Estate of Anello v. McQueen

953 P.2d 1143, 336 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1998 Utah LEXIS 8, 1998 WL 40475
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 3, 1998
Docket960368
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 953 P.2d 1143 (Estate of Anello v. McQueen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Estate of Anello v. McQueen, 953 P.2d 1143, 336 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1998 Utah LEXIS 8, 1998 WL 40475 (Utah 1998).

Opinions

STEWART, Justice:

We issued a writ of certiorari to review a Court of Appeals decision that reversed a [1144]*1144summary judgment in favor of the Estate of Frank Joseph Anello, Jr., and against Viann McQueen -with respect to ownership of a $53,000 IRA that Anello had owned and that McQueen claimed as the designated survivor beneficiary. Estate of Anello v. McQueen, 921 P.2d 1030 (Ct.App.), cert. granted, 929 P.2d 350 (Utah 1996).

Frank Joseph Anello, Jr., died December 27,1993, at the age of sixty-three. A probate petition was filed, and Patricia Israel, decedent’s daughter, was appointed personal representative of the Estate. Anello and Viann McQueen were married June 14, 1975, and divorced December 10, 1984. They were married a second time December 29, 1985, and divorced again November 9, 1993, approximately a month and a half before his death. At Anello’s death, McQueen was the designated survivor beneficiary of a $53,000 IRA that Anello owned. Before the second divorce decree was entered, Anello and McQueen entered into a property settlement agreement that was prepared by Anello and McQueen jointly and signed June 9, 1993. Neither party was represented by an attorney in the preparation of the settlement agreement, nor did an attorney review the agreement. Nevertheless, the agreement was written with remarkable sophistication as to the identification and disposition of the parties’ property rights and interests in the various assets they owned.

The terms of the property settlement agreement provided the basis for the division of the marital estate in the divorce decree. To a large degree, those terms were incorporated into the decree. The property settlement agreement and the divorce decree identified specific IRAs and retirement plans the parties owned and the types of legal interests in such assets. It distributed to the parties the existing property interests and the expectancy or survivorship interests therein.

Anello had civil service retirement benefits. Paragraphs one and two of the property settlement allocated the right to the income and the survivorship interest as follows:

1. Wife relinquishes any direct claim to share in monies derived from husband’s civil service retirement income during his retirement years.
2. It is further agreed that Viann McQueen has always been named the survivor annuitant on husband’s Civil Service Retirement, was granted the annuity in the previous divorce decree and has continued to be the annuitant at all times since husbands [sic] retirement in 1979. Husband agrees to sign an attachment to the Interlocutory Decree of Dissolution of Marriage and to execute any further documents with U.S. Civil Service Commission, Office of Personnel Management or any other agency as required, as are necessary to effectuate the agreement to name Viann as the continued beneficiary-survivor on husbands [sic] Civil Service Retirement.

McQueen also had civil service retirement benefits. Paragraph three of the property settlement agreement dealt with the right of survivorship as follows:

3. Viann is required by law to continue Frank as the survivor beneficiary on her Civil Service Retirement unless and until Frank specifically waives in writing his entitlement to be the named beneficiary. Each is the beneficiary survivor on the others [sic] Civil Service Retirement. ■ Viann is still working Civil Service and is not eligible for retirement until age 60, in the year 2003.

Anello also had retirement benefits from Martin Marietta Company. However, because the parties were unable to agree as to the disposition of the interests therein, they decided to dispose of those interests at a later time, when they had more pertinent information. Paragraph five stated:

5. Husband is entitled to a retirement from Martin Marietta Co. Viann wishes to be named the beneficiary on his insurance. Husband is reluctant to do this. We lack adequate information to make an informed decision at this time. This item is to remain open and to be resolved to each parties [sic] satisfaction at a later date before the divorce is finalized.[1]

[1145]*1145Paragraph seven of the agreement dealt ■with the IRA at issue here: “Husband has an Individual Retirement Account in the approximate amount of $53,000.00. Wife hereby relinquishes all claim to this account.” (Emphasis added.) The divorce decree stated, “Plaintiff and Defendant are awarded their own separate IRA, as their individual and separate property, free and clear of any claim or interest of the other party.” (Emphasis added.)

At Anello’s death, McQueen, as the designated survivor beneficiary, claimed entitlement to Anello’s IRA. The Estate filed an action against her to have the money in the IRA paid to the Estate. The trial court awarded the fund to the Estate, and McQueen appealed. The Court of Appeals reversed the trial court, ruling that McQueen had not waived or renounced any right she had to the survivorship interest in Anello’s IRA. The Court of Appeals held that the property settlement agreement and the decree of divorce did not have the “requisite specificity” to effectuate a waiver, renunciation, or revocation of her interest as a surviv- or beneficiary. Estate of Anello, 921 P.2d at 1033. The Court of Appeals also held that there was a disputed material issue of fact as to whether Anello had taken sufficient steps to eliminate McQueen as the designated beneficiary of the IRA and remanded to the trial court for a determination of that issue.2

Culbertson v. Continental Assurance Co., 631 P.2d 906 (Utah 1981), is dispositive of the issue as to whether McQueen’s right to Anello’s IRA as a designated survivor beneficiary was terminated by the property settlement agreement and/or the divorce decree.

We noted in Culbertson:

[E]ven though the beneficiary has not been changed in accordance with the statute or policy, if the language in a particular decree of divorce must be construed as a waiver or renunciation of a. party’s right to take as a beneficiary, then the proceeds of the policy may not be paid to the former spouse, although he [or she] remains the designated beneficiary.

Id. at 909.

The question presented in this case is whether the language of the property settlement agreement as embodied in the divorce decree was sufficiently specific to constitute a waiver of any expectancy interest McQueen held as a survivor beneficiary.

The general rule in Utah is that divorce alone does not terminate a former spouse’s rights as a survivor beneficiary of an insurance policy, IRA, or retirement benefits, or as a devisee or legatee under a will. Culbertson stated:

[G]eneral expressions or clauses in such agreements are not to be construed as including an assignment or renunciation of expectancies; therefore, a beneficiary retains his [or her] status ... if it does not clearly appear from- the agreement that in addition to the segregation of the property of the spouses it was intended to deprive either spouse of the right to take property under the will or insurance contract of the other.

Id.

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Estate of Anello v. McQueen
953 P.2d 1143 (Utah Supreme Court, 1998)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
953 P.2d 1143, 336 Utah Adv. Rep. 3, 1998 Utah LEXIS 8, 1998 WL 40475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-anello-v-mcqueen-utah-1998.