In re the Marriage of: Sharon and Frank Taylor

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedApril 11, 2017
Docket33878-9
StatusUnpublished

This text of In re the Marriage of: Sharon and Frank Taylor (In re the Marriage of: Sharon and Frank Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of: Sharon and Frank Taylor, (Wash. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

FILED APRIL 11, 2017 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals, Division Ill

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

In the Matter of the Marriage of ) ) No. 33878-9-111 SHARON TAYLOR, ) ) Appellant, ) ) V. ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) FRANK TAYLOR, ) ) Respondent. )

FEARING, C.J. - Sharon Radovich, formerly Sharon Taylor, appeals an order

clarifying the distribution of her former husband's retirement benefit. Frank Taylor and

she maintained their matrimony for thirteen years while he worked for the Douglas

County Public Utility District (PUD). Dissolution ended their union in 1985, but Taylor

continued to work at the PUD until 2014. The divorce decree awarded Radovich "[o]ne

half of Respondent's [Frank Taylor's] retirement benefits for 13 years." Clerk's Papers

(CP) at 13. No. 33878-9-111 In re Marriage of Taylor

At Frank Taylor's request, the trial court granted Radovich payment for the rest of

her life based on the monthly retirement benefit that Taylor would have garnered if he

only worked thirteen years with the Douglas County PUD. Radovich sought distribution

of half of the amount Frank Taylor receives from the Department of Retirement Systems

(DRS) over thirteen years during the first thirteen years of Taylor's retirement. We

disagree with both parties and award Radovich recovery based on Court of Appeals

precedent. We divide the number thirteen by the number of years Taylor worked at the

PUD, divide the remainder by two, and multiply that remainder by Taylor's monthly

retirement benefits.

FACTS

Sharon Radovich and Frank Taylor married on July 6, 1962. On November 2,

1970, Frank enrolled in the Public Employees Retirement System, Plan 1 (hereafter

"PERS l ") through his work for Douglas County Public Utility District. While Frank

still worked at the utility district, the Taylors separated on October 1, 1983.

On July 3, 1984, Sharon Radovich petitioned the superior court to dissolve the

couple's irretrievably broken union. The petition, acknowledged by Taylor and

Radovich, provided:

We have agreed that our property will be divided as follows: 1. Home to Respondent [Frank Taylor], with a $11,250 lein [sic] to Petitioner [Sharon Radovich] which shall become due upon sale of said home or in 10 years, whichever occurs first.

2 No. 33878-9-III In re Marriage of Taylor

2. Household goods of furniture, half to Respondent and half to Petitioner. 3. Retirement Benefits, Douglas County P.U.D. Half to Petitioner for 13 years after Respondent retires.

CP at 3. The Taylors did not enter a written separation agreement, and neither hired an

attorney for the divorce.

The superior court entered a dissolution decree on May 21, 1985. The decree

provided:

(7) PETITIONER'S PROPERTY. The following property is the sole and separate property of the Petitioner; (use legal descriptions for real estate). 1. 1978 Chevy Pickup 2. One half of Respondents retirement benefits for 13 years 3. One half of furniture and household goods. 4. $8,000 dollars, which is half of agreed upon equity in home at the time of separation. Respondent agrees to pay Petitioner this amount within ten years of separation, or upon sale of home. This property is legally described as follows Lot 24 S.E. Alta Lake Golf Course. 1981 Homette Mobil [sic] Home.

(8) RESPONDENT'S PROPERTY. The following property is the sole and separate property of the Respondent; (use legal descriptions for real estate). 1. 1981 Monte Carlo 2. One half of household furniture and goods. 3. All money from sale of home after $8,000 has been paid to petitioner. 4. Half of retirement benefits for 13 years and full amount after that period of time.

CP at 13. We do not know who drafted the language addressing the distribution of Frank

Taylor's retirement benefits.

3 No. 33878-9-III In re Marriage of Taylor

In 2014, Frank Taylor, when nearing retirement, requested that DRS calculate

Sharon Radovich' s portion of his retirement benefit as allocated by the dissolution

decree. DRS responded by letter with the following computation:

CONTRIBUTION INFORMATION

• Contributions earned as of 11/1/83 $22,364.57 • Assets in account subject to a Property Division $22,364.57

MONTHLY BENEFIT INFORMATION

The calculation of monthly retirement benefit is based on the retirement benefit earned only from 11/2/70 to 11/1/83 and assumes you terminated service at that time, leaving the account balance to accrue a future retirement benefit at age 60.

• Service credit earned from 11/2/70 to 11/1/83 156 months • AFC earned from 11/1/81 to 10/31/83 $3,024.20 • Estimated benefit amount = 2 °/o x 156 x $3,024.20 + 12 = $788.40 per mo.

CP at 70. AFC means average final compensation. We do not know why DRS gauged

the benefit on the assumption Taylor would retire at age sixty. We do not know the

source of the two percent figure, but assume that figure is standard in determining PERS

1 retirement benefits. We have performed the same calculation performed by DRS and

arrive at $786.29, not $788.40.

Although not relevant to resolution of this appeal, the parties in their briefs

mention the current value of half of Frank Taylor's contributions to PERS 1 through the

date of separation. Half the contributions from the first 13 years equals $11,182.29.

4 No. 33878-9-III In re Marriage of Taylor

Frank Taylor retired from the Douglas County Public Utility District on December

31, 2014, thirty-one years after the separation and divorce. PERS 1 commenced paying

Taylor a gross monthly benefit of $6,743.42. DRS refused to issue retirement benefits to

Sharon Radovich until DRS received a court order with language acceptable to it.

PROCEDURE

On June 3, 2015, Sharon Radovich filed a motion for entry of an amended

property division, under which she sought an award of retirement benefits. We consider

her motion to seek clarification of the 1985 marriage dissolution decree. Radovich

proposed that she receive half of Frank Taylor's monthly retirement benefits during the

thirteen years following his retirement. She first calculated this amount at $4,081.98 per

month. She later reduced the amount to $3,371.71 per month, one-half of Frank Taylor's

gross monthly payment of $6,743.42. Sharon Radovich's calculation gives her the

benefit of Taylor's higher average final compensation as the result of working an

additional thirty-one years after the separation and divorce. Frank contested this amount

and cross moved for a clarification of the award of retirement benefits. Frank proposed

an order awarding Radovich an amount consistent with the DRS calculation. This

amount is $394.20 per month.

The trial court conducted two hearings. At each hearing, the parties provided their

respective proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law supported by affidavits in

which each declared his or her intent when entering the divorce decree. After the second

5 No. 33878-9-111 In re Marriage of Taylor

hearing, the trial court adopted Frank Taylor's position that Sharon Radovich receive

$394.20 per month and entered findings of fact and conclusions of law consistent with

this ruling. The findings and conclusions included:

FINDINGS OF FACT

FF-13. The number "13" [in terms of years] is used twice in the decree.

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