Bennett, P. v. Bennett, P.

168 A.3d 238, 2017 Pa. Super. 253, 2017 WL 3318842, 2017 Pa. Super. LEXIS 589
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 4, 2017
DocketBennett, P. v. Bennett, P. No. 428 EDA 2016
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 168 A.3d 238 (Bennett, P. v. Bennett, P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bennett, P. v. Bennett, P., 168 A.3d 238, 2017 Pa. Super. 253, 2017 WL 3318842, 2017 Pa. Super. LEXIS 589 (Pa. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION BY

BOWES, J.:

Peter Y. Bennett (“Husband”) appeals from the March 1, 2016 order imposing a constructive trust over a pension benefit that accrued during his marriage to Pamela A. Bennett (“Wife”). 1 We reverse.

Husband and Wife married on January 29, 1972 and divorced approximately twenty-three-and-one-half years later. Two children were born of the marriage. In anticipation of the divorce, the parties executed a property settlement agreement to facilitate equitable distribution. The agreement covered the various economic aspects of the divorce, including the distribution of marital assets and Husband’s assent to paying the marital liabilities, alimony, child support, and the children’s college expenses. As it relates to the present case, the accord provides:

3. Legal Advice. Each of the parties acknowledges that he and she has had the opportunity to consult with independent legal counsel regarding the terms and provisions of this Agreement and his or her legal rights and obligations, and each party further acknowledges and accepts that this Agreement is, in the circumstances, fair and equitable, and that it is being entered into freely and voluntarily, and that the execution of this Agreement is not the result of any duress or undue influence. Each party has made a full and complete *241 disclosure to the other of his and her entire assets and liabilities, and each is informed and familiar with the property, estate and assets, earnings and income of the other.
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6. Distribution of Property.
(a) The parties acknowledge that they have previously sold and divided to their mutual satisfaction the proceeds from the sale of their former marital residence. Each party shall retain the proceeds from the sale thereof received by him and her free and clear of any claim of the other.
(b) The parties have previously divided to their mutual satisfaction all items of tangible personal property, household furnishings, motor vehicles, bank accounts, investments, business interests, stocks, securities, retirement accounts, insurance policies and all other assets which, as between the parties, are or may be subject to equitable distribution, and each party does hereby release and relinquish any and all claims that either of them have or may have with respect to any property, property interest or asset.

Property Settlement Agreement, 4/21/95, at 3, 4-5 (emphases added). 2

Although the accord did not identify any specific marital assets or state the percentage basis that the assets would be divided, it listed the liabilities that Husband was solely responsible for repaying. Likewise, the agreement stipulated that the potential net proceeds from a possible lawsuit against Boise Cascade Corporation would be divided equally. During the evidentiary hearing, Wife testified that she requested fifty percent of the pension benefits because it was in keeping with the parties’ promise to split the other assets equally.

The property settlement agreement was incorporated but not merged into the July 12, 1995 divorce decree. Approximately nineteen years later, on September 2014, Wife filed a petition to impose a constructive trust pursuant to 23 Pa.C,S. § 3505(d), which we reproduce infra. She averred that, in executing the property settlement agreement, Husband failed to make a full disclosure of the pension benefit that he earned during the marriage. 3 Wife requested the creation of a constructive trust as to the previously undisclosed marital asset, an accounting of the monthly benefits Husband received since the account entered pay status, and fifty percent of the marital value of past and future benefits. She 'also requested counsel fees and the costs associated with drafting the Qualified Domestic Relations Orders (“QDRO”) needed to facilitate the future payment of her portion of the benefit.

Husband filed preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer based upon the *242 position that the formation of a constructive trust pursuant to § 3505(d) required, as a prerequisite, the filing of an inventory during the equitable distribution process, and, in the absence of that form, the statutory provision is inapplicable. In addition, Husband leveled a preliminary-objection to the petition based upon, insufficient specificity insofar as Wife failed to assert that Husband secreted the pension’s existence when the agreement was formed. After conferring with the attorneys, the trial court summarily overruled Husband’s preliminary objections and scheduled an evi-dentiary hearing on Wife’s petition.

The evidence adduced at the hearing revealed that Husband has a pension that entered pay status during October 2012. Since .then, Husband has received a monthly benefit of $1,785.75, which calculates to an annual benefit of $21,429. Wife testified that she and Husband did not discuss the pension, in anticipation of equitable distribution of their marital estate, 4 Their discussions, focused upon liquidating the marital residence, which was subject to encumbrances, and satisfying debts. She identified two- conversations with Husband wherein both parties agreed that the only significant marital asset was the family home. Neither party mentioned the pension or retirement benefits that possibly accrued during the marriage.

Wife did not assert that Husband mislead her.mr lied about the existence of the pension benefit. Instead, she testified that she was unaware of the pension and believed that the home was the only asset to be divided. She received $1,100 from the sale of the property. In relation to her view of the marital estate, Wife stated, “I didn’t think there was anything. I didn’t think I' was signing away anything. And with the house, it was $1100; I left the marriage with $1100, a car and two part-time jobs[.]” N.T., 1/19/16, at 47. Wife also testified that she believed the agreement was boilerplate and that the references to various assets did not apply to them. She explained, “I believed it was a template. I looked for the things that he and I agreed upon and made sure that they were [included] and signed it.” Id. at 44.

During his testimony, Husband countered, “we did, in fact, review the document [and] we were very comfortable with the fact that the assets weren’t identified [and] the fact I was going to pick up all the outstanding liabilities[.]” Id. at 71-72. He also testified that he believed Wife was aware of all of the marital' assets'.' He stated that Wife had knowledge of the pension in the past because, along with the increase in salary, he and Wife considered the pension benefit when Husband faced the décision whether to'accept his position with American Can Company and, then having been promoted by its successor, whether to uproot the family from its hometown in Connecticut and move to -Virginia, In addition, he surmised that -the 1992 distribution that Wife's expert referenced was connected to a 401(k) plan that Husband contributed to when he worked for those entities. Id.

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Bluebook (online)
168 A.3d 238, 2017 Pa. Super. 253, 2017 WL 3318842, 2017 Pa. Super. LEXIS 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bennett-p-v-bennett-p-pasuperct-2017.