, 545 N.W.2d at 254
    .
    Under a defined-benefit plan, the future benefit received is
    determined in advance based on a benefit formula.         
    Id. Such a
    plan
    “provides a benefit that is related to the employee’s earnings and length
    of service.” 
    Id. at 254–55
    (citing Steven R. Brown, An Interdisciplinary
    Analysis of the Division of Pension Benefits in Divorce and Post-Judgment
    Partition Actions: Cures for the Inequities in Berry v. Berry, 39 Baylor L.
    Rev. 1131, 1141–42 (1987)).
    There are two acceptable methods for dividing pension benefits:
    the present-value method and the percentage method.             
    Sullins, 715 N.W.2d at 248
    ; 
    Benson, 545 N.W.2d at 255
    . Under the first method, the
    court determines the current value of the plan and awards the spouse a
    share of the total. 
    Benson, 545 N.W.2d at 255
    . Under the percentage
    method, the court awards the spouse a percentage of the pension that is
    payable when the benefits mature. 
    Id. Although both
    methods may be used to divide a defined-benefit
    plan, we have expressed a preference for the percentage method. 
    Sullins, 715 N.W.2d at 248
    .       The present-value method presents problems
    because it requires the court to determine the present value of the plan
    before it can allocate a portion to the spouse.     
    Id. Determining the
    present value of a defined-benefit plan is complicated and requires
    actuarial science. 
    Id. This is
    partially because the present value actually
    represents a series of payments computed into one lump sum payment
    in current dollars. Id.; see also Thompson v. Thompson, 
    438 A.2d 839
    ,
    841 (Conn. 1981) (“The present value of a pension benefit may be arrived
    at by using general[] actuarial principles to discount for mortality,
    interest and the probability of the employee remaining with the employer
    10
    until retirement age.”).    In expressing this preference, the court also
    considers the economic difficulty of paying a lump sum amount at the
    time of dissolution. 
    Sullins, 715 N.W.2d at 249
    .
    As previously noted, David’s pension is a defined-benefit plan with
    its attendant problems in accurately determining its present value.
    Therefore, it was preferable that the percentage method be used to divide
    the benefits.
    C.    The QDRO.       David contends the district court erred by
    adopting a QDRO that is contrary to the language of the parties’ decree of
    dissolution.    He claims the language of the parties’ 1999 dissolution
    decree employed the present-value method.           The problem is no one
    appealed the decree in 1999. We are now at the QDRO stage and must
    determine the effect of the language in the decree. After reviewing both
    parties’ proposed QDROs, the district court applied the percentage
    method to divide David’s pension, and therefore, adopted Pamela’s
    proposed QDRO.
    A    dissolution   decree   is   construed   like   any   other   written
    instrument. In re Marriage of Lawson, 
    409 N.W.2d 181
    , 182 (Iowa 1987).
    “The decree should be construed in accordance with its
    evident intention. Indeed the determinative factor is the
    intention of the court as gathered from all parts of the
    decree. Effect is to be given to that which is clearly implied
    as well as to that which is expressed.          Of course, in
    determining this intent, we take the decree by its four
    corners and try to ascertain from it the intent as disclosed by
    the various provisions of the decree.”
    In re Marriage of Goodman, 
    690 N.W.2d 279
    , 283 (Iowa 2004) (quoting In
    re Roberts’ Estate, 
    257 Iowa 1
    , 6, 
    131 N.W.2d 458
    , 461 (1964)).             In
    construing a dissolution decree, we give force and effect to every word, if
    possible, in order to give the decree a consistent, effective and reasonable
    meaning in its entirety. 
    Lawson, 409 N.W.2d at 182
    –83.
    11
    David’s pension plan is divided in the dissolution decree as follows:
    David has an IPERS pension plan which is currently
    valued at approximately $22,500.00. This plan should be
    divided so that David receives 60% of it and Pamela receives
    40% of it. This is to account [for] the disparity in value of
    the property previously awarded the parties. A separate
    Qualified Domestic Relations Order should be entered in
    such regard. The parties should submit such an order to the
    Court for its signature.
