Bart Dalton v. Carol Dalton ( 2018 )


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  •                IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS
    ══════════
    No. 17-0155
    ══════════
    BART DALTON, PETITIONER,
    v.
    CAROL DALTON, RESPONDENT
    ══════════════════════════════════════════
    ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE
    COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE TWELFTH DISTRICT OF TEXAS
    ══════════════════════════════════════════
    Argued February 27, 2018
    JUSTICE BOYD delivered the opinion of the Court, in which CHIEF JUSTICE HECHT, JUSTICE
    GREEN, JUSTICE JOHNSON, JUSTICE GUZMAN, JUSTICE DEVINE, JUSTICE BROWN, and JUSTICE
    BLACKLOCK joined.
    JUSTICE LEHRMANN filed a concurring opinion.
    This appeal challenges trial-court orders enforcing an agreed spousal-support obligation.
    An Oklahoma court first entered an order approving and incorporating the parties’ agreements.
    When the husband later filed for divorce in Texas, the wife filed the Oklahoma order in the Texas
    court. The Texas court granted the divorce, incorporating the parties’ agreements as approved in
    the Oklahoma order, and later issued various post-divorce orders to enforce the former husband’s
    obligations. The former husband argues that the court cannot enforce his spousal-support
    obligation by wage withholding or by an assignment of his retirement benefits to his former wife.
    The court of appeals rejected both arguments. We agree with the former husband on both points.
    We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and render judgment that the wage-withholding order
    and the order assigning retirement benefits to enforce unpaid spousal support are void.
    I.
    Background
    For 150 years, the State of Texas rejected post-divorce alimony as contrary to public policy.
    Francis v. Francis, 
    412 S.W.2d 29
    , 32 (Tex. 1967).1 But Texas courts often approved voluntary
    spousal-support agreements and incorporated those agreements into divorce decrees. 
    Id. at 33.
    Although courts could enforce those agreements if the paying spouse failed to perform as
    promised, the obligation remained an agreed duty enforceable as a private contract, rather than a
    court-ordered duty enforceable as a judgment. Id.2
    In 1995, the Texas Legislature first authorized courts to award a form of involuntary post-
    divorce alimony referred to as “spousal maintenance.” See TEX. FAM. CODE § 8.001(1) (defining
    maintenance as “an award in a suit for dissolution of a marriage of periodic payments from the
    future income of one spouse for the support of the other spouse.”). But Chapter 8 of the Family
    Code allows spousal-maintenance awards only under “very narrow” and “very limited
    1
    Texas’s earliest divorce statutes provided only for temporary alimony during the pendency of a divorce
    proceeding. See James W. Paulsen, Remember the Alamo[ny]! The Unique Texas Ban on Permanent Alimony and the
    Development of Community Property Law, 56-SPG LAW & CONTEMP. PROBS. 7, 15 (1993). The state rejected post-
    divorce alimony on the theory that a “just and right” division of the couple’s community property would sufficiently
    support both spouses after the divorce. See Fitts v. Fitts, 
    14 Tex. 443
    , 453 (1855) (“Generally there would be no
    necessity for trenching on the separate property of either partner for the benefit of the other. Both would often have
    separate property, and an equal division of the net amount of the common property would, in the meaning of the
    statute, be deemed just and right.”).
    2
    See also McGoodwin v. McGoodwin, 
    671 S.W.2d 880
    , 882 (Tex. 1984) (“Such an agreement, though
    incorporated into a final divorce decree, is treated as a contract, and its legal force and its meaning are governed by
    the law of contracts, not by the law of judgments.”); Ex parte Jones, 
    358 S.W.2d 370
    , 375 (Tex. 1962) (“This agreed
    judgment must be interpreted as if it were a contract between the parties and the interpretation thereof is governed by
    the laws relating to contracts, rather than laws relating to judgments.”).
    2
    circumstances.” McCollough v. McCollough, 
    212 S.W.3d 638
    , 645 (Tex. App.—Austin 2006, no
    pet.); Cardwell v. Sicola-Cardwell, 
    978 S.W.2d 722
    , 724 n.1 (Tex. App.—Austin 1998, pet.
    denied). The former spouse must be “eligible” to receive spousal maintenance;3 the “duration”4
    and “amount”5 of the payments must not exceed specified limits; the obligation must automatically
    terminate upon certain events;6 and the court must consider a wide variety of factors to “determine
    the nature, amount, duration, and manner of periodic payments.”7
    3
    Generally, a former spouse is eligible to receive spousal maintenance only if the paying spouse was recently
    convicted of family violence, the parties were married at least ten years, or the receiving spouse or the couple’s child
    has a disability, and the receiving spouse is unable to meet her own “minimum reasonable needs.” TEX. FAM. CODE
    § 8.051.
    4
    The court “shall limit the duration of a maintenance order to the shortest reasonable period that allows the
    spouse seeking maintenance to earn sufficient income to provide for the spouse’s minimum reasonable needs,” and
    the order may not last more than five, seven, or ten years, depending on how long the parties were married. 
    Id. § 8.054.
               5
    “A court may not order maintenance that requires an obligor to pay monthly more than the lesser of: (1)
    $5,000; or (2) 20 percent of the spouse’s average monthly gross income.” 
    Id. § 8.055(a).
             6
    The obligation terminates upon the death of either party, the remarriage of the obligee, or if the obligee
    “cohabits with another person with whom the obligee has a dating or romantic relationship in a permanent place of
    abode on a continuing basis.” 
    Id. § 8.056.
