Gregory Numann v. Diane Gallant f/k/a Diane Numann

555 P.3d 527
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 6, 2024
DocketS18580
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 555 P.3d 527 (Gregory Numann v. Diane Gallant f/k/a Diane Numann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gregory Numann v. Diane Gallant f/k/a Diane Numann, 555 P.3d 527 (Ala. 2024).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.gov.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

GREGORY NUMANN, ) ) Supreme Court No. S-18580 Appellant, ) ) Superior Court No. 3AN-21-07318 CI v. ) ) OPINION DIANE GALLANT, f/k/a Diane ) Numann, ) No. 7717 – September 6, 2024 ) Appellee. )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Peter R. Ramgren, Judge.

Appearances: Gregory Numann, pro se, Lisbon, Ohio, Appellant. Erin Welden, Law Offices of Blake Fulton Quackenbush, Anchorage, for Appellee.

Before: Maassen, Chief Justice, and Carney, Borghesan, Henderson, and Pate, Justices.

HENDERSON, Justice.

INTRODUCTION A husband appeals the superior court’s division of his military retirement benefit from the date of separation rather than from the date of the final divorce decree. He also argues that the judge presiding over his case was biased against him. Observing no legal error or abuse of discretion in the court’s division of the benefit, and no evidence of judicial bias, we affirm. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Facts Gregory Numann and Diane Gallant were married in 2002. They have one child together who reached the age of majority before trial. The parties separated in October 2016. At that point they verbally agreed that they would maintain separate residences, that Numann would pay child support to Gallant, 1 that both parties would contribute equally to the child’s college fund, and that each party would maintain their separate retirement accounts.2 Numann served in the military from 1989 to 2015, for a total of 26 years. His military pension was worth about $730,000 when the parties separated. Gallant had full- or part-time employment throughout the marriage and had two retirement accounts cumulatively worth about $30,000 at separation. B. Proceedings 1. Divorce Gallant filed for divorce in 2021, citing an incompatibility of temperament. In her trial brief she asked to be awarded the marital home and for Numann to be awarded a condominium he purchased after separation. She also sought 25% — or half of the marital portion — of Numann’s military retirement benefit. 3

1 Numann continued to pay child support to Gallant even after the child turned 18, and the court credited him for these payments in its final property division. The court subtracted the value of the child support payments Numann made after the child turned 18 from the money he owed Gallant. 2 Gallant disagrees with Numann’s characterization of the parties’ agreement. Numann now contends this “preexisting verbal separation agreement” was binding on the court, but he never made this argument to the superior court and thus did not preserve it for appeal. See McMullen v. Bell, 128 P.3d 186, 190 (Alaska 2006) (explaining argument waived where raised for first time on appeal). As a result we do not address this argument. 3 Gallant qualified for this portion of the benefit through the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act. See 10 U.S.C. § 1408.

-2- 7717 In answering Gallant’s complaint, Numann sought 27.5% of the equity in the marital home based on his contributions to the mortgage. He also asked that both parties retain their separate retirement accounts. Under Numann’s preferred property division and calculations, Gallant would owe him an equalization payment of $30,636. The superior court held a two-day divorce trial that ended in July 2022. At the end of the trial, the court issued a divorce decree and made several findings and conclusions on the record. The court asked Gallant’s counsel to prepare written findings and conclusions, and it also invited the parties’ further input if they believed there was a better way to evenly distribute the marital estate. In her proposed findings and conclusions, Gallant proposed that, in addition to receiving a portion of Numann’s military retirement after their divorce, she should be awarded a sum equal to the accrued value of her portion of Numann’s military retirement benefit since separation. Numann opposed Gallant’s proposed findings and conclusions and requested a hearing to address potential issues with the court’s anticipated division of marital property. In response the court held a hearing in late August. At the hearing Numann expressed concerns about the proposed award of “arrears” associated with his military retirement benefit. At this hearing and in later motions such as his motion for reconsideration,4 he maintained that a final court order is required before a non-military spouse becomes entitled to a portion of the military retirement benefit, and that the court was prohibited from ordering he pay back retirement funds Gallant was never entitled to. The court addressed Numann’s concerns regarding division of his military retirement benefit in a second decision on the record. It agreed with Numann’s understanding that Gallant could only seek direct payment from the Defense Finance

4 The court denied the motion for reconsideration in January 2023. Numann also filed a motion to consider limiting the spousal retirement award on September 22, 2022. The court denied that motion as untimely because final judgment had been entered on September 21. Although Numann challenges this decision on appeal, we agree his motion was untimely and affirm the court’s denial of that motion.

-3- 7717 and Accounting Service (DFAS) 5 for her portion of the military retirement benefit pursuant to a final court order. However, the court also concluded the marital portion of the military retirement benefit was a marital asset. Because the marital portion of the military retirement benefit necessarily “accrued during the marriage,” the court found Gallant “was entitled to her portion of th[e benefit] starting from the date of separation.” The court believed it had authority to create such an award of “arrears”6 under state law, even if the federal government would not enforce an award of arrears directly. Its final property division was fashioned accordingly. The court issued its final findings of fact and conclusions of law in September 2022. In its findings and conclusions, the court made several preliminary decisions about assets it would award the parties and then essentially balanced these awards against each other to reach a final distribution of the marital property. It preliminarily credited Numann for 28% of the equity in the marital home and also gave him credit for child support payments made from the date the child reached the age of majority to trial. As for the condominium, the court determined it was Numann’s separate property not subject to division. The court preliminarily ordered that the marital portions of the parties’ three retirement accounts be divided as of the date of their separation. It also found that Numann owed Gallant $94,248.70, the value of half of the marital portion of the retirement payments Numann had collected over the 70 months since the parties separated in October 2016. 7 Meanwhile, Numann’s portion of

5 DFAS is “the [federal] agency in charge of disseminating military retirement benefits.” See Villars v. Villars, 277 P.3d 763, 767 (Alaska 2012). 6 As we discuss further in this opinion, the court’s use of the term “arrears” was misplaced. Instead, the court in effect recaptured the marital portion of the military retirement funds when it calculated how much Gallant should have received from the military pension since the parties’ separation. See infra Part IV.A.2.

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555 P.3d 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gregory-numann-v-diane-gallant-fka-diane-numann-alaska-2024.