In the Matter of the Marriage of: Judith K. Tulleners & Andre J. Tulleners

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedFebruary 1, 2022
Docket37742-3
StatusUnpublished

This text of In the Matter of the Marriage of: Judith K. Tulleners & Andre J. Tulleners (In the Matter of the Marriage of: Judith K. Tulleners & Andre J. Tulleners) 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 the Matter of the Marriage of: Judith K. Tulleners & Andre J. Tulleners, (Wash. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

FILED FEBRUARY 1, 2022 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

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

In re the Matter of the Marriage of ) ) No. 37742-3-III JUDITH K. TULLENERS, ) ) Appellant, ) ) and ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION ) ANDRE J. TULLENERS, ) ) Respondent. )

FEARING, J. —

This marital dissolution reaches us a second time. The first appeal resulted in a

published opinion. In re Marriage of Tulleners, 11 Wn. App. 2d 358, 453 P.3d 996

(2019). The dispute between the parties concerns the distribution of the parties’ assets,

particularly retirement accounts. One primary question in both appeals concerns the

propriety of the dissolution court’s award of a Nuss-type credit to the husband, Andre

Tulleners. Pursuant to In re Marriage of Nuss, 65 Wn. App. 334, 341, 828 P.2d 627

(1992), trial courts may consider the origin of property as one spouse’s separate property

when appropriate to justify awarding a disparate share of the property to that spouse.

Because we are unable to determine the validity of the credit and its amount, we remand

for further proceedings. No. 37742-3-III In re Marriage of Tulleners

FACTS

Judith and Andre Tulleners married on November 29, 1997, in what was a second

marriage for both. At the time of their dissolution trial, both parties were in their early

seventies and retired. After Judith filed her first appeal, Andre died, and his estate was

substituted as respondent. We refer to the Estate of Andre Tulleners, however, in this

opinion as Andre Tulleners.

The facts arise from trial testimony. Andre Tulleners worked thirty-two years for

Williams Companies until his retirement on May 31, 2006. Williams, a Fortune 500

company, engages in natural gas processing, petroleum generation, electricity generation,

and transportation. The corporation’s stock trades on a public exchange. Williams

Companies provided an employer funded pension program (company plan) and made

available to its employees an employee funded 401(k) plan.

Andre Tulleners divorced his first wife in May 1997, six months before his

marriage to Judith. At the time of the dissolution of his first marriage, his 401(k) account

totaled $375,000, half of which ($187,500) the court awarded him in the earlier marital

dissolution proceeding. We do not know the value of Andre’s interest in the company

plan at the time of his first divorce. We do not know the value of either the company

plan or the 401(k) plan in November 1997, when Andre married Judith.

Williams Companies continued to contribute to the company plan and Andre

continued to contribute to the 401(k) plan during the eight and one half years of Andre’s

2 No. 37742-3-III In re Marriage of Tulleners

employment between the time of his marriage to Judith and his retirement. At trial,

Andre offered no evidence of the respective contributions made toward his two

retirement plans during the marriage.

In May 2006 on retirement, the company plan paid Andre Tulleners the lump sum

of $514,106 in lieu of a pension benefit. His 401(k) plan then held $357,017.10. Andre

converted his company plan lump sum and the sum in his 401(k) plan, which totaled

$871,123, to two individual retirement accounts. In 2013, Andre withdrew $300,000

from his individual retirement account funds to purchase an annuity. We hereafter refer

to the combined total of the individual retirement account funds and value of the annuity

as Andre’s retirement assets.

At trial, Judith Tulleners contended that most of the $357,017.10 value of Andre’s

401(k) account at retirement constituted community property. She testified that Williams

Companies’ stock crashed in the early 2000s, at which time Andre told her that the value

of his 401(k) plan declined to $40,000. Thus, according to Judith, about $317,017 of the

401(k) plan’s value, or 89 percent of the value, at Andre’s retirement should be

considered to have accrued after the marriage and therefore be deemed community

property. Judith averred that Andre asked that the couple rely primarily on her income to

pay expenses before retirement so that he could use his wages to maximize contributions

to rebuild his 401(k) account. She agreed.

3 No. 37742-3-III In re Marriage of Tulleners

Andre Tulleners denied at trial that he told Judith that his 401(k) account declined

in value to $40,000 on some unidentified date after the marriage, but he acknowledged

that the value dipped after marriage because his 401(k) account invested in Williams

Communications stock. Williams Communications is a subsidiary of Williams

Companies. The stock value decreased in the early 2000s. We do not know what, if any

other, assets the 401(k) account held other than Williams Communications stock. Andre

provided no information as to the lowest value of his 401(k) plan or the date on which the

plan reached its bottom price. Andre agreed that he told Judith he wanted to maximize

his contributions to the account. He further conceded that he maximized his

contributions to the 401(k) account during the marriage to Judith.

At the time of marital separation, the value of Andre Tulleners’ retirement assets

totaled $767,924. We do not know how the total is divided among the individual

retirement accounts and the annuity. We do not know the total value of the retirement

assets at the time of trial.

During the marriage, Judith Tulleners accumulated a teacher’s pension plan. She

received $944.65 per month from the plan after retirement. During trial, neither party

valued Judith’s pension as of any date. Nevertheless, Judith’s plan administrator testified

that 67.6 percent of her pension plan constituted separate property and 32.4 percent

community property. Aside from the teachers’ pension plan, Judith also maintained an

employee contribution retirement account worth $11,872 at trial.

4 No. 37742-3-III In re Marriage of Tulleners

The parties separated on May 5, 2016.

PROCEDURE

Judith Tulleners filed for dissolution in May 2016, after eighteen and one half

years of marriage. At trial, Judith and Andre disputed how to divide their assets,

including their retirement accounts and retirement assets.

In a memorandum decision after trial, the dissolution court commented on Andre

Tulleners’ failure to offer evidence as to the amounts and timing of employer

contributions to his company plan and his contributions to his 401(k) plan between his

marriage to Judith and his retirement. Based on this failure, the dissolution court

characterized his retirement assets as solely community property.

In its memorandum decision, the dissolution court valued the parties’ community

property at $1,019,914, $767,924 of which consisted of Andre Tulleners’ retirement

assets. The dissolution court adopted Judith’s pension plan administrator’s calculation of

the community property and separate property percentages of Judith’s pension, and the

court adjudged a 32.4 percent interest in Judith Tulleners’ future pension payments to be

community property and a 67.6 percent of the future payments as Judith’s separate

property. The court did not place a value on Judith’s pension plan. The trial court valued

Andre’s separate property at $20,000 and Judith’s separate property, not including her

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