               7
    The court must consider “all relevant factors,” including:
    (1)         each spouse’s ability to provide for that spouse’s minimum reasonable needs
    independently, considering that spouse’s financial resources on dissolution of the marriage;
    (2)        the education and employment skills of the spouses, the time necessary to acquire sufficient
    education or training to enable the spouse seeking maintenance to earn sufficient income,
    and the availability and feasibility of that education or training;
    (3)        the duration of the marriage;
    (4)        the age, employment history, earning ability, and physical and emotional condition of the
    spouse seeking maintenance;
    (5)        the effect on each spouse’s ability to provide for that spouse’s minimum reasonable needs
    while providing periodic child support payments or maintenance, if applicable;
    3
    Chapter 7 of the Family Code continues to encourage divorcing parties to amicably settle
    their disputes by agreeing to any spousal-support obligations. TEX. FAM. CODE § 7.006(a). But
    Texas law distinguishes between court-ordered spousal-maintenance awards under Chapter 8 and
    court-approved voluntary obligations under Chapter 7. See generally In re Green, 
    221 S.W.3d 645
    ,
    647–48 (Tex. 2007); Ex parte Hall, 
    854 S.W.2d 656
    , 656–57 (Tex. 1993). In particular, spousal-
    maintenance awards are enforceable as court judgments while agreed spousal-support obligations
    constitute debts enforceable only as a contract. 
    Green, 221 S.W.3d at 647
    .8 Chapter 8’s
    (6)        acts by either spouse resulting in excessive or abnormal expenditures or destruction,
    concealment, or fraudulent disposition of community property, joint tenancy, or other
    property held in common;
    (7)        the contribution by one spouse to the education, training, or increased earning power of the
    other spouse;
    (8)         the property brought to the marriage by either spouse;
    (9)        the contribution of a spouse as homemaker;
    (10)       marital misconduct, including adultery and cruel treatment, by either spouse during the
    marriage; and
    (11)       any history or pattern of family violence, as defined by Section 71.004.
    
    Id. § 8.052.
               8
    See also 
    McCollough, 212 S.W.3d at 648
    (“The fact that a court expressly approves [a spousal-support]
    agreement and incorporates it into the final divorce decree does not transform contractual alimony payments into
    court-ordered maintenance payments subject to the termination and modification provisions of chapter 8 of the family
    code.”); In re Dupree, 
    118 S.W.3d 911
    , 914–15 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2003, orig. proceeding) (holding that a “person
    may contract to support his spouse, and that obligation, to the extent it exceeds his legal duty, is a debt” that is not
    enforceable by contempt) (citing TEX. CONST. art. I, § 18); 
    Cardwell, 978 S.W.2d at 726
    (“Texas law mandates that
    we apply contract principles to determine whether the obligation contained in [an agreed support order] terminated on
    [the obligor’s] death.”).
    4
    enforcement provisions apply only to spousal-maintenance orders that a court enters “on the
    authority” of Chapter 8 and that meet that chapter’s “other requirements.” 
    Id. at 647–48.9
    By contrast, the State of Oklahoma treats court-approved spousal-support agreements as
    judgments, not as mere contractual obligations. Dickason v. Dickason, 
    607 P.2d 674
    , 678 (Okla.
    1980). When an Oklahoma court approves a voluntary support agreement and incorporates it into
    a court order, the agreement “merges into the decree” and is “extinguished by force of law.” 
    Id. at 677.
    As a result, the parties’ rights and obligations “cease to be contractual” and instead are
    “governed and become enforceable as a judgment.” 
    Id. The obligation,
    although voluntarily
    created, no longer constitutes a debt and becomes enforceable by contempt and other judgment-
    enforcement methods. Potter v. Wilson, 
    609 P.2d 1278
    , 1281 (Okla. 1980).
    In this case, an Oklahoma court entered an order approving and incorporating Bart and
    Carol Dalton’s separation agreement. The Oklahoma order approved the Daltons’ agreements
    regarding child custody and support, division of their marital property and debts, spousal support,
    attorney’s fees, and costs. Regarding spousal support, the Oklahoma order required Bart to pay
    Carol “support alimony” of $6,060.25 per month until he had paid $1,309,014.00. Regarding
    property division, the order assigned “all right, title, and interest” in one-half of Bart’s 401(k) and
    profit-sharing plans to Carol. After the Oklahoma court entered the agreed order, Bart and Carol
    separated, Carol moved to Texas, and Bart later followed. Bart filed for divorce in a Texas court.
    Carol filed a counterpetition for divorce and filed the Oklahoma order with the Texas court.
    9
    See also 
    McCollough, 212 S.W.3d at 645
    (holding Chapter 8’s enforcement provisions apply “only [to]
    those forms of ‘spousal maintenance payments’ governed by the act, not to contractual alimony previously permitted
    under Texas law”).
    5
    Before the Texas court rendered a final divorce decree, it entered a summary-judgment
    order declaring that the Oklahoma order constitutes “a final judgment entitled to full faith and
    credit by the Texas Courts.”10 It also found that Bart was in arrears on his support obligations and
    held him in contempt. The court issued a wage-withholding order requiring Bart’s employer to
    withhold some of his earnings to satisfy his monthly child-support and support-alimony
    obligations. It later entered a “qualified domestic relations order” (commonly called a “QDRO”)
    making up for some of Bart’s arrearages by assigning Carol an additional interest in Bart’s
    retirement accounts.
    Bart and Carol’s divorce was made final in 2011. Consistent with the earlier summary
    judgment, the Texas court’s final divorce decree incorporated the Oklahoma order approving the
    parties’ agreement. Neither Bart nor Carol challenged the final divorce decree.
    Soon after the final decree, Carol alleged that Bart continued to fall short on his support-
    alimony obligations. In response to Carol’s post-divorce motions, the Texas court entered an
    additional QDRO to enforce Bart’s spousal-alimony obligations, assigning Carol additional
    interests in Bart’s retirement accounts. The court also denied and dismissed Bart’s motions to
    terminate and vacate the earlier wage-withholding order. Ultimately, the court again found Bart in
    contempt and entered a judgment awarding Carol $269,665.19.
    10
    The trial court denied Carol’s first summary-judgment motion, finding that the Oklahoma order was void,
    not final, and not entitled to full faith and credit in the Texas court. It later granted Carol’s second summary-judgment
    motion, finding that the order was a valid and enforceable partition-and-exchange agreement under Texas law. On
    agreed interlocutory cross-appeals, the court of appeals reversed the trial court’s denial of Carol’s first summary-
    judgment motion and held that the Oklahoma order is an enforceable, final judgment entitled to full faith and credit.
