Cherise Danielle Smith v. Kenneth Dean Smith

CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 17, 2023
DocketA22A1443
StatusPublished

This text of Cherise Danielle Smith v. Kenneth Dean Smith (Cherise Danielle Smith v. Kenneth Dean Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cherise Danielle Smith v. Kenneth Dean Smith, (Ga. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

FOURTH DIVISION DILLARD, P. J., MERCIER and MARKLE, JJ.

NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be physically received in our clerk’s office within ten days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed. https://www.gaappeals.us/rules

January 17, 2023

In the Court of Appeals of Georgia A22A1443. SMITH v. SMITH.

DILLARD, Presiding Judge.

Cherise Smith appeals the trial court’s grant of Kenneth Smith’s motion to

amend a provision in their then-current divorce decree regarding her entitlement to

a portion of his military retirement benefits. Specifically, Cherise argues the trial

court erred as a matter of law by adopting Kenneth’s proposed amended decree

because, in doing so, it impermissibly and substantively amended the provision at

issue. For the reasons explained infra, we vacate the trial court’s judgment and

remand the case with direction.

Cherise and Kenneth were married in May 1989, and divorced in 2012. A

provision of their initial 2012 divorce decree was titled “Military Pension” and

provided, in relevant part, as follows: The marital portion of [Kenneth’s] military retired pay is subject to equitable division as a marital asset. [Cherise] is entitled to a share of [Kenneth’s] military retirement benefits and [he] hereby agrees to assign to [Cherise] a portion of his entitlement under the military retirement plan (“the Plan”), earned as a result of his service with the United States Navy, as set out more specifically below . . .

[Kenneth] agrees to assign [Cherise] forty percent (40%) of the marital share of his “disposable retired pay” (as defined by the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act) each month. The marital share of [Kenneth’s] disposable retired pay is found by multiplying the total disposable retired pay by a fraction where the numerator is 223 (the number of months of [Kenneth’s] military service while married to [Cherise]) and the denominator is the total months of [Kenneth’s] military service whether married or not.

In other words, [Cherise’s] portion of the plan may be determined in accordance with the following formula:

40% x [Kenneth’s] disposable retired pay at retirement x

# months married while [Kenneth] in military (223)

Total # months [Kenneth] in military.

This decree also provided that: “The [c]ourt shall retain jurisdiction to amend or

modify this Order to the extent necessary or appropriate to clarify, establish[,] or

2 maintain the status of this Order as an award of military retirement payments, and the

parties agree to cooperate in making such necessary or appropriate changes.”

Thereafter, the parties discovered certain military regulations require that, in

a divorce decree, the length of military service must be expressed in terms of years,

instead of months. So, in 2015, Cherise filed a motion to set aside or, in the

alternative, clarify the 2012 divorce decree to make this required change. On February

29, 2016, the trial court entered an amended divorce decree making the requested

change, and in doing so, noted that both parties agreed to the amended decree.

In relevant part, the provision quoted supra was amended as follows:

[Kenneth] agrees to assign [Cherise] forty percent (40%) of the marital share of his “disposable retired pay” (as defined by the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act) each month. The marital share of [Kenneth’s] disposable retired pay is found by multiplying the total disposable retired pay by a fraction where the numerator is 19 (the number of years of [Kenneth’s] military service while married to the [Cherise]) and the denominator is the total years of [Kenneth’s] military service whether married or not. [Cherise] is awarded forty percent (40%) of the disposable military retired pay [Kenneth] would have received had [he] become eligible to receive military retired pay with a retired base pay of $ (dollar amount for 04/LCDR) and with “X” reserved retirement points on August 7, 2012.

3 In other words, [Cherise’s] the portion of the plan may be determined in accordance with the following formula:

40% x [Kenneth’s] disposable x 19 years = [Cherise’s] portion monthly retired pay at Retirement military retirement pay

Total # of years [Kenneth] in the military

All remaining terms, conditions[,] and provisions of the parties Final Judgment and Decree of Divorce, not otherwise modified herein, shall remain in full force and effect.1

But at some point following the entry of the 2016 amended decree, Kenneth

switched from active naval duty to reservist duty, retired from service as a reservist,

and began to receive retirement benefits. Then, in 2019, after Cherise learned

Kenneth was receiving those benefits, she filed an application with the Defense

Finance and Accounting Service (“DFAS”) to receive her share as provided for in the

2016 amended divorce decree. Shortly thereafter, she was notified that her application

was invalid. Specifically, the DFAS letter explained that Kenneth retired as a

reservist, and his retired pay was based on “the number of points earned” (i.e.,

“reservist points”). As a result, DFAS could not use the formula in the 2016 amended

decree to calculate the amount of benefits she was owed because “the court order

1 (Emphasis supplied).

4 must state the numerator [of the formula] as the number of [reservist] points earned

during the marriage.” And because retired pay does not accrue or vest, “[i]t is based

strictly on service points and rank for the reservist.” The letter went on to instruct

Cherise that, in order for her to receive her allotted portion of Kenneth’s retirement

benefits, she must “obtain a certified copy of a clarifying order awarding either a

fixed amount or a percentage of [Kenneth’s] retired/retainer pay, or which provides

a formula wherein the only missing element is the denominator (total points earned

by a reservist) [(i.e., reservist points)].”

In January 2022, Cherise filed a motion seeking another modification of the

original divorce decree, requesting that Kenneth be held in contempt and claiming she

was entitled to reasonable attorney fees.2 As an exhibit to the motion, Cherise

attached a proposed order, modifying the military retirement benefits provision

(quoted supra) to replace all references in the applicable formula from the number of

years Kenneth served in the military with the number of reservist points.

2 Cherise references her 2022 motion as one for a third amendment to the 2012 divorce decree, even though the military retirement provision was only revised once before in 2016. This is because the trial court entered a prior amended divorce decree in 2013 that did not relate to the retirement provision. Thus, the motion underlying this appeal sought a third amendment to the parties’ divorce decree.

5 Kenneth filed a response in opposition to Cherise’s motion, asserting several

affirmative defenses. Relevant here, Kenneth contended “it is clear that the language

used in the divorce decree and amended divorce decree [as to his military benefits]

is just wrong.” Kenneth also provided a proposed amended divorce decree, which he

claimed “would appropriately award [Cherise] forty percent (40%) of [his] retirement

pay based upon the amount he would have drawn at the time the [initial] [d]ivorce

[d]ecree was entered . . . .”

After a hearing on the parties’ respective motions, the trial court issued an

amended divorce decree, striking the provision at issue and adopting the language

used in Kenneth’s proposed order.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Cherise Danielle Smith v. Kenneth Dean Smith, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cherise-danielle-smith-v-kenneth-dean-smith-gactapp-2023.