Holmes v. Kent

221 S.W.3d 622, 50 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 613, 2007 Tex. LEXIS 324, 2007 WL 1162710
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 20, 2007
Docket04-0729
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 221 S.W.3d 622 (Holmes v. Kent) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. Kent, 221 S.W.3d 622, 50 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 613, 2007 Tex. LEXIS 324, 2007 WL 1162710 (Tex. 2007).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Petitioner Tommy Joe Holmes claims that he is entitled to payments from an optional annuity elected by his deceased ex-wife, Linda Ann McWhorter, as part of her teacher retirement benefits. Her son Alan Brad Kent, who is the executor of her estate and only heir, joined by his ex-wife Cassie Elizabeth Kent 1 as respondents, disagree. They argue, first, that McWhorter’s designation of them as beneficiaries of her other retirement benefits covered the optional annuity as well or at least showed her intent that they receive the annuity, and second, that Holmes and McWhorter’s divorce decree divested him of all interest in her retirement benefits. The trial court granted Holmes summary judgment. The court of appeals rejected the Kents’ first argument but agreed with the second, thus concluding that while Holmes was entitled to receive the annuity payments because his designation as beneficiary was never changed, after the divorce he had no right to retain the payments unless McWhorter intended for him to have them. 2 If on remand it were shown that she had no such intention, a constructive trust should be imposed on the payments in favor of McWhorter’s estate. 3 Holmes petitioned this Court for review. The Teacher Retirement System of Texas has filed an amicus curiae brief arguing that the court of appeals’ decision will adversely affect thousands of TRS retirees and beneficiaries. We reverse and render judgment for Holmes.

TRS allows a retiree to elect, instead of a standard service retirement annuity, an optional annuity that provides reduced payments to the retiree during her life and, at death, continued payments to and throughout the life of a designated beneficiary. 4 Under this option, if the beneficiary does not survive the retiree, the retiree’s payments increase to those of a *624 standard annuity, but only prospectively. 5 If the beneficiary survives the retiree, payments cease when the beneficiary dies. 6 Only one beneficiary can be designated, and changing the designation is restricted, 7 since the value of the optional annuity, and hence the cost to TRS, depend on the beneficiary’s longevity. Statutory amendments in 1997 and 2001 allow a retiree who has designated a spouse as beneficiary a change or revocation if the spouse files a notarized consent or if a court in a divorce proceeding approves or orders the change or revocation. 8 TRS is *625 authorized to prescribe the form the retiree must use. 9 If the designation is revoked, the retiree receives the higher payments of a standard annuity going forward, 10 as if the beneficiary had predeceased the retiree. If the designation is changed, the new beneficiary receives payments for the shorter of his life or the original beneficiary’s life expectancy at the time the retiree retired. 11 Thus, a change or revocation should not (statistically) increase and may actually decrease the cost to TRS of the retiree’s original election of the optional annuity.

TRS reads the statutory provisions strictly to require that a retiree submit the change or revocation to TRS on a prescribed form and that the divorce court’s approval or order specifically direct the change or revocation; a divorce decree’s general award of retirement benefits to the retiree does not, in TRS’s view, satisfy the requirements. According to TRS, these statutory requirements “protect the trust fund from the claims of multiple beneficiaries that arise when there is uncertainty regarding the beneficiary of the benefits and the resulting costs of litigation.” They also protect retirees and beneficiaries, TRS argues, by providing a clear, certain system for assigning retirement benefits.

When McWhorter retired in May 1997 at age 54 after 33 years of teaching, she *626 elected an “option 5” annuity 12 and designated Holmes as the beneficiary. The TRS form she signed correctly explained that she could not name joint primary beneficiaries of this optional annuity and that she would receive

[a] reduced annuity payable throughout my life with the provision that upon my death three-fourths (3/4) of the reduced annuity shall be continued throughout the life of and paid to the person designated hereupon as primary beneficiary. If my primary beneficiary designated hereupon predeceases me, my annuity payment will increase to the standard annuity amount. 13

McWhorter was also entitled to a $10,000 lump-sum payment at her death.

A year later, while going through a divorce, McWhorter signed a TRS form stating:

I hereby designate the following person(s) as my primary beneficiaryfies) to receive any payments which may be due under the Teacher Retirement System Law of the State of Texas following my death (joint beneficiaries to share alike, with right of survivorship only): Alan Brad Kent ... [and] Cassie Elizabeth Kent.

The form stated that “[w]hen received by the Teacher Retirement System, this form revokes any previous beneficiary designation made by the member on a prescribed Teacher Retirement form.” Nevertheless, McWhorter’s submission of the form did not meet the statutory requirements for a change in the optional annuity beneficiary because it designated two people, not one, and it was not accompanied by Holmes’ notarized consent or a divorce decree ordering a change. 14 TRS notified McWhorter by letter that it had accepted the change for the $10,000 death benefits but explained that to change the beneficiary of the optional annuity, she would be required to submit the appropriate form, which TRS enclosed, and submit it with either Holmes’s notarized consent or a “[c]ertified copy of a Court Order from the court with jurisdiction over the marriage ordering the change.” The letter added that by statute

the new beneficiary is entitled to receive monthly payments for the SHORTER of EITHER the remainder of the life expectancy of the original beneficiary designated at retirement, OR the remainder of the new beneficiary’s life.

Another year passed, and McWhorter and Holmes’s divorce became final. The decree awarded McWhorter

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W.3d 622, 50 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 613, 2007 Tex. LEXIS 324, 2007 WL 1162710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-kent-tex-2007.