    In re Marriage of Dalton, 
    348 S.W.3d 290
    , 292–93, 298 (Tex. App.—Tyler 2011, no pet.). Bart did not petition for
    review, and the trial court entered summary judgment consistent with the appellate court’s holding.
    6
    Bart appealed, challenging (1) the order finding him in contempt, (2) the final QDRO, and
    (3) the order dismissing his motion to vacate the wage-withholding order. While his appeal was
    pending, the trial court conducted an additional hearing, ordered Bart to forty-five days’
    confinement if he did not pay the arrearages, and entered a first-amended QDRO increasing the
    amount awarded to Carol from Bart’s retirement accounts. Bart supplemented his notice of appeal
    to include both of these orders. The court of appeals modified the judgment to reduce the amount
    of Bart’s arrearages but otherwise affirmed. — S.W.3d —, —, 
    2017 WL 104639
    , at *3 (Tex.
    App.—Tyler 2017). Bart petitioned for our review, challenging the trial court’s wage-withholding
    order and the amended QDRO,11 and we granted his petition.
    II.
    Wage Withholding
    Bart argues that the trial court erred by ordering his employer to withhold a portion of his
    wages to satisfy his spousal-support obligations. We agree that the trial court erred because Texas
    law does not permit wage withholding in this case, and the fact that an Oklahoma court first entered
    the agreed support order does not change that result.
    The Texas Constitution prohibits the garnishment of current wages for personal service,
    “except for the enforcement of court-ordered” child-support payments or “spousal maintenance.”
    TEX. CONST. art. XVI, § 28.12 Chapter 8 of the Family Code expressly allows a court to order “that
    11
    Bart does not challenge the trial court’s contempt order in this Court.
    12
    This constitutional prohibition against the garnishment of wages appeared in Texas’s 1876 Constitution
    and remained unchanged until a 1983 amendment providing the current exception “for the collection of child support.”
    Caulley v. Caulley, 
    806 S.W.2d 795
    , 799 (Tex. 1991) (Mauzy, J., concurring). After the Legislature statutorily
    7
    income be withheld from the disposable earnings” of a spouse in “a proceeding in which periodic
    payments of spousal maintenance are ordered, modified, or enforced.” TEX. FAM. CODE
    § 8.101(a).13 The statute thus permits wage withholding, but—consistent with the constitutional
    prohibition—only to enforce a court-ordered obligation that qualifies as “spousal maintenance.”
    See, e.g., Kee v. Kee, 
    307 S.W.3d 812
    , 813 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2010, pet. denied) (explaining that
    Chapter 8 allows wage withholding only “for spousal maintenance payments ordered thereunder”).
    Here, the Oklahoma order neither orders spousal maintenance nor approves an agreement to pay
    spousal maintenance.
    Carol argues that Bart’s support-alimony obligation constitutes spousal maintenance
    because section 8.001(1) defines “maintenance” as an award of payments by one spouse “for the
    support” of the other. TEX. FAM. CODE § 8.001(1). Bart agreed to pay alimony under Oklahoma
    law, and according to Carol, “there is no real difference between ‘alimony,’ as ordered here by the
    Oklahoma court, and ‘spousal maintenance’ within the meaning of the Texas constitution,”
    because both involve a spouse’s payments “for the support” of the other.
    We have explained, however, that although Chapter 8 “broadly define[s]” the term
    maintenance, an order requiring spousal support does not award “spousal maintenance” under
    Chapter 8 unless it complies with the statute’s eligibility, duration, termination, and other
    permitted spousal-maintenance awards in 1995, this section was again amended in 1999 to provide the additional
    exception for the enforcement of “spousal maintenance.” See TEX. CONST. art. XVI § 28.
    13
    The court effectuates wage withholding by ordering the court clerk to issue and deliver a “writ of
    withholding” to the spouse’s employer, “directing that earnings be withheld for payment of spousal maintenance as
    provided by this chapter.” TEX. FAM. CODE § 8.001(5).
    8
    requirements. 
    Green, 221 S.W.3d at 647
    . Here, neither the Texas trial court nor the Oklahoma
    court found—nor does the record reflect—that Carol was eligible for spousal maintenance under
    Chapter 8. See TEX. FAM. CODE § 8.051 (describing eligibility requirements). Carol never argued
    to the trial court—when registering the Oklahoma order in Texas, filing her counterpetition for
    divorce, or moving for enforcement—that she was eligible to receive spousal maintenance. To the
    contrary, when questioned on the applicability of Chapter 8, Carol testified that her agreements
    with Bart regarding support never “even touched on the possibility” that she was eligible for
    Chapter 8 spousal maintenance. Bart likewise testified that Carol never indicated an “intent at any
    time to have anything to do with the maintenance statutes in Texas.” And Carol has not argued to
    this Court that she could have qualified under Chapter 8 or that she has not been afforded the
    opportunity to claim eligibility.14
    We conclude that neither the Oklahoma order nor the Texas trial court’s decree required
    Bart to pay spousal maintenance; instead, they required him to provide “support alimony” that
    “falls outside of Chapter Eight.” 
    Green, 221 S.W.3d at 647
    –48. As explained, under Texas law,
    an order incorporating a voluntary support obligation that does not qualify as spousal maintenance
    creates a debt that is enforceable as a contract, not a court-ordered obligation that is enforceable
    as a judgment. 
    Id. Courts cannot
    use wage withholding to enforce such an order unless the parties
    specifically agreed to that enforcement method. TEX. FAM. CODE § 8.101(b)(1); see also Kee, 307
    14
    JUSTICE LEHRMANN would hold that a former spouse should be afforded an opportunity at the time she
    seeks enforcement to establish that she was eligible for Chapter 8 spousal maintenance at the time of the divorce. Post
    at __. We do not address that issue because Carol has never argued that she was eligible for spousal maintenance or
    that she should have been given an opportunity to establish that she 
    was. 9 S.W.3d at 816
    (“The parties’ Agreement did not provide for enforcement by income withholding.
