In Re Marriage of Poppe

97 Cal. App. 3d 1, 158 Cal. Rptr. 500, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2143
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 17, 1979
DocketCiv. 20642
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 97 Cal. App. 3d 1 (In Re Marriage of Poppe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Marriage of Poppe, 97 Cal. App. 3d 1, 158 Cal. Rptr. 500, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2143 (Cal. Ct. App. 1979).

Opinion

Opinion

KAUFMAN, J.

The marriage of the parties was dissolved by a final judgment on January 30, 1974, referring to and incorporating the provisions of an interlocutory judgment entered on November 9, 1973. Daniel G. Poppe (hereafter former husband) appeals from an order of the court dated September 18, 1978, denying his request that spousal support be decreased or terminated and granting the application of Josephine A. Poppe (former wife) for “modification” of the judgment by fixing her interest in the Naval Reserve pension being received by former husband on the basis of the “time rule” at one-half the fraction 27.25/31.50, the numerator being the number of years of reserve service during the marriage before separation and the denominator being the number of former husband’s “qualifying” years of service, which amounts to $253.60 of the total of $592 per month presently being received.

Naval Reserve Pension

Former husband entered the Navy on July 1, 1937. He served on active duty from that date until July 13, 1946, at which time he became a member of the Naval Reserve. On February 23, 1946, the parties were married. The parties separated on June 16, 1973, and their marriage was *5 subsequently dissolved as previously indicated. After the separation of the parties former husband continued serving in the Naval Reserve until he retired on October 31, 1977. He commenced receiving pension payments on November 30, 1977.

Retirement benefits paid to Navy personnel retiring from active duty are based on the number of years served and the amount of the retiree’s salary during active service. Contrastingly, the amount of the pension paid to Naval Reserve retirees is a percentage of the base pay for the rank achieved arrived at on the basis of the number of points accumulated by the retiree during his service in the Naval Reserve. Essentially one point is earned for each drill attended. For example, 14 or 15 points would be earned during the annual two weeks’ training duty. For periods of active duty, one point is credited for each day. To be eligible for retirement a Naval reservist must have been credited with a minimum number of “qualifying” years of service, that is, years in which 50 or more points were earned. However, if the minimum “qualifying” years requirement is met, all points earned are counted in the calculation of the pension notwithstanding that in some years less than 50 points were earned.

Former husband retired with a total of 5,002 points of which more than 3,000 were earned during the period he was on active duty prior to the marriage. The number of points accumulated during the marriage was 1,632. The balance of former husband’s points were earned by him for his participation in the Naval Reserve after the separation of the parties. It was former husband’s contention in the trial court that former wife’s interest in the pension should be computed by multiplying one-half times the fraction 1632/5002 times the amount of the pension, $592 per month. Apportioning the pension in that fashion, former wife’s share would amount to approximately $95.50 per month, and former husband had been paying that sum to former wife. However, the trial court determined that former husband’s “qualifying” years totaled 31.50 and apportioned the pension on the basis of the “time rule” by dividing the 27.25 years between marriage and separation by the 31.5 “quálifying” years so that former wife’s share amounts to $253.60 per month. 1

Former husband first contends that the Naval Reserve pension was divided by the court in the interlocutory judgment of dissolution in *6 accordance with his point ratio theory, that that determination has long since become final and that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to alter the division long since and finally made. Not so.

In numbered paragraph 4 of the interlocutory judgment the court purported to divide the community property. It dealt with items “a” through “e,” none of which was the Naval Reserve retirement benefits. Numbered paragraph 5 read: “The Court Further Orders that respondent [former wife] has a right to apply for and obtain one half of petitioner’s [former husband’s] military pension benefits accrued between February 23, 1946 and June 16, 1973 when petitioner [former husband] is eligible to obtain said benefits.”

Former husband contends that the court’s intention to divide the retirement benefits in accordance with former husband’s ratio theory is evident from a dialogue between the court and former husband near the conclusion of the dissolution hearing in which the court stated to former husband: “What you accumulated by points toward your pension prior to the time of marriage is a hundred percent your separate property.” We cannot agree.

During the same dialogue the court stated, apparently to former wife: “Once he [former husband] applies and once he gets it [the pension], then you’re going to get an appropriate amount based on the number of years to the date of separation that you were married to him. You are entitled to one-half as a community vested property interest as of that time.” (Italics added.) We think it rather clear from the entire statement of the court 2 *7 taken together with the format and language of the interlocutory judgment that what the court did and intended to do was to adjudicate that the community property interest in the retirement benefits was that accruing between February 23, 1946, and June 16, 1973, that former wife was entitled to one-half of such community property interest if and when former husband should become eligible for and apply for the pension and that jurisdiction was reserved to permit the court to make an order for an “appropriate amount” out of the pension to be paid to former wife if and when pension payments should materialize. Our conclusion in this regard is confirmed by the fact that, so far as appears, no evidence was introduced at the dissolution trial as to how Naval Reserve retirement benefits were calculated and no mention of the point system was made at the hearing other than former husband’s query to the court near the conclusion of the hearing (see fn. 2, ante). Further, had the court intended finally to divide the retirement benefits at the time of the dissolution its use of the language that former wife “has a right to apply for and obtain” her portion of the benefits would be rendered most inappropriate.

Thus, wife’s application for a “modification” of the judgment of dissolution was in reality a request to the court to exercise its reserved jurisdiction to make an order specifying the proportion and amount of her interest in the Naval Reserve pension. The court having reserved jurisdiction by its order that former wife would have in the future the “right to apply for and obtain” her share of the pension, the court was not precluded from entertaining former wife’s application and making an order quantifying her interest.

Next former husband contends that the trial court’s apportionment of the pension was legally erroneous.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 Cal. App. 3d 1, 158 Cal. Rptr. 500, 1979 Cal. App. LEXIS 2143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-poppe-calctapp-1979.