Janson v. Janson

773 A.2d 901, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 172, 2001 WL 710610
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 25, 2001
Docket99-490-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 773 A.2d 901 (Janson v. Janson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Janson v. Janson, 773 A.2d 901, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 172, 2001 WL 710610 (R.I. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

In this divorce dispute, the defendant, Patricia J. Janson (wife), appeals from the Family Court’s denial of her motion to obtain a share of the pension benefits available to the plaintiff, John H. Janson (husband) and from the entry of a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO). The parties were directed to show cause why the issues raised by this appeal should not be summarily decided. Because neither party has done so, we proceed to decide the appeal at this time.

The husband and wife were married on September 30, 1966. Although their marriage produced four children, only one of them, Kerri (born September 26, 1981), was a minor on July 3, 1995, when the husband filed this action. In January 1998, after a hearing on the merits, the parties reached a property-settlement agreement. On May 14, 1998, this agreement was embodied in an amended decision pending entry of final judgment (decision). The decision awarded both parties joint custody of their minor child, with the wife having physical possession of the child and the husband having reasonable rights of visitation. Pursuant to the decision, the parties also agreed that the husband’s retirement benefits would be divided, with 60 percent awarded to the husband and 40 percent awarded to the wife. The award was to be accomplished by the issuance of a QDRO.

More than one year later, on July 6, 1999, the husband filed a motion seeking to enter the final judgment out of time and to enter the QDRO. On July 12, 1999, the wife filed a motion seeking her portion of the husband’s pension benefit as if he had retired, asserting that the husband was eligible to retire as of May 1999. The Family Court heard both motions on August 3, 1999. At the hearing, the wife also sought to have the QDRO encompass pension benefits that her husband had accrued for the period starting with the date his employment began through the date of entry of the final judgment of divorce, rather than through January 16, 1998, the date of the parties’ settlement agreement that allocated the husband’s pension benefits. After argument by counsel, the trial justice granted the husband’s motion and declined to rule on the wife’s motion. The final judgment of divorce and QDRO entered on August 3, 1999. The QDRO provided that the “[participant [husband] shall assign Forty (40%) Percent of his retirement benefit from the Rhode Island State Employee’s Pension Plan to the Alternate Payee [wife]” and that the “payments to the Alternate Payee [wife] shall be made in accordance with the plan.” After the entry of the final judgment and QDRO, the wife filed her timely notice of appeal.

Because the court did not enter a formal order concerning the denial of the wife’s motion to expand the QDRO, we remanded the appeal for the entry of such an order. On January 25, 2001, an order entered in which the Family Court denied the wife’s *903 motion and made the following findings of fact:

“1.- The decision pending entry of final decree provides for a sixty/forty (60/40) split of the pension benefits of the Plaintiff. Defendant is to receive forty percent and Plaintiff 60 percent.
“2. The Qualified Domestic Relations Order presented by Plaintiffs counsel is in accordance with the Decision Pending Entry of Final Decree.
“3. The court didn’t order anything other than a sixty/forty (60/40) split, which it seems logic would say that the sixty/forty (60/40) split cannot take place until the plan says it can.”

On appeal, the wife argues that the trial justice’s refusal to hear her motion and the court’s subsequent entry of the QDRO constituted reversible error. She further contends that the husband became eligible to terminate his employment and to begin collecting retirement benefits in May 1999 and that the trial justice “failed to recognize that the [husband] acquired a substantial right in May of 1999 that he didn’t possess on January 16, 1998.” The wife maintains that she is now entitled to her share of the husband’s pension benefits. In support of this position, the wife relies upon the cases of Furia v. Furia, 638 A.2d 548 (R.I.1994) (Furia I), and Furia v. Furia, 692 A.2d 327 (R.I.1997) (Furia II).

In Furia II, this Court concluded that even though the Family Court possessed the authority in equitably distributing the marital assets to award the defendant husband the value of his share of his former wife’s pension, it could not order that the cash value of the wife’s pension be distributed before or at the time of the plaintiff wife’s retirement. 692 A.2d at 328. Expanding upon our ruling in Fuña I, we held that the proper distribution of the plaintiffs pension “is the payment each month by plaintiff to defendant of an amount equal to one-half of the monthly pension benefits that plaintiff would have received had she chosen to retire.” Id. The Court also held that the plaintiff should continue to pay her former husband one-half of her actual monthly pension benefits after she retired. Id.

Here, the parties’ settlement agreement, as it was embodied in the May 1999 decision pending entry of final judgment, was ambiguous or silent about the valuation date of the husband’s pension and when the wife would be entitled to receive her share of this benefit. When a provision in a settlement agreement is ambiguous, we have held that “the practice of this Court is to ‘adopt that construction which is most equitable and which will not give to one party an unconscionable advantage over the other.’” Flynn v. Flynn, 615 A.2d 119, 122 (R.I.1992) (quoting Antone v. Vickers, 610 A.2d 120, 123 (R.I.1992)). In determining which construction of the decision’s and the agreement’s ambiguous pension provisions would be “most equitable” to the parties in this ease, we must interpret them in the context of the parties’ overall agreement concerning the distribution and valuation of the entire marital estate. Ultimately, the ambiguity should be resolved such that the final division of the entire marital estate is consistent with the unambiguous portions of the parties’ property-settlement agreement and with the principles underlying an equitable distribution of that estate.

Thus, because the parties’ property-settlement agreement and the court’s decision were silent with respect to when the wife was entitled to receive either actual or equivalent pension payments, the trial justice should have resolved the ambiguity based upon principles of equitable distribution rather than simply adopting, without sufficient explanation or justification, the *904 husband’s preferred reading of the agreement. In this case, the parties divided all the marital property on a 60/40 basis and the decision provided that the wife was entitled to receive 40 percent of the husband’s pension benefits. But the agreement and the decision were silent about when the wife should begin to receive those benefits. In Furia I,

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Bluebook (online)
773 A.2d 901, 2001 R.I. LEXIS 172, 2001 WL 710610, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janson-v-janson-ri-2001.