    Accordingly, such remedy is not available to Wife.”); cf. Holland v. Holland, 
    357 S.W.3d 192
    ,
    199 (Tex. App.—Dallas 2012, no pet.) (distinguishing Key because “the agreement in this case
    provides for enforcement by income withholding”). As in Key, the Daltons’ agreement did not
    provide for wage withholding.
    Citing section 8.101(a-2), which she asserts codified the rulings in Green and Key, Carol
    argues that only “any agreed amount in excess of [Chapter 8’s] limits is ‘a contractual debt that
    cannot be enforced by contempt.’” (Emphasis added.) If by this assertion Carol means to argue
    that Chapter 8 authorized the court to order Bart’s employer to withhold wages up to the monthly
    amount Chapter 8 permits, we disagree. Subsection (a-2) prohibits wage withholding “to the extent
    that any provision of an agreed order for maintenance exceeds the amount of periodic support the
    court could have ordered under this chapter or for any period of maintenance beyond the period of
    maintenance the court could have ordered under this chapter.” TEX. FAM. CODE § 8.101(a-2)
    (emphases added).15 While this section suggests that the parties may agree to a spousal-
    maintenance order that requires payments that exceed the amount or duration Chapter 8 permits,
    the provision applies only if the parties agreed to an “order for maintenance” under Chapter 8. So
    parties may agree to a spousal-maintenance order under Chapter 8 that requires payments
    exceeding Chapter 8’s amount and duration limits, and the court can order wage withholding to
    15
    Similarly, section 8.059(a-1) provides that a “court may not enforce by contempt any provision of an agreed
    order for maintenance that exceeds the amount of periodic support the court could have ordered under this chapter or
    for any period of maintenance beyond the period of maintenance the court could have ordered under this chapter.” 
    Id. § 8.059(a-1)
    (emphases added). As noted, however, Bart has not challenged the trial court’s contempt order in this
    Court.
    10
    enforce the order only up to those limits. But as we have explained, nothing in the Oklahoma order
    indicates that the Daltons agreed to spousal maintenance under Chapter 8, and nothing in the record
    indicates that Carol could have established her eligibility for Chapter 8 spousal maintenance. We
    thus conclude that Chapter 8 does not authorize the trial court’s wage-withholding order in this
    case, even up to the statutory limits.
    Carol argues, however, that Oklahoma law authorizes the wage-withholding order, and
    because the Texas divorce decree is based on an Oklahoma order, we must give full faith and credit
    to Oklahoma law. Again, we disagree. We agree with Carol that the Oklahoma order became a
    final, enforceable Texas judgment when she properly filed an authenticated copy of the order in a
    Texas court. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 35.003(a); Walnut Equip. Leasing Co. v. Wu, 
    920 S.W.2d 285
    , 286 (Tex. 1996) (per curiam). A foreign judgment properly filed in a Texas court is
    “entitled to full faith and credit in this state,” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE § 35.001, and the law
    of Oklahoma, as the issuing state, governs “the nature, extent, amount, and duration of current
    payments under” the Oklahoma order. TEX. FAM. CODE § 159.604(a)(1). But when it comes to
    enforcement procedures, Texas law provides that the order “has the same effect and is subject to
    the same procedures, defenses, and proceedings for reopening, vacating, staying, enforcing, or
    satisfying a judgment as a judgment of the court in which it is filed.” TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM.
    CODE § 35.003(c) (emphasis added).
    Article IV section 1 of the United States Constitution requires “that each state give full
    faith and credit to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state.” Bard v.
    Charles. R. Myers Ins. Agency, 
    839 S.W.2d 791
    , 794 (Tex. 1992) (citing U.S. CONST. art. IV, § 1).
    11
    A foreign judgment properly filed in a Texas court “must be recognized and given effect
    coextensive with that to which it is entitled in the rendering state, . . . regardless of the laws or
    public policy” of Texas. Id.; see also State of Washington v. Williams, 
    584 S.W.2d 260
    , 261 (Tex.
    1979) (“The general rule is that a judgment rendered by a court of one state is . . . entitled to
    recognition, force or effect, . . . to the same extent as it has by law or usage in the courts of the
    state where the judgment was rendered.”). Carol argues that the full-faith-and-credit clause
    requires Texas courts to recognize the Oklahoma order as a final judgment enforceable by wage
    withholding, consistent with Oklahoma law, even if Texas law and public policy prohibit that
    enforcement method.
    We agree that the full-faith-and-credit clause requires Texas to recognize the Oklahoma
    order as a final judgment requiring Bart to pay spousal-support to Carol, but that does not make it
    a final judgment requiring Bart to pay spousal maintenance under Chapter 8. The full-faith-and-
    credit clause does not require states to “adopt the practices of other States regarding the time,
    manner, and mechanisms for enforcing judgments.” Baker by Thomas v. Gen. Motors Corp., 
    522 U.S. 222
    , 235 (1998). Although the “duty to give effect to [the order] clearly results from the full
    faith and credit clause, the modes of procedure to enforce the collection may not be the same in
    both states.” Sistare v. Sistare, 
    218 U.S. 1
    , 26 (1910).16
    16
    See also Rosin v. Monken, 
    599 F.3d 574
    , 576 (7th Cir. 2010) (“Illinois’s recognition of the New York order
    does not carry with it an obligation that Illinois enforce that order in the manner which [New York] apparently
    prescribes.”); City of Philadelphia v. Bauer, 
    478 A.2d 773
    , 778 (N.J. 1984) (“Although judgments of sister states must
    be given full faith and credit, local law may determine the scope and nature of available remedies.”); Nat’l Union Fire
    Ins. v. Greene, 
    985 P.2d 590
    , 593 (Ariz. Ct. App. 1999) (“The Full Faith and Credit Clause does not make the laws of
    the rendering state applicable in enforcing the judgment.”).
    12
    Although Oklahoma has chosen to allow wage withholding to enforce all agreed spousal-
    support orders, the full-faith-and-credit clause does not require Texas to honor that choice. Texas
    has instead chosen to apply its own enforcement methods: to enforce a “registered support order
    issued in another state . . . in the same manner and . . . subject to the same procedures as an order
    issued by a tribunal of this state.” TEX. FAM. CODE § 159.603(b); see also 
    id. § 159.604(c)
    (providing that a “responding tribunal of this state shall apply the procedures and remedies of this
    state to enforce current support and collect arrears and interest due on a support order of another
    state . . . registered in this state”). So the Texas trial court was required to accept the Oklahoma
    order as an adjudication of the Daltons’ respective rights and obligations, but Texas law governs
    the methods by which the Texas court could enforce those rights and obligations. See Johnson v.
    Johnson, 
    13 S.E.2d 593
    , 595 (S.C. 1941) (holding full-faith-and-credit clause did not govern “the
    method of collecting” an alimony judgment, “and the procedure of enforcement to be followed is
    a matter exclusively for our Courts”); Sainz v. Sainz, 
    245 S.E.2d 372
    , 375 (N.C. App. 1978)
    (refusing to apply foreign state’s methods for enforcing alimony judgment because the “methods
    by which a judgment of another state is enforced are determined by the local law of the forum.”).
    And as we have explained, Texas law allows wage withholding only to enforce spousal-
    maintenance orders under Chapter 8.
    Finally, Carol argues that because, under Oklahoma law, the Oklahoma order incorporating
    the Daltons’ agreement “extinguished” the agreement and left only a court order enforceable as a
    judgment, see 
    Dickason, 607 P.2d at 677
    , Texas courts must treat it as judgment awarding spousal
    maintenance under Chapter 8. Again, we disagree. Although the order constitutes a spousal-
    13
    support judgment under Oklahoma law, it is not a spousal-maintenance award under Texas law.
    The full-faith-and-credit clause requires Texas to accept the Oklahoma order as a final judgment,
    but our Constitution and Chapter 8 allow wage withholding only to enforce spousal maintenance.
    Wage withholding is not available to support all spousal-support judgments in Texas. We thus
    hold that the court of appeals erred by affirming the trial court’s orders denying and dismissing
    Bart’s motions to terminate and vacate the court’s wage-withholding order.
    III.
    Retirement Benefits
    Bart also challenges the trial court’s post-divorce order assigning Carol an interest in his
    retirement accounts. He argues that under the Family Code, the trial court was required to apply
    Texas procedures and remedies to enforce his support obligations and no Texas procedure or
    remedy allowed the court to assign Carol more interests in Bart’s retirement accounts than were
    assigned in the final divorce decree. We agree with Bart that Texas procedures and remedies apply
    and that Texas law does not authorize the trial court’s order in this case.
    In seeking to garnish Bart’s retirement benefits for the alimony he owed, Carol petitioned
    the trial court for a QDRO “pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3).” In granting her petition, the trial
    court likewise made its order “pursuant to 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3).” Neither Carol nor the trial
    court identified any Texas law authorizing the order. Carol argues, however, that what Texas law
    does or does not authorize is immaterial because the federal Employee Retirement Income Security
    Act (ERISA) (of which section 1056(d)(3) is a part) “supersede[s] any and all State laws insofar
    as they may now or hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan.” 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). We agree
    14
    that ERISA preempts any Texas law relating to employee benefit plans, but here, there is no Texas
    law that ERISA would preempt.
    ERISA was enacted “to protect . . . the interests of participants in employee benefit plans
    and their beneficiaries . . . by establishing standards of conduct, responsibility, and obligation for
    fiduciaries of employee benefit plans, and by providing for appropriate remedies, sanctions, and
    ready access to the Federal courts.” 
    Id. § 1001(b);
    see Boggs v. Boggs, 
    520 U.S. 833
    , 845 (1997)
    (“The principal object of the statute is to protect plan participants and beneficiaries.”). To that end,
    ERSIA includes an anti-alienation clause that generally prohibits any assignment of retirement
    benefits. 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(1); see Guidry v. Guidry, 
    493 U.S. 365
    , 376 (1990) (“Section 206(d)
    [the anti-alienation clause] reflects a considered congressional policy choice, a decision to
    safeguard a stream of income for pensioners (and their dependents, who may be, and perhaps
    usually are, blameless), even if that decision prevents others from securing relief for the wrongs
    done them. . . . [T]he effectuation of certain broad social policies sometimes takes precedence over
    the desire to do equity between the parties.”). This prohibition broadly applies to a “domestic
    relations order,” including an order approving a property-settlement agreement, that “relates to the
    provision of . . . alimony payments, or marital property rights to a spouse [or] former spouse” and
    “is made pursuant to a State domestic relations law.” 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(B)(ii). But ERISA’s
    prohibition against assignments does not apply to a “qualified domestic relations order”; instead,
    ERISA requires pension plans to “provide for the payment of benefits in accordance with the
    applicable requirements of any qualified domestic relations order.” 
    Id. § 1056(d)(3)(A)
    (emphasis
    15
    added).17 A pension plan that receives a valid QDRO must pay the plan benefits to the spouse or
    former spouse designated as an alternate payee. See 
    id. § 1056(d)(3)(H)(ii),
    (J), (K).
