Jody Bart Randolph v. Kerry Ann Sheehy

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 10, 2023
Docket0277221
StatusPublished

This text of Jody Bart Randolph v. Kerry Ann Sheehy (Jody Bart Randolph v. Kerry Ann Sheehy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jody Bart Randolph v. Kerry Ann Sheehy, (Va. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Athey, Ortiz and Lorish PUBLISHED

Argued at Norfolk, Virginia

JODY BART RANDOLPH OPINION BY v. Record No. 0277-22-1 JUDGE LISA M. LORISH JANUARY 10, 2023 KERRY ANN SHEEHY

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH Stephen C. Mahan, Judge

Emily K. Miller (Julia E. Keller; Keller Law Group, on briefs), for appellant.

(LeeAnne C. Schocklin; Parks Zeigler PLLC, on supplemental brief), for appellee.

The parties divorced and reached a property settlement agreement that was ratified by the

circuit court into a final divorce decree. Under the agreement, Kerry Ann Sheehy (appellee) was to

receive 50% of the marital share of the disposable military retired pay for her former husband Jody

Bart Randolph (appellant). The agreement also prohibited Randolph from taking any action to

reduce the amount of her share, including any election to receive disability pay instead of retired

pay,1 and Randolph agreed to indemnify Sheehy if any actions he took reduced the amount she was

to receive. Two years later, Randolph retired from the United States Navy and sought to receive

tax-free disability pay as well as Combat-Related Special Compensation (“CRSC”). The effect was

to reduce his disposable military retired pay, decreasing the amount that Sheehy received. After

1 Courts, including those quoted in this opinion, have alternatively used “retired pay” and “retirement pay” to describe non-disability payments made to retired military veterans. We use “retired pay” here, the term used in the governing statutes, administering agency documents, and parties’ agreement. Sheehy petitioned for a rule to show cause, Randolph ultimately indemnified her under their

agreement. Still, the court issued an order requiring Randolph to revoke the CRSC election. We

find the court was without authority to issue such an order.

BACKGROUND

Randolph and Sheehy divorced in 2017. Under their property settlement agreement, Sheehy

would “receive fifty (50%) percent of the marital share (as defined by [Code § 20-107.3]) of

[Randolph’s] disposable military retired pay as an equitable division of the marital property.”

(Emphasis added). Randolph agreed “not to pursue any course of action which would defeat,

reduce, or limit [Sheehy’s] right to receive her 50% of the marital share” of his military retired

pay “or which would decrease or limit the amount of any such benefits.” These prohibited

actions “include, but are not limited to . . . waiving any portion of [Randolph’s] disposable

retired pay to receive disability pay.” If Randolph took “any action” which reduced Sheehy’s

share, he agreed to “indemnify [Sheehy] by paying directly to [Sheehy] the difference between

the [50%] of the marital share . . . of the pension that [Sheehy] should receive pursuant to this

Agreement, and the amount she actually receives.” This indemnification extends to “any of

[Sheehy’s] costs associated with enforcing this provision of the Agreement, including reasonable

attorney’s fees.” As for attorney fees more broadly, the agreement provides that in “any court

proceeding . . . to enforce or prevent the breach of any provision hereof, the losing party shall be

responsible for all expenses incurred thereby, including but not limited to, all reasonable

litigation expenses, costs of court and actual attorney’s fees.” The court entered a final divorce

decree incorporating this agreement in October 2017.

Randolph retired from the United States Navy in 2019, and he and Sheehy began

receiving their respective shares of his disposable military retired pay. In January 2020, the

amount of monthly military retired pay Sheehy received decreased from $1,097.12 to $414.59. -2- In June 2020, Sheehy petitioned for rule to show cause, alleging that Randolph breached the final

divorce decree and agreement when her share of his military retired pay was reduced after he

chose to receive “disability pay.” She also requested attorney fees.

At an initial hearing on the show cause in February 2021, it emerged that Randolph had

elected to receive disability pay as well as CRSC with the net effect that his disposable military

retired pay was lower, decreasing the pot from which Sheehy’s 50% share could be taken.

Randolph paid Sheehy the $9,603.18 he was in arrearage before a second scheduled February

hearing.

Randolph argued at that next hearing that he should not be found in contempt because he

had complied with the agreement’s indemnification provision and paid Sheehy’s attorney fees.

The court took under advisement any determination of whether Randolph was in contempt for

violating the final decree of divorce and ordered Randolph to “ascertain if he is able to place an

irrevocable allotment” from the Defense Financing and Accounting Service (“DFAS”) that

would permanently revoke his entitlement to CRSC “to ensure [Sheehy] shall receive her full

Court awarded military retirement benefit” in the future. The court also ordered Randolph to pay

$11,650, plus interest, toward Sheehy’s attorney fees.

At a June 2021 hearing, Randolph explained that while he could not place an irrevocable

allotment through DFAS, he did set up an allotment through which he kept reimbursing Sheehy

for the shortfall in what she was owed under the agreement’s indemnification provision. Sheehy

agreed that the allotment had continued to cover the full balance of what she was owed. In June

2021, Randolph also requested that the circuit court enter an order allowing an interlocutory

appeal of its ruling that Randolph must revoke his CRSC, which the court denied.

The parties returned to court in October 2021. The court again took under advisement

any finding of contempt. But the court ordered Randolph to “revoke the Combat Related Special -3- Compensation election at this earliest opportunity” and “maintain the allotment that was

established to reimburse” Sheehy. The court further ordered Randolph to pay an additional

$5,729 for Sheehy’s attorney fees. Randolph noted his objection on the order: “As there is

insufficient evidence to find [Randolph] in contempt and, assuming arguendo, there is sufficