In Re the Marriage of Joseph Vincent Colarusso and Karyl Jean Colarusso Upon the Petition of Joseph Vincent Colarusso, and Concerning Karyl Jean Colarusso, N/K/A Karyl Jean Hughes

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedDecember 9, 2015
Docket15-0177
StatusPublished

This text of In Re the Marriage of Joseph Vincent Colarusso and Karyl Jean Colarusso Upon the Petition of Joseph Vincent Colarusso, and Concerning Karyl Jean Colarusso, N/K/A Karyl Jean Hughes (In Re the Marriage of Joseph Vincent Colarusso and Karyl Jean Colarusso Upon the Petition of Joseph Vincent Colarusso, and Concerning Karyl Jean Colarusso, N/K/A Karyl Jean Hughes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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In Re the Marriage of Joseph Vincent Colarusso and Karyl Jean Colarusso Upon the Petition of Joseph Vincent Colarusso, and Concerning Karyl Jean Colarusso, N/K/A Karyl Jean Hughes, (iowactapp 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 15-0177 Filed December 9, 2015

IN RE THE MARRIAGE OF JOSEPH VINCENT COLARUSSO AND KARYL JEAN COLARUSSO

Upon the Petition of JOSEPH VINCENT COLARUSSO, Petitioner-Appellee,

And Concerning KARYL JEAN COLARUSSO, n/k/a KARYL JEAN HUGHES, Respondent-Appellant. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Scott County, Marlita A. Greve,

Judge.

Karyl Hughes appeals the district court’s ruling denying her motion to

amend the 1999 Qualified Domestic Relations Order to reflect the intent of the

court’s division of their marital property in their 1990 dissolution of marriage

decree. AFFIRMED.

Elliott R. McDonald III and Ryan F. Gerdes of McDonald, Woodward

& Carlson, P.C., Davenport, for appellant.

Christine Frederick of Zamora, Taylor, Woods & Frederick, Davenport,

and Gary D. McKenrick of Cartee & McKenrick, P.C., Davenport, for appellee.

Considered by Doyle, P.J., and Mullins and Bower, JJ. 2

DOYLE, Presiding Judge.

In contention here is whether a Qualified Domestic Relations Order

(QDRO), entered some nine years after Joseph and Karyl Colarusso’s 1990

decree of dissolution of marriage, correctly reflects the intent of the decree’s

division and disposition of Joseph’s retirement benefits. The decree provides

that when and if Joseph begins to receive his government pension benefits, Karyl

is to be paid forty percent of a fraction of the benefits. The QDRO fixes the value

of Karyl’s forty percent by the amount of accrued benefits as of the date of the

dissolution, January 30, 1990.

Joseph retired in September 2011, and his pension went into “pay status.”

The parties then began collecting benefits pursuant to the QDRO’s provisions.1

In 2014, Karyl moved to amend the QDRO, contending the QDRO was in

error because the decree provided that the value of her share of the pension was

to be determined as of the date of Joseph’s retirement, not the date of

dissolution. The district court denied Karyl’s motion concluding “the pension’s

value was meant to be determined at the time of the dissolution, not more than

[twenty] years later.” Karyl appeals the court’s ruling. Ultimately, we affirm.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings.

Joseph and Karyl were married on May 31, 1970. They divorced some

twenty years later on January 30, 1990. Joseph worked for the Department of

the Army for nineteen of the parties’ twenty-year marriage. His pension benefits

1 The record before us does not reflect the amount of the monthly benefits now being paid to the parties, nor does it reflect the basis upon which Karyl’s payments are calculated. 3

at the time of the dissolution of marriage were valued at $37,340—representing

his contributions. Karyl also had a pension, apparently valued at $6660.

In its decree, the dissolution court found:

Both pensions are assets earned during the marriage, and should be considered in any property distribution. No evidence concerning present value has been presented. Total pension value is $44,000 which is valuable to each party at the time pension benefits are paid, and to which they should share equally based upon their contribution during the period of the marriage and the total number of years contribution to the respective funds.

In its division of the parties’ property, the dissolution court ordered the following

with regards to the parties’ pensions:

IT IS FURTHER ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that [Karyl] be awarded all right, title and interest in and to her pension plan and benefits, free and clear of any claim of [Joseph]. [Joseph] shall be awarded all right, title and interest in and to his pension plan and fund, except that when and if [Joseph] commences to receive his government pension, he shall pay to [Karyl] an amount equal to 40% of a fraction of his pension; the numerator[2] of the fraction being 19, the number of years of marriage during which [Joseph] worked for the government, and the denominator[3] of the fraction being the total number of years during which the pension benefits were accumulated prior to being paid.

The decree made no provision for the entry of a QDRO.

In July 1999, Karyl filed a motion for entry of a domestic relations order.

The motion indicates a copy of the proposed QDRO was attached, but that

attachment is not a part of the record before us. Joseph resisted the motion.

Apparently the parties took the matter up before a district court judge, for in a

second motion for entry of a QDRO, Karyl represented that the parties had

2 The numerator is “the part of a fraction that is above the line and signifies the number of parts of the denominator taken.” Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary 578 (1967). 3 The denominator is “the part of a fraction that is below the line signifying division.” Webster’s Seventh New Collegiate Dictionary 221 (1967). 4

previously appeared before a district court judge, “who indicated that a [QDRO]

should be entered to effectuate and enforce the Decree.” The motion also states

that “immediately following the hearing” Karyl’s attorney mailed a QDRO to

Joseph’s attorney. The motion further states that “since mailing said Order,”

Karyl’s attorney mailed to Joseph’s attorney a letter asking for the QDRO to be

returned, “however it has not been returned.” Karyl asked that the court enter the

QDRO “without approval of counsel.” Six days later, on September 28, 1999, the

district court entered the “Domestic Relations Order” prepared by Karyl’s

attorney. Although the order had a provision for each party’s counsel to sign

“approved as to form,” neither attorney signed.

At issue in this appeal is the following QDRO provision:

Alternate Payee [Karyl] is entitled to a portion of Participant’s [Joseph’s] gross annuity as set forth in the formula below:

40% of the accrued pension benefit to the credit of the Participant [Joseph] as of January 30, 1990

X Number of months of marriage during which benefits were being accumulated

OVER Total months during which benefits were accumulated

EQUALS Actual Payments of Distribution to Alternate Payee [Karyl]

Karyl’s motion for entry of an amended QDRO asked the court to correct

an error in this provision of the QDRO. She asserted that the QDRO violated the

language of the decree because the QDRO provides for valuation of her share of

the pension to be fixed as of the date of dissolution and not the date of Joseph’s

retirement when he started receiving benefits. Joseph resisted, arguing, among 5

other things, the QDRO complied with the decree’s language. A hearing was

held but not reported because of court reporter unavailability.

“Considering the case law at the time of [the] decree, 1990, and the

equitable effect of [Karyl’s] request,” the district court found the “decree clearly

intended [Karyl] to receive a portion of the value of the pension at the date of the

entry of the decree.” As to the equity piece of the ruling, the court stated:

It is only fair to divide the value of the pension at the time of the divorce.

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In Re the Marriage of Joseph Vincent Colarusso and Karyl Jean Colarusso Upon the Petition of Joseph Vincent Colarusso, and Concerning Karyl Jean Colarusso, N/K/A Karyl Jean Hughes, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-joseph-vincent-colarusso-and-karyl-jean-colarusso-iowactapp-2015.