    ERISA’s anti-alienation and preemption clauses do not, however, grant a state court
    authority to issue an order that the state’s law does not authorize. See 
    Boggs, 520 U.S. at 851
    (looking to state law to determine whether assignment of retirements benefits was proper in a
    QDRO). ERISA does not strip a state’s power to determine how it will govern divorce and support
    issues in its borders. See 
    id. at 848
    (“As a general matter, ‘[t]he whole subject of the domestic
    relations of husband and wife, parent and child, belongs to the laws of the States and not to the
    laws of the United States.’ Support obligations, in particular, are ‘deeply rooted moral
    responsibilities’ that Congress is unlikely to have intended to intrude upon.”) (quoting In re
    17
    A qualified domestic relations order is a domestic relations order that:
    (1)         “creates or recognizes the existence of an alternate payee’s right to, or assigns to an alternate payee
    the right to, receive all or a portion of the benefits payable with respect to a participant under a
    plan”;
    (2)         “clearly specifies” (i) the plan participant’s and the alternate payee’s name and last-known mailing
    address; (ii) “the amount or percentage of the participant’s benefits to be paid by the plan to each
    such alternate payee, or the manner in which such amount or percentage is to be determined”;
    (iii) “the number of payments or period to which such order applies”; and (iv) “each plan to which
    such order applies”;
    (3)         “does not require a plan to provide any type or form of benefit, or any option, not otherwise provided
    under the plan”;
    (4)        “does not require the plan to provide increased benefits (determined on the basis of actuarial value)”;
    and
    (5)        “does not require the payment of benefits to an alternate payee which are required to be paid to
    another alternate payee under another order previously determined to be a
    qualified domestic relations order.”
    29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(B)(i), (C), and (D).
    16
    Burrus, 
    136 U.S. 586
    , 593–94 (1890)); see also Hisquierdo v. Hisuquierdo, 
    439 U.S. 572
    , 583
    (“The federal nature of [retirement] benefits does not by itself proscribe the entire field of state
    control.”). ERISA only supersedes that power when state law runs contrary to its own provisions.
    See 
    Hisquierdo, 439 U.S. at 584
    (“Like anti-attachment provisions generally, [the provision of the
    Railroad Retirement Act] ensures that the benefits actually reach the beneficiary. It pre-empts all
    state law that stands in its way.”) (emphasis added) (internal citations omitted).
    The only power ERISA grants to a pension plan administrator is the power to review an
    existing order to determine whether it is a qualified domestic relations order under the Act. See 29
    U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(G)(i)(II) (“[T]he plan administrator shall determine whether such an order is
    a qualified domestic relations order and notify the participant and each alternate payee of such
    determination.”). Thus, any power the trial court had to enter the post-divorce order must come
    from state law. See Hogle v. Hogle, 
    732 N.E.2d 1278
    , 1284 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000) (“Since ERISA
    does not provide an enforcement mechanism for collecting judgments, state law methods for
    collecting money generally remain undisturbed by ERISA.”).18 If no state law authorizes the order,
    ERISA does not apply, and the trial court still lacked authority to enter the order at issue.
    Chapter 8, the Texas Family Code’s chapter on “Maintenance,” provides for enforcement
    “by any means available for the enforcement of judgment for debts.” TEX. FAM. CODE § 8.059(b).
    But Carol cannot avail herself of Chapter 8’s remedies because she does not have a court order for
    Chapter 8 spousal maintenance. Likewise, while Chapter 159 (Texas’s enactment of the Uniform
    18
    Although Hogle notes that state law must authorize garnishment of retirement benefits, it does not reference
    what Indiana law allows garnishment under the facts of that case.
    17
    Interstate Family Support Act) allows a Texas court, in enforcing a foreign support order, to “set
    aside property for satisfaction of the support order,” the Act does not grant the court power it does
    not otherwise have. See TEXAS ANNOTATED FAMILY CODE (2012 ed.) 1097 cmt. (“[T]he Act
    explicitly states that a tribunal is not granted powers that it does not otherwise possess under state
    law.”). Chapter 154 allows for enforcement of judgments under that chapter “by all remedies
    available for enforcement of a judgment,” TEX. FAM. CODE § 154.124(c), and it specifically
    authorizes a trial court to “set[] aside property,” 
    id. § 154.003(4),
    but Chapter 154 applies only to
    child support. The only other possible source for the trial court’s power to issue a QDRO to enforce
    a contractual and voluntary support agreement is Chapter 9.
    Chapter 9 governs post-decree proceedings, and it identifies four types of those
    proceedings: suits to enforce the decree (covered in subchapter A), post-decree QDROs
    (subchapter B), post-decree division of property (subchapter C), and the disposition of undivided
    beneficial interests (subchapter D). Subchapter A allows post-decree orders to enforce and
    effectuate the decree’s property division (including dividing retirement benefits) made under
    section 7.003, but it does not allow orders that alter that division. 
    Id. § 9.007(a)
    (stating that Texas
    courts generally have no power to “amend, modify, alter, or change the division of property made
    or approved in the decree of divorce or annulment”). The court hearing an enforcement suit under
    subchapter A “may render further orders,” but only “to enforce the division of property made or
    approved in the decree of divorce or annulment.” 
    Id. § 9.006(a)
    (emphasis added); see also 
    id. § 9.004
    (stating that subchapter A’s “procedures and limitations” do not apply “to existing property
    not divided on divorce”). And “the court may specify more precisely the manner of effecting the
    18
    property division,” but only the division “previously made or approved” and only “if the
    substantive division of property is not altered or changed.” 
    Id. § 9.006(b).
    So subchapter A confirms that “[a]n order to enforce the division is limited to an order to
    assist in the implementation of or to clarify the prior order and may not alter or change the
    substantive division of property.” 
    Id. § 9.007(a)
    . And any order “that amends, modifies, alters, or
    changes the actual, substantive division of property made or approved in a final decree of divorce
    or annulment is beyond the power of the divorce court and is unenforceable.” 
    Id. § 9.007(b).
    Under
    subchapter A, any post-decree enforcement order cannot alter the decree’s substantive property
    division. The question, then, is whether subchapter B, which addresses QDROs, provides
    otherwise.
    Subchapter B allows a party to sue to enforce “a decree of divorce or annulment providing
    for a division of property” by “an enforceable qualified domestic relations order or similar order
    permitting payment of pension, retirement plan, or other employee benefits divisible under the law
    of this state or of the United States to an alternate payee or other lawful payee.” 
