Diana Jeanne Paiz Engle v. Patrick a Engle

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 14, 2019
Docket343123
StatusUnpublished

This text of Diana Jeanne Paiz Engle v. Patrick a Engle (Diana Jeanne Paiz Engle v. Patrick a Engle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diana Jeanne Paiz Engle v. Patrick a Engle, (Mich. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

DIANA JEANNE PAIZ ENGLE, UNPUBLISHED March 14, 2019 Plaintiff-Appellee,

v No. 343123 Ingham Circuit Court PATRICK A. ENGLE, Family Division LC No. 14-000461-DO Defendant-Appellant.

Before: SAWYER, P.J., and CAVANAGH and K. F. KELLY, JJ.

PER CURIAM.

Defendant appeals as of right the trial court’s order granting plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration and amending the parties’ consent judgment of divorce. Defendant argues that the trial court abused its discretion when it granted plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration and that it erred when it exercised its equitable powers to amend the judgment of divorce. While we disagree that the trial court abused its discretion when it granted plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration, we conclude that the trial court lacked authority to modify the consent judgment of divorce. Accordingly, we reverse and remand to the trial court for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND FACTS

The parties divorced in 2014 pursuant to a consent judgment of divorce (JOD). The JOD included a property settlement, which provided that plaintiff was awarded one-half of defendant’s pension, and defendant was awarded one-half of plaintiff’s pension, both pursuant to an eligible domestic relations order (EDRO). The property distribution also provided that defendant would receive one-half of plaintiff’s 401k account, pursuant to a qualified domestic relations order (QDRO), plus an additional $10,000 from plaintiff’s 401k in lieu of spousal support. Defendant retained the full amount of his own 401k. In November 2014, the trial court entered a QDRO for plaintiff’s 401k account that awarded defendant, as alternate payee, 50% of plaintiff’s account balance, and an additional $10,000 payment.

Two years later, in November 2016, plaintiff moved the trial court in propria persona to approve an EDRO for the Municipal Employees Retirement System of Michigan (MERS), which administered defendant’s pension. The trial court did not grant or deny plaintiff’s motion to approve the EDRO and did not hold a hearing on the motion.

In September 2017, plaintiff moved the trial court to enforce and amend the JOD and for entry of an EDRO. According to plaintiff, throughout 2016, the parties attempted to reach an agreement regarding the language of the EDROs for both parties’ pensions, but they were unable to do so. In January 2017, plaintiff discovered that defendant began drawing on his pension without an EDRO in place, and was receiving the full amount of his pension, in violation of the JOD. Further, plaintiff believed that defendant’s receipt of his full pension payment without segregation for plaintiff was “irrevocable,” and could not be modified even pursuant to a court order. In order to offset the loss of her portion of defendant’s pension, plaintiff requested that the trial court deny defendant his award of a portion of plaintiff’s 401k account and reduce his award of a portion of plaintiff’s pension.

In response to plaintiff’s motion, defendant claimed that when he applied to receive his pension, he believed MERS would put his application on hold, pending the outcome of plaintiff’s motion to approve the EDRO that she filed in November 2016. However, MERS later informed defendant’s counsel that it was unable to hold defendant’s application, and it began disbursing his monthly payments in January 2017, with a lump sum for the payments from August to December 2016. Defendant stated that MERS was still able to allocate the remainder of his pension according to an EDRO, and that he had retained for plaintiff half of the payments he had already received and was “ready, willing, and able to pay her that amount.”

However, the parties additionally disputed the extent of defendant’s entitlement to plaintiff’s pension. The point of dispute was that plaintiff would be eligible for retirement in October 2018, before she turned 60, but did not want to retire until she reached age 65. The Eligible Domestic Relations Order Act, MCL 38.1701 et seq., provides that “the payment of a benefit to an alternate payee under an EDRO and this act shall begin on the retirement allowance effective date of the participant.” MCL 38.1704. Defendant wanted to be able to claim payments from plaintiff’s pension when plaintiff became eligible for retirement, not when she actually retired. However, plaintiff argued that the JOD was silent on the question of when defendant could draw on plaintiff’s pension, and, therefore, he could only receive payments upon plaintiff’s retirement. Further, plaintiff argued that she would be “substantially harmed” if defendant took early retirement on plaintiff’s pension because then she would be responsible for recoupment.1

1 Wolf v Mahar, 308 Mich App 120, 123-124; 862 NW2d 668 (2014), explains: The recoupment policy was designed to prevent a loss to the retirement system from administering and paying benefits to both participants and alternate payees, as opposed to just participants. In its simplest terms, an alternate payee who elects to receive benefits before the participant retires receives a set monthly payment and the participant, when he or she retires after age 60, receives a recouped or reduced monthly benefit to account for the alternate payee’s early receipt of payments.

-2- Following the hearing, the trial court issued an opinion and order. It determined that the primary issue was whether defendant could receive his portion of plaintiff’s pension at plaintiff’s earliest retirement date, even if plaintiff did not retire at that time, and found that the JOD was “silent as to these benefits.” The trial court concluded that MCL 552.101(4) addressed the issue and was controlling. Because the JOD did not expressly exclude any components of plaintiff’s pension, “based upon MCL 552.101(4),[2] . . . both parties in this matter [were] entitled to a proportionate share of all components of the pension, annuity, or retirement benefits awarded to them in the” JOD. The trial court further stated, “It is unclear if the fact that the Defendant is in active retirement status impacts the Plaintiff’s ability to share in those components of Defendant’s pension.”

Plaintiff moved for reconsideration and for entry of a domestic relations order (DRO) following the trial court’s ruling. Plaintiff claimed, “in answer to the question posed by the [trial] court in its Order,” that defendant’s active retirement status permanently and negatively affected plaintiff because she was “absolutely and forever barred from using an EDRO to claim any portion of Defendant’s pension.”3 She requested that the trial court exercise its equitable discretion to amend the JOD to allow defendant to retain his full pension and award defendant 15% of plaintiff’s pension, effective on her earliest retirement date in October 2018. Plaintiff argued that because defendant claimed his pension without an EDRO in place, plaintiff was precluded from seeking survivorship benefits from defendant’s pension, and any payments she received from the pension would stop upon defendant’s death. Further, if she continued to work while defendant drew early retirement benefits from her pension, plaintiff would receive only approximately 15-20% of her pension because of recoupment. Accordingly, plaintiff argued that the trial court should amend the JOD “based on the equities of this case.” Defendant argued that plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration was improper because she did not present any new information from the previous hearing and presented arguments that she could have raised at that hearing.

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Bluebook (online)
Diana Jeanne Paiz Engle v. Patrick a Engle, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diana-jeanne-paiz-engle-v-patrick-a-engle-michctapp-2019.