In RE MARRIAGE OF SHEVLING v. Shevling

97 P.3d 1036, 278 Kan. 356, 2004 Kan. LEXIS 460
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedSeptember 24, 2004
Docket90,273, 90,876
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 P.3d 1036 (In RE MARRIAGE OF SHEVLING v. Shevling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court 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 SHEVLING v. Shevling, 97 P.3d 1036, 278 Kan. 356, 2004 Kan. LEXIS 460 (kan 2004).

Opinion

The opinion was delivered by

Luckert, J.:

This is a dispute between an ex-wife and the second wife over federal survivor benefits. The ex-wife had been awarded a percentage of the benefits as part of a property settlement agreement at the time of divorce. The husband subsequently tried to change the beneficiary when he remarried but his request was denied by the Merit Systems Protection Board. Following husband’s death, the second wife filed this action as a postdivorce motion to intervene. The district court ordered the ex-wife to pay a portion of the survivor benefits to the second wife. The ex-wife refused to comply and was found in contempt of court. She appeals.

Facts

Jacqueline Kay Shevling (Kay) and Harley Eugene Shevling (Gene) divorced in 1985 after 25 years of marriage. Their Property Settlement Agreement (PSA), which was incorporated into the di *357 vorce decree, provided that Gene would allocate to Kay “the maximum survivor annuity” under his Civil Service Retirement. Gene’s retirement benefits accrued while Gene was working for the federal Food and Drug Administration where he was employed during his marriage to Kay and after the divorce until his retirement.

On the same day that Gene and Kay signed the PSA, they also signed an agreement stating that, in the event Gene retired or remarried, Kay agreed to modify the original divorce decree so that, rather than receiving full survivor benefits, she would receive an amount at least equal to 55% of a base rate of $5,000 per year. This separate agreement was not attached to or filed with the original divorce decree and PSA.

Kay testified that she agreed to sign the separate agreement because Gene was refusing to sign the original PSA unless she agreed to the change. Kay was getting ready to leave for a job in Europe and the divorce had already “dragged out for a year.” Kay realized she was giving up the maximum survivor benefits and would only receive $200 per month if Gene retired or remarried, but she was “desperate for a divorce.”

Kay also testified that Gene told her the reason he wanted to reduce her survivor benefits was that giving her the maximum survivor benefits would reduce the amount of benefits he would receive when he retired.

Gene retired in 1989 and shortly thereafter realized that the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) was calculating his benefits based upon full survivor benefits to Kay rather than partial survivor benefits as contemplated by his June 1985 agreement with her. He wrote to the OPM about this perceived mistake. OPM responded that it was calculating Gene’s benefits correctly based upon the divorce decree which provided for full survivor benefits to Kay and that Kay’s notarized letter documenting her agreement to a lesser amount of benefits was not sufficient.

Gene then provided OPM with an agreed court order, signed by Kay and filed on June 18, 1990, which purported to correct the original PSA and reflected tire parties’ separate agreement wherein Kay agreed to the reduction in her survivor benefits. The agreed order stated that the parties had intended to incorporate the sep *358 arate agreement into the original PSA but had failed to do so as a result of inadvertence or mistake.

In September 1990, Gene married Judith Shevling (Judy). Gene attempted to elect full survivor benefits for Judy with the exception of that portion allocated to Kay under their agreement. OPM informed Gene that, under federal law, it must honor the provisions of Gene and Kay s divorce decree and not the agreed order modifying the divorce decree because that order was not filed until after Gene’s retirement. Thus, Kay was entitled to the maximum survivor annuity and Judy was entitled only to a contingent survivor annuity, i.e., if Kay died or remarried.

Gene appealed OPM’s decision to the Merit Systems Protection Board which affirmed OPM’s decision. Kay attempted to assist Gene in the appeal process by writing a letter to the Board affirming that, at the time of the divorce, she had agreed to receive reduced survivor benefits in the amount of approximately $200 per month. Gene did not further appeal the Board’s decision.

When Gene died in April 2001, the government began sending full survivor benefits to Kay. In August 2001, Judy filed a motion to intervene in Gene and Kay’s divorce seeking to enforce the prior agreement regarding the survivor benefits. One month later Judy filed a limited actions petition in which she alleged that Kay “had agreed and promised in writing and orally that the Plaintiff would be entitled to the death survivor benefits of Harley Eugene Shevl-ing.” The actions were consolidated.

After an evidentiary hearing, the district court ruled that Kay was bound by her agreement with Gene to waive all but 55% of the base rate of $5,000 in survivor benefits. The court found the fact that the federal government could not malee the payments in the manner the parties had agreed did not excuse Kay from following the agreement. Accordingly, the court ordered Kay to pay Judy all but $229.17 per month of the survivor benefits she was receiving. The court also awarded Judy a money judgment of $17,504 for accrued past payments. Kay filed a motion for reconsideration which the court ultimately denied in January 2003. On January 7, 2003, the district court filed an amended journal entry of judgment, from which Kay timely appeals.

*359 In April 2003, Judy filed an accusation in contempt alleging that Kay had refused to abide by the district court’s order and had taken affirmative steps to hide assets and income. The district court held a contempt hearing and, on June 26, 2003, ruled that Kay was willfully violating the court’s order by failing to send Judy her portion of the survivor benefits. The court found Kay to be in contempt of court and sentenced her to jail until she complied with the court’s order. The court stayed execution of the jail sentence until July 7, 2003, in order to give Kay the opportunity to purge herself of contempt by complying with the court’s order.

The case was transferred to this court on its own motion pursuant to K.S.A. 20-3018(c).

Was the Second Wife a Third-Party Beneficiary of the Agreement Between the Ex-Wife and HusbandP

Although the parties raise several issues, we begin our analysis with the one critical to Judy’s ability to recover. Judy, according to her motion, sought intervention in the divorce action “for the purpose of enforcing certain amendments to the Decree of Divorce and Property Settlement Agreement that were to benefit the proposed intervenor.” Judy argues that she was a donee beneficiary (one of three classes of third-party beneficiaries) and the only possible intended beneficiary of Gene and Kay’s agreement. Kay responds that Judy was not an intended beneficiary and has no right to enforce the contract.

First we must consider a procedural argument. Judy contends that Kay never raised the defense that Judy was not a third-party beneficiary before the district court, thus she has waived it. This is inaccurate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 P.3d 1036, 278 Kan. 356, 2004 Kan. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-shevling-v-shevling-kan-2004.