    Id. §§ 9.001(a),
    .101(a). But a suit seeking a QDRO under subchapter B applies only “to a previously divided
    pension, retirement plan, or other employee benefit.” 
    Id. § 9.101(b).
    The court may enter a post-
    decree QDRO if the court did not enter a QDRO when it entered the “final decree of divorce or
    annulment or another final order dividing property,” 
    id. § 9.103
    (emphasis added), or to “correct”
    or “clarify” a prior QDRO “to effectuate the division of property ordered by the court” in the final
    decree, 
    id. § 9.1045(a).
    All these provisions exist to enable the court “to effect payment of
    retirement benefits that were divided by a previous decree.” 
    Id. § 9.105
    (emphasis added).
    19
    Reading subchapters A and B together, we have expressly confirmed that trial courts are
    “without authority to enter a QDRO altering the terms of the decree.” Shanks v. Treadway, 
    110 S.W.3d 444
    , 449 (Tex. 2003). A QDRO “cannot change the substantive division of property made
    in the original decree.” 
    Id. The court
    can enter a “clarifying order” to “enforce compliance with
    an insufficiently specific decree,” but it “may not amend, modify, alter, or change the division of
    property made or approved in the decree of divorce.” 
    Id. (citing TEX.
    FAM. CODE §§ 9.008(b),
    .007(a)).
    The courts of appeals agree that a “suit seeking a QDRO applies to a previously divided
    pension, retirement plan, or other employee benefit.” DeGroot v. DeGroot, 
    260 S.W.3d 658
    , 665
    (Tex. App.—Dallas 2008, no pet.) (emphasis added). The “procedures and limitations of a suit to
    enforce do not apply to existing property that was not divided in the divorce.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    As “with any post-divorce enforcement or clarification order, a QDRO may not amend,
    modify, alter, or change the division of property made or approved in the decree of divorce or
    annulment.” Gainous v. Gainous, 
    219 S.W.3d 97
    , 107 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2006, pet.
    denied); see also In re Marriage of Jones, 
    154 S.W.3d 225
    , 228 (Tex. App.—Texarkana 2005, no
    pet.). A QDRO “may more precisely specify the manner of carrying out the property division
    previously ordered,” but only “so long as the substantive division of the property is not altered.”
    Vaughn v. Vaughn, No. 03-04-00030-CV, 
    2005 WL 1115965
    , at *6 (Tex. App.—Austin May 12,
    2005, no pet.) (mem. op.). Any QDRO that alters the decree’s property division is “void.” 
    Gainous, 219 S.W.3d at 108
    .
    20
    Bart’s retirement plans were indeed divided by previous decrees; the Oklahoma order
    granted Carol one-half of Bart’s plans as part of their agreed property division, and the final
    divorce decree incorporated that order. But the post-judgment order at issue does not purport to
    effectuate the assignment of those benefits; it seeks to enforce payment of a separate obligation in
    the Oklahoma order of “support alimony.” Neither the Oklahoma order nor the final divorce decree
    divided Bart’s retirement plans to pay that obligation.
    Put another way, after the final divorce decree, Bart and Carol each owned a one-half
    interest in his retirement accounts. In 2011, the trial court entered QDROs to effectuate that
    division, and Bart does not challenge those orders. The post-divorce orders in 2015, on the other
    hand, assigned to Carol additional interests in the retirement accounts that had not previously been
    divided. The post-divorce orders created a new division to enforce Bart’s spousal-support
    obligation. Because Chapter 9 authorizes post-decree QDROs only to effectuate previous property
    divisions, it does not provide authority for the trial court’s order at issue. See In re A.E.R., No. 2-
    05-057-CV, 
    2006 WL 349695
    , at *3 (Tex. App.—Fort Worth Feb. 16, 2006, no pet.) (mem. op.)
    (per curiam) (holding that trial court did not have authority to enter a QDRO that “impose[d]
    additional obligations on appellant that, by appellee’s admission, were not included in the original
    decree or QDRO”); Marriage of 
    Jones, 154 S.W.3d at 227
    , 229 (holding that QDROs that
    “provide[d] markedly different and more complex division formulas and address[ed] new and
    previously unstated conditions and situations” were not “valid orders of the trial court”).
    In her concurring opinion, JUSTICE LEHRMANN argues that “garnishment of retirement
    benefits awarded to the payee spouse in order to enforce a child support or spousal maintenance
    21
    obligation does nothing to the decree’s division of property.” Post at __. She notes that ERISA
    defines a “domestic relations order” to include any order that “relates to the provision of child
    support, alimony payments, or marital property rights to a spouse, former spouse, child, or other
    dependent of a participant.” 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(B)(ii). Because the definition refers to child
    support and alimony obligations, she concludes that courts may use a QDRO to further divide
    retirement-plan interests to enforce a support obligation by assigning interests that the divorce
    decree did not assign or divide. Nothing in the federal statutes or the Family Code supports this
    conclusion. The reference to support obligations recognizes that the court that enters the final
    decree may divide one spouse’s retirement benefits not only as a means to divide the marital
    property, but also as a means to award child support or alimony.
    For example, in Quijano v. Quijano, the final divorce decree awarded a “lump sum award
    of child support” and for “that express purpose,” the court awarded the child a specific monetary
    interest in the father’s retirement accounts and, at “the same time as the final decree, the court
    issued two QDROs to effect the lump sum child support award.” 
    347 S.W.3d 345
    , 348 (Tex. App.
    2011—Houston [14th] 2011, no pet.). The court later entered an amended QDRO, and the father
    alleged that order
    was void because it modified the division of property set forth in the divorce decree
    by (1) listing the child as Alternate Payee rather than [the mother], (2) making [the
    father] liable for the taxes rather than [the mother], and (3) potentially awarding the
    remainder of the funds to [the mother] in the event the child were to die before
    distribution of all funds to him.
    
    Id. at 353.
    The court rejected the father’s arguments, finding no substantive amendment, but it
    recognized that as “with any post-divorce enforcement or clarification order, a QDRO may not
    22
    amend, modify, alter, or change the division of property made or approved in the decree of divorce
    or annulment.” 
