In re Marriage of Saunders and Grzesinski

CourtCourt of Appeals of Kansas
DecidedDecember 5, 2025
Docket127028
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re Marriage of Saunders and Grzesinski (In re Marriage of Saunders and Grzesinski) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kansas 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 Saunders and Grzesinski, (kanctapp 2025).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

No. 127,028

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF KANSAS

In the Matter of the Marriage of

JENNIFER SAUNDERS, Appellee,

and

JOHN BARRY GRZESINSKI, Appellant.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Appeal from Sedgwick District Court; LINDA D. KIRBY, judge. Submitted without oral argument. Opinion filed December 5, 2025. Reversed and remanded with directions.

Stephen M. Turley and Krystle M.S. Dalke, of Hinkle Law Firm LLC, of Wichita, for appellant.

Chris Randle, of Penner Lowe Law Group, LLC, of Wichita, for appellee.

Before HURST, P.J., ATCHESON and ISHERWOOD, JJ.

PER CURIAM: After fewer than five years of marriage, Jennifer Saunders filed a petition seeking a divorce from John Grzesinski. Throughout the proceedings, the parties generally disputed the property division and valuations. After trial, the district court issued an order dividing the property, but Grzesinski objected on several grounds, including the division of his military retirement pay, and twice moved to amend. In addressing part of Grzesinski's concerns, the district court ordered the parties to work with an attorney identified as an expert in military retirement benefits. Ultimately, the

1 district court largely denied Grzesinski's requests and issued a final memorandum order in which it divided the marital property, including Grzesinski's military retirement pay.

Grzesinski is generally displeased with the district court's decision. On appeal, he claims the district court erred in its property division, violated his due process rights, and abused its discretion in ordering him to pay a portion of Saunders' attorney fees. While district courts generally have broad discretion to divide assets in a divorce proceeding, that discretion is contingent on appropriate application of the law. Here, the district court misunderstood its broad discretion and in so doing erroneously bound itself to federal law in the valuation and division of Grzesinski's military retirement pay. Moreover, the district court erred in its identification of marital property related to the party's 401(k) accounts.

The property division through a divorce proceeding must be just and reasonable. This court provides no opinion as to whether the district court's ultimate division accomplished that requirement but finds that the court's legal reasoning was flawed. Accordingly, the district court's property division is reversed and remanded with directions as provided herein. The ultimate property division may well be identical or similar to what was previously decided, but in doing so that must be made with a full understanding of the applicable law.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The parties married in October 2014, at which time Grzesinski was serving in the United States Navy. Grzesinski continued his military service with the Naval Reserves throughout the marriage. On June 29, 2018, after almost four years of marriage, Saunders filed a petition for divorce.

2 The district court's subsequent temporary order awarded Saunders possession of the parties' marital home and ordered her to make the future mortgage payments. In a pretrial order, the district court set Saunders' filing date of June 29, 2018, as the valuation date for the parties' marital property. The parties filed competing property division spreadsheets, and the case proceeded to trial in June 2020. At trial, the parties disputed the valuation and division of their marital property, including Grzesinski's military retirement pay. Grzesinski testified that he entered the military in 1993; accumulated 27 years of military service in total; and had completed 20 years of service before marriage, which qualified him for retirement pay at 60 years old.

On January 15, 2021, the district court issued a memorandum order and divorce decree in which it valued and divided the parties' marital property and debt. The portion of the order dividing Grzesinski's military retirement pay provided:

"[Saunders] is awarded the portion of any military or reserve military pension and/or retirement due to [Grzesinski], whether payable currently or in the future, in proportion to the length of the marriage as permitted by federal law. [Saunders'] attorney is directed to draft such domestic relations order. [Grzesinski] is ordered to provide any requested information regarding such retirement and/or pension timely. The court retains jurisdiction to enforce such award." (Emphasis added.)

The district court's order also made the following divisions of certain financial accounts:

"Home bank account ending in (4110) is marital property and allocated to [Grzesinski] at value of $451. "Home bank account ending in (4228) is marital property and allocated to [Grzesinski] at value of $4,445. .... "[Saunders'] MGM resorts 401(k) is valued at $86,432.57 and the total is reduced by 20% for taxes. Of the reduced total value, $43,207.20 is found to be

3 [Saunders'] premarital property and is not subject to division; and $25,938.87 is found to be marital property and assigned to [Saunders]. .... "[Grzesinski's] Spirit 401(k) valued at $19,437 reduced by 20% for taxes is marital property and assigned to [Grzesinski] at value of $17,919.01."

The district court allocated the marital home to Saunders and credited her for the mortgage payments she made during the pendency of the case.

Saunders prepared a proposed domestic relations order as directed by the court, but the parties could not agree on some of the final language. Thus, on June 3, 2021, under Kansas Supreme Court Rule 170, Saunders asked the district court to "review the [proposed journal entry] and the objections from [Grzesinski], resolve any conflicts, revise the order as necessary, and sign a final order and judgment without hearing." Kansas Supreme Court Rule 170(d)(3) states: "If—after reasonable effort to confer—the parties have not agreed on the terms of the order, the drafter must submit the original draft and the objection to the court and the court must settle the order, with or without a hearing." (2025 Kan. S. Ct. R. at 230).

On June 16, 2021, the district court sent a letter to address Grzesinski's "objections to third draft of Journal Entry that was submitted by" Saunders' counsel. In its letter, the district court addressed the division of Grzesinski's military retirement pay:

"The court awarded [Saunders] the military pension and/or retirement due [Grzesinski]…. in proportion to the length of marriage. The length of the marriage is 82 months, which is to be divided by the number of months that [Grzesinski] served and divided by 2 (for 20 years of service 82 would be divided by 240 months and again by 2 for award of 17.08%). The conventions used by the military to calculate may make these calculations. [Saunders] is awarded the full amount to which the federal laws and guidelines provide. Counsel is directed to consult with administrator of military pensions to determine the formula for such calculation." (Emphasis added.)

4 Grzesinski objected to the district court's military retirement decision for several reasons, including the court's reliance on federal guidelines. In an email to the district court, Grzesinski argued that the district court should have valued the military retirement pay as of the date of the divorce filing—not the date of the divorce. He also argued:

"In addition, [Grzesinski] served 28.1 years in the military not 20 year[s] and there was very little increase in his pension amount after the marriage due to his full-time military service prior to the marriage.

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In re Marriage of Saunders and Grzesinski, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-saunders-and-grzesinski-kanctapp-2025.