Di Pietro v. Di Pietro

443 A.2d 244, 183 N.J. Super. 69
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedJanuary 5, 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 443 A.2d 244 (Di Pietro v. Di Pietro) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Di Pietro v. Di Pietro, 443 A.2d 244, 183 N.J. Super. 69 (N.J. Ct. App. 1982).

Opinion

183 N.J. Super. 69 (1982)
443 A.2d 244

MARIE DI PIETRO, PLAINTIFF,
v.
ANTHONY DI PIETRO, DEFENDANT.

Superior Court of New Jersey, Chancery Division Camden County.

Decided January 5, 1982.

*71 Edwin Segal for plaintiff.

Gary L. Borger for defendant.

DAVIS, J.S.C.

This divorce action presents the question of the appropriate method for calculating the present value of a pension or profit-sharing plan which is a part of the marital estate. The wife urges application of the "total offset method." This method is based upon the economic assumption that over the long run the *72 rate of inflation runs parallel with and equals the rate of interest and thereby precludes the necessity of discounting to arrive at present value. There is no reported New Jersey decision which deals precisely with this question as it relates to pension or profit-sharing plans or cases involving general damages and their present value. For the reasons hereafter stated, I conclude that this method has been shown to be economically realistic and beneficial and therefore applicable in this type of case.

Wife and husband, now age 51 and 57 respectively, were married on October 2, 1948 and lived together until final separation which took place on September 26, 1979. The wife, Marie Di Pietro, sued for separate maintenance and the husband, Anthony Di Pietro, counterclaimed for divorce. There are six children of this marriage, only one of whom is a minor, who presently resides with wife. During the course of this 31-year marriage the husband was the sole income earner and the wife was the homemaker. He presently earns a net annual disposable income of approximately $17,500 and she has no employable skills and no income. She presently receives public assistance.

The only assets legally or beneficially acquired during the marriage are the marital home, a motor vehicle, household furniture and the husband's noncontributory pension plan. The parties stipulated the value, method and ratio of distribution of all items except the pension plan. It was also stipulated that the entire value of the plan, as determined by this court, is includable in the marital estate. This court is to determine the extent of the wife's participation.

I

The issue of whether the "total offset method" should be adopted when considering the value of a pension or profit-sharing plan emanated from divergent viewpoints between two actuaries. The parties accepted both actuaries as experts after appropriate voir dire.

*73 The facts utilized by each expert were not in substantial dispute. They both utilized in their computation a male age 57, employed by Cement Masons Local Union No. 699, which had a qualified, noncontributory pension plan. Husband has been a pension plan member since August 21, 1956 and has accumulated 24.66 years of service as of June 30, 1981. His total work hours after May 1, 1970 to August 3, 1981 was 19,500. The plan entitled husband to benefits of: (a) $15 a month for each year of service up to 25 years; (b) $5.50 a month for each year of service without a maximum, and (c) $.0075 for each hour of service after May 1, 1970. The contracted entitlements multiplied by the accumulated services mentioned above provide a monthly benefit of $652 to commence at age 65. Although wife's expert erred by not including entitlement (b), the computation is necessarily as follows:

              (a) $15 x 24.66        or   $369.90
              (b) $5.50 x 24.66      or   $135.63
              (c) $.0075 x 19,500    or   $146.25
                                          _______
                                          $651.78
                                          =======

At this point the experts disagree. The issue simply restated is: What is the present value of this retirement contract as described?

Husband's expert stated that since the values are being determined as of today, we must similarly look to husband's status in relationship to the plan, as of today. The plan has a provision which requires a penalty of 1/2% for each month that a participant retires before age 65. In the case at bar it is undisputed that if husband were to elect to retire as of June 2, 1981, there would exist 96 months before his 65th birthday. There would accordingly be a 48% penalty in the amount of $314 applied to the normal retirement benefit of $652, thereby leaving an early retirement benefit of $338.

Husband's expert makes an assertion that, to arrive at the present value of this $338 benefit for life, commencing now, one must only resolve the cost in the marketplace to purchase an annuity that would provide such a benefit.

*74 A more familiar expression of the same principle is: What investment, at what rate of interest, is necessary today to produce a monthly benefit of $338, payable immediately. Husband's expert states that it would take $31,079. His assumed interest rate was 10.2%. He further stated, but did not explain, that mortality tables are irrelevant.

Wife's expert first states that for actuarial purposes, the penalty assessed in husband's computation is inappropriate for the purposes of determining present value. His reasoning rests upon the required premise of "actuarial equivalence." Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C.A. § 1001 et seq. (ERISA). ERISA requires that a participant can not increase or decrease the value of a plan by the exercise of one retirement option over another. Therefore, the $338 annuity must be an actuarial equivalent to the $652 annuity. As an example, if you retire early, the reduced amount will be received for a longer period of time, and that total benefit must be equivalent to receiving a larger sum for the shorter period of time. In effect, the value of the plan has not changed. Husband's expert did not dispute this representation.

Having established that the rule of actuarial equivalents prevents the imposition of a penalty for valuation purposes, wife's expert addressed the issue of the use of mortality tables. Suffice to say, pensions and annuities should be valued on the basis of the 1978 United States Life Tables of the Department of Health and Human Services, published February 24, 1978. Pressler, Current N.J. Court Rules, Appendix I (1981). Utilizing this table, the husband's life expectancy is 11.3 years after age 65.

To determine the value of the plan, wife's expert states that this court need only multiply the life expectancy in terms of months (135.6) by the calculated normal retirement benefit of $652 rounded off, the result being $88,400. It should be noted that the aforementioned mortality tables use an interest factor of 5 1/2%. Wife's expert, however, asserts that the interest factor *75 is irrelevant, which gives rise to the central issue of this case. He also states that the use of the 5 1/2% rate or any other is superfluous.

When discounting, the interest factor becomes a multiplier, but this approach does not take into account an equally competing factor, viz, the inflation factor. This latter factor becomes a divider. If we are to take into account inflation, then the interest factor is nullified because the rate of inflation, when speaking in terms of average tendencies and economic history, always closely equals the rate of interest. Therefore, since both factors are equal, they neutralize each other and the value will remain the same. There is, in effect, a "total offset."

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Related

Cross v. Cross
363 S.E.2d 449 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1987)
DiPietro v. DiPietro
475 A.2d 82 (New Jersey Superior Court App Division, 1984)
Young v. Young
467 A.2d 33 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1984)
Kalinoski v. Kalinoski
29 Pa. D. & C.3d 37 (Butler County Court of Common Pleas, 1983)

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