Inman v. Inman

67 P.3d 655, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 29, 2003 WL 1860761
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 11, 2003
DocketS-10238
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 67 P.3d 655 (Inman v. Inman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inman v. Inman, 67 P.3d 655, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 29, 2003 WL 1860761 (Ala. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Homer Inman appeals the superior court's grant of Civil Rule 60(b) relief from judgment and its subsequent award of thirty percent of his civil service pension to his former wife, Peggy. Because the superior court lacked personal jurisdiction over Peggy at the time of the divorce, the original property division was void under Civil Rule 60(b)(4) and the court's subsequent award to Peggy of thirty percent of the pension as of the date she filed the motion was appropriate. In addition, the superior court's setting of the date of separation as the date the divorcee complaint was filed was not clearly erroneous, and the court did not abuse its discretion in finding that Homer had thirty years of qualifying service for his pension. We therefore affirm the judgment of the superior court in all respects.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Peggy and Homer were married in Castle Rock, Colorado on April 19, 1965. During the course of the marriage, Peggy and Homer had three sons. At some point during the marriage the couple moved to Fairbanks where Homer was working as a civil servant at Eielson Air Force Base.

In August 1976 Peggy and the children moved to Colorado. Peggy understood that Homer would join the family in Colorado as soon as he was eligible for retirement. Homer visited Peggy and the children for approximately two to three weeks each year. Peggy visited Homer in Alaska in 1981. Peggy and the children moved from Colorado to Texas in approximately 1978, and from Texas to New Mexico in 1982.

In November 1982 Homer filed for divoree in Fairbanks. Peggy was served with the complaint in New Mexico in February 1983. Peggy neither appeared nor filed an answer to the complaint. In April a default divorce decree was entered. The decree provided that each party should be permitted to maintain the property in his or her possession at that time.

In 1983 Homer remarried. He retired from his civil service job in July 1984 at approximately age fifty-seven. He began receiving pension benefits in August 1984.

In September 1999 Peggy filed a motion for a "Domestic Relations Order to Partition Plaintiff's Retirement Benefits 50/50." Homer opposed Peggy's motion, arguing that it had not been filed within a "reasonable time," that the issue should have been raised on appeal from the original decree, and that Peggy failed to demonstrate that the pension would have been divided in the first place had its existence been disclosed from the start. After supplemental briefs were submitted by the parties, Standing Master Kath-evine Bachelder held oral argument and then issued a report containing factual findings and legal recommendations regarding Peggy's motion.

In her report, Master Bachelder found that Peggy was entitled to relief only within the parameters of Civil Rule 60(b), which provides the cireumstances under which a court may set aside a final judgment. Finding that the property decree was void for lack of personal jurisdiction, Master Bachelder set it aside pursuant to Civil Rule 60(b)(4). Master Bachelder then found that Peggy's motion was timely despite the passage of seventeen years, and that Homer's defense of laches would not provide him relief from a void judgment. Master Bachelder recommended that a trial be held to divide the parties' marital property, including Homer's pension. In an order dated July 28, 2000, *658 Superior Court Judge Niegje J. Steinkruger adopted Master Bachelder's report and ordered a trial. The trial was held on January 25, 2001.

Following the trial, Master Bachelder issued a second report in which she made recommendations regarding the division of property and retirement benefits. Although Homer alleged that the date of separation was August 1976, Master Bachelder found that the marriage did not terminate as a joint enterprise until November 1982. Further, Master Bachelder suggested that Peggy be awarded fifty percent of the marital portion of Homer's pension which constituted thirty percent of the entire pension. Master Ba-chelder found that Peggy was entitled to pension benefits effective October 1999, the month after the date on which she first filed the complaint, and Master Bachelder recommended that Peggy not be awarded a share of the benefits paid to Homer from August 1984 through September 1999 due to her delay in acting to obtain rights to Homer's pension and Homer's subsequent reliance on that delay. Judge Steinkruger adopted the master's report in full on May 21, 2001.

Homer appeals.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

A challenge to the validity of a judgment under Civil Rule 60(b)(4) is strictly a question of law. 1 We review questions of law de novo. 2 We will "adopt the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy" for questions of law. 3

We "review[ ] a trial court's findings of fact under a clearly erroneous standard." 4 A finding of fact is clearly erroneous when we are left with a definite and firm conviction that the trial court has made a mistake. 5 We review the equitable allocation of property for abuse of discretion and will not reverse the trial court's decision "unless it is clearly unjust." 6

IV. DISCUSSION

A. The Trial Court Did Not Err When It Ordered a Trial To Determine the Division of Marital Property.

The trial court adopted the Master's finding that the 1982 property division was void for lack of personal jurisdiction and that Peggy was accordingly relieved from it. Under Civil Rule 60(b)(4), a party may be relieved from a final judgment that is void. 7 Homer argues that the superior court erred in ordering a trial to determine the division of marital property. He claims that once a court rules that a judgment is void, the court may not act affirmatively to impose relief. He further maintains that laches prevents Peggy from altering the property division at this time.

1. The trial court did not err in acting further after setting aside the judgment as void under Rule 60(b)(4).

Homer argues that Rule 60(b)(4) can be used only to set aside a judgment and cannot be the basis for the imposition of affirmative relief. But in setting aside the judgment and ordering a trial for the division of the marital property, the superior court did not grant affirmative relief. Rather, the court ordered a new trial in order to equitably divide the estate in the absence of a *659 legally binding property division 8 The court's actions here are similar to what was suggested in U.S. v. One 1961 Red Chevrolet Impala Sedan 9 when the judgment in that case was set aside as void. 10

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Bluebook (online)
67 P.3d 655, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 29, 2003 WL 1860761, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inman-v-inman-alaska-2003.