Carpenter v. Carpenter
This text of 972 A.2d 311 (Carpenter v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
BRANDY A. CARPENTER, Respondent Below-Appellant,
v.
DAVID V. CARPENTER Petitioner Below-Appellee.
Supreme Court of Delaware.
Before HOLLAND, JACOBS, and RIDGELY, Justices.
ORDER
HENRY DuPONT RIDGELY, Justice.
This 6th day of April 2009, it appears to the Court that:
(1) Respondent-Appellant Brandy A. Carpenter ("Wife") appeals from the Family Court order denying her a retroactive award of Petitioner-Appellee David V. Carpenter's ("Husband") pension to the date of divorce.[1] Wife makes two arguments on appeal. First, she contends that the Family Court erred when it issued a second and contradictory decision regarding the issue of retroactivity of Husband's pension without a motion to reopen, a motion to reargue, or any appeal having been filed by either party after the entry of the previous final order. Second, she contends that the Family Court abused its discretion by reconsidering and contradicting a prior final order without a request from either party to do so. We find no merit to her arguments and affirm.
(2) Husband and Wife were married on February 4, 1974, separated on May 4, 1994, and divorced on May 16, 2001. The Family Court held ancillary hearings regarding property division and alimony from April through June 2002 and an Ancillary Order dividing the parties' marital estate 60% to Wife and 40% to Husband was entered on June 8, 2005 (the "2005 Order").[2] The 2005 Order also specifically addressed Husband's State Police pension, holding that it "shall be divided pursuant to the Cooper formula with a 55% multiplier in favor of wife."[3] It referred to Wife's award prospectively (i.e. "[p]ursuant to the terms of this decision, [W]ife will be receiving over $1,000.00 per month from her husband's State Police pension."[4]) and there was no mention of any retroactivity of the award.
(3) Both Husband and Wife filed timely motions for reargument in June of 2005. In her motion, Wife raised the issue of her entitlement to an award of Husband's pension benefits retroactive to the date of divorce, not, as Husband argued, prospective as of the date of the 2005 Order awarding those pension benefits. On August 25, 2006, the court issued an order regarding the motions for reargument (the "2006 Order").[5] In the 2006 Order, the court concluded that it needed additional information concerning the value of the pension in order to rule on the appropriateness of a retroactive award and ordered Husband to produce additional information regarding the asset. The court noted that it was still considering the issue of a retroactive award of Husband's pension.[6]
(4) On April 9, 2008, without any oral argument or further hearing regarding the motions for reargument, the court issued an order granting Wife a retroactive award of Husband's pension to the date of their divorce (April 2008 Order").[7] The April 2008 Order also addressed another outstanding issue by refusing to require Husband to maintain a $100,000 life insurance policy with Wife as the beneficiary.[8] The court then ordered Wife's counsel to submit a Qualified Domestic Relations Order ("QDRO") within 30 days calculating Wife's retroactive interest in the pension in "the same manner and interest as in the current QDRO."[9]
(5) Following the April 2008 Order, nothing was filed by either party until forty-two days later, on May 21, 2008, when Wife submitted a proposed QDRO with the requested calculations. According to Wife, the retroactive payments required by the April 2008 Order amounted to an additional $69,000 plus $19,764 in interest, or a total additional payment of $88,764. The QDRO was never entered and no motion for reargument, reconsideration, or relief from judgment or order, or appeal to this Court was filed by either party.
(6) On May 19, 2008, Judge Peter B. Jones, who had been assigned to the case since February 2000, recused himself from further involvement in the case. Judge Jay H. Conner was assigned to the matter on May 27, 2008.
(7) On June 24, 2008, Husband submitted a letter to Judge Conner seeking relief from the April 2008 Order awarding Wife retroactive pension benefits. Wife responded on July 3 and July 9, arguing Husband's letter was an inappropriate attempt to have the court reconsider the April 2008 Order, because he did not file a motion to reconsider/reargue within ten days of the order. On July 1, 2008, Judge Conner wrote to the parties' counsel and indicated his belief that the effective date of Wife's entitlement to her share of Husband's pension as well as an appropriate amount of life insurance to be maintained by Husband for Wife's benefit were still at issue.
(8) On July 28, 2008, the court held a hearing and heard oral arguments from counsel regarding the June 2005 cross-motions for reargument and the April 2008 Order awarding Wife a retroactive interest in Husband's pension. On August 13, 2008, the court issued an opinion indicating that Judge Jones had "recused himself prior to the reargument aspect of the case being completed...."[10] Judge Conner then reviewed the 2005 Order and April 2008 Order and concluded that the two were "contradictory and inconsistent."[11] The court determined that the April 2008 Order was fundamentally unfair to Husband and modified Wife's retroactive award of Husband's pension to begin as of January 1, 2003the date by which the court felt a QDRO should have been signedrather than May 21, 2001 the date of divorce.[12] The court also lowered Wife's Cooper formula multiplier from 55% to 40% to reflect the fact that Husband had already paid the tax on Wife's share.[13] Further, the court declined to add interest because it found Husband was not at fault for the delay in Wife receiving her share of the pension.[14] The net effect of the court's ruling was to lower Wife's retroactive award of Husband's pension from $88,764 to $26,013.[15]
(9) Wife contends that the Family Court erred by issuing a second and contradictory decision regarding the issue of retroactivity of Husband's pension when there was no motion to reopen, motion to reargue, or any appeal filed by either party in response to the first order. Wife asserts that the April 2008 Order was a final order on the issue of retroactivity and there was no authority or procedural mechanism whereby the court could issue a subsequent decision modifying that order.
(10) Our "standard and scope of review of an appeal from the Family Court extends to a review of the facts and law as well as to a review of the inferences and deductions made by the Trial Judge."[16] Where the court's decision implicates a ruling of law, we review the court's determination de novo.[17] However, the reopening of a final judgment is a matter within the sound discretion of the trial judge.[18]
(11) The record is clear that subsequent to the April 2008 Order, neither party took any formal procedural action to have that decision reviewed by any court. The docket reflects that there was no motion to reconsider, reargue, or alter or amend judgment pursuant to Family Court Civil Rule 59;[19] no motion for relief from judgment or order pursuant to Family Court Civil Rule 60;[20] and no appeal to this Court pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 6.[21]
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
972 A.2d 311, 2009 WL 910871, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-carpenter-del-2009.