    (Emphasis added.)
    David claims that according to this language, the estimated value
    of the pension on the date of dissolution was to be divided using the
    percentages provided by the court.           He was to receive $13,500 and
    Pamela was to receive $9,000 of the pension plus ten percent interest on
    her portion compounded annually.             He claims this would make her
    portion of the pension plan worth approximately $17,540 today. Pamela
    disputes this interpretation and asserts that the percentage method was
    intended. 2
    To determine whether the district court intended the division of
    David’s pension to be under the present-value method or the percentage
    method, we must interpret the language of the district court’s division.
    Although the decree purports to value the plan, the record does not
    contain any actuarial data submitted by either of the parties; thus, we
    can only conclude the district court based its figure on the statement
    2Pamela’s proposed QDRO states the service-factor formula should be used to
    determine the respondent’s benefits according to the following formula:
    40% of the gross monthly or lump sum benefit payable at the date of
    distribution to the Member multiplied by the “service factor.” The
    numerator of the service factor is the number of quarters covered during
    the marriage period of October 7, 1972 through June 30, 1999 and the
    denominator is the Member’s total quarters of service covered by IPERS
    and used in calculating the Member’s benefit.
    12
    that showed the value of David’s contributions to the plan up until the
    date of dissolution.    This figure does not accurately value the present
    worth of the benefits. See In re Marriage of Scheppele, 
    524 N.W.2d 678
    ,
    679 (Iowa Ct. App. 1994) (noting the value of petitioners IPERS pension
    is not limited to her vested contributions). As we noted in Sullins, the
    amount of a participant’s IPERS contributions has no relation to the
    present value of the future benefits because the contributions are not
    used to calculate benefits.    
    Sullins, 715 N.W.2d at 249
    .    Instead, the
    benefits are ultimately tied to a percentage of the employee’s average
    wages. 
    Id. Absent detailed
    expert testimony involving mortality and discount
    rates, future contributions and other factors, an accurate present-value
    calculation was impossible. 
    Id. at 248–49.
    Thus, without such evidence,
    the percentage method would have been the only practical way to
    equitably divide David’s pension.     In re Marriage of Branstetter, 
    508 N.W.2d 638
    , 642 (Iowa 1993). We find the language used by the district
    court to divide David’s pension was intended to divide it according to the
    percentage method.
    In interpreting divorce decrees, we give effect not only to that
    which is plainly expressed, but also that which is implied.     
    Goodman, 690 N.W.2d at 283
    .       The court expressly stated David’s pension was
    valued at approximately $22,500.00, but it also gave David and Pamela’s
    portions of the pension in terms of percentages. While these statements
    appear contradictory, we must assume that the district court knew of the
    problem   highlighted    in   Scheppele—that   the   amount   of   David’s
    contributions was not an actual present-value calculation. We must also
    assume that the district court knew of Benson and Branstetter, citing the
    practical problems in trying to divide a defined-benefit plan using the
    13
    present-value method. We also believe that if the intent was to use the
    present-value method, a sum certain would have been found, not an
    approximation.
    In its decree, the court also stated that its division of the pension
    was intended “to account [for] the disparity in value of the property
    previously awarded the parties.” In construing a dissolution decree, we
    give force and effect to every word if possible. 
    Lawson, 409 N.W.2d at 182
    –83.    Rather than an extraneous detail, we believe the court’s
    approximation of the present value of the pension plan was included as a
    way of explaining the equality of the property division as a whole.
    In trying to give a consistent, effective, and reasonable meaning to
    the language used, we find that the intent of the court’s language was to
    utilize the percentage method to divide the pension. We therefore find
    Pamela’s proposed order comports with the intent of the original decree
    and affirm the district court’s order.
    IV. Disposition.
    We hold that the decree entered in 1999 was final as to the
    property division and the division of the pension plan. We further find
    that the district court properly utilized the percentage method to divide
    the pension plan. The order of the district court is affirmed.
    DECISION OF COURT OF APPEALS VACATED; DISTRICT
    COURT JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.