    Id. at 354
    (quoting 
    Gainous, 219 S.W.3d at 107
    ).
    As Quijano illustrates, a divorce decree may divide a spouse’s retirement benefits as a
    means to award child support or alimony, as well as a means to divide the marital property. And
    when the court does that, it may enter a QDRO to effectuate that division. But it may not later
    enter a QDRO that amends the division announced in the divorce decree.
    The concurrence finds support for its proposition to the contrary in decisions of other states.
    See post at __ (citing In re Marriage of Thomas, 
    789 N.E.2d 821
    , 831 (Ill. App. Ct. 2003); 
    Hogle, 732 N.E.2d at 1284
    ; Baird v. Baird, 
    843 S.W.2d 388
    , 392 (Mo. Ct. App. 1992)). But each of those
    cases recognizes the source of that power as state law authorizing assignment of benefits.19 The
    courts in those cases did not have to look to law regarding post-decree division of property because
    19
    See Marriage of 
    Thomas, 789 N.E.2d at 831
    (“[W]hen a former spouse seeks the assignment of the plan
    participant’s retirement accounts after obtaining a judgment for a maintenance and child support arrearage, the spouse
    is not a typical creditor as that term is used [in Illinois statute prohibiting assignment of benefits].”); 
    Hogle, 732 N.E.2d at 1284
    (“Since ERISA does not provide an enforcement mechanism for collecting judgments, state law methods for
    collecting money generally remain undisturbed by ERISA.”); 
    Baird, 843 S.W.2d at 392
    (“[Missouri statutory law]
    allows a spouse to attach or execute against any of the debtor spouse’s property to enforce a decree for maintenance
    or child support.”). Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri have statutes allowing garnishment of retirement benefits for
    spousal support arrearages. See 750 ILL. COMP. STAT. 5/504 (a) (allowing for “a maintenance award for either spouse
    in amounts and for periods of time as the court deems just, without regard to marital misconduct, and the maintenance
    may be paid from the income or property of the other spouse”), 5/504 (b-7) (“Notwithstanding any other State or local
    law to the contrary, a lien arises by operation of law against the real and personal property of the obligor for each
    installment of overdue support owed by the obligor.”); IND. CODE § 31-15-7-10 (“Notwithstanding any other law, all
    orders and awards contained in a dissolution of marriage decree or legal separation decree may be enforced by . . . any
    other remedies available for the enforcement of a court order . . . .”); MO. STAT. § 452.325(5) (“Terms of the
    [separation agreement containing provisions for the maintenance of either spouse] set forth in the decree are
    enforceable by all remedies available for the enforcement of a judgment, and the court may punish any party who
    willfully violates its decree to the same extent as is provided by law for contempt of the court in any other suit or
    proceeding cognizable by the court.”).
    23
    other state law allowed the garnishment of retirement benefits.20 In contrast, no Texas statute
    grants the trial court authority to assign Carol more interests in Bart’s retirement accounts than
    was assigned in the final divorce decree.21
    We must therefore conclude that the trial court acted without statutory authority when it
    assigned additional interests in Bart’s retirement accounts to Carol for Bart’s support arrearages.
    See 
    Shanks, 110 S.W.3d at 449
    (“The trial court had no authority to enter an order altering or
    modifying the original disposition of property.”); cf. Hoy v. Hoy, 
    510 S.E.2d 253
    (Va. Ct. App.
    1999) (per curiam) (“Under Virginia domestic relations law, Pearce may not recast her claim as a
    judgment creditor, albeit one that seeks recovery of unpaid spousal support, into a QDRO which
    substantively modifies the terms of a final divorce decree. Therefore, under ERISA, the proposed
    order does not qualify as a QDRO. The cases appellant cites arise from other jurisdictions and have
    limited persuasive authority in interpreting Virginia statutory law.”). The order, having been made
    without authority, is void. See 
    Gainous, 219 S.W.3d at 108
    (“Accordingly, we hold that section
    9.007 is jurisdictional and that orders violating its restrictions are void.”) The court of appeals thus
    erred by affirming the trial court’s QDRO.
    20
    See also Kesting v. Kesting, 
    370 P.3d 729
    , 733 (Idaho 2016) (“We conclude that the provisions of Title 11
    of the Idaho Code that provide for attachment of exempt property to enforce claims for support are part of Idaho’s
    domestic relations law.”); Stinner v. Stinner, 
    554 A.2d 45
    , 48 (Pa. 1989) (“It was pursuant to this decisional law of
    the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania that the Stinners, in 1977, entered into the agreement for alimony.”). Idaho and
    Pennsylvania also authorize garnishment of retirement benefits. See IDAHO CODE § 11-607 (1)(a) (“A creditor may
    make a levy against exempt property . . . to enforce a claim for . . . [a]limony, support, or maintenance.”); 23 PA. STAT.
    AND CONS. STAT. § 3703 (authorizing “the taking and seizure of the goods and chattels” for alimony arrearages).
    21
    JUSTICE LEHRMANN also sites to a Texas continuing legal education paper and the Texas Practice Series.
    Post at __(citing Charla H. Bradshaw, Retirement and Employment Benefits, 2016 TEXASBARCLE Advanced Fam. L.
    ch. 19, at 37–38 (2016); 33 JOHN F. ELDER, TEXAS PRACTICE: HANDBOOK OF TEXAS FAMILY LAW § 6.3 (2017)). Both
    sources discuss the general proposition that ERISA allows the use of QDROs to enforce child support and spousal
    maintenance orders. Neither source, however, explains how Texas law allows QDROs for those purposes.
    24
    IV.
    Conclusion
    We reverse the court of appeals’ judgment upholding the trial court’s wage-withholding
    order and the trial court’s qualified domestic relations order. We render judgment that both orders
    are void.
    _____________________
    Jeffrey S. Boyd
    Justice
    Opinion delivered: June 29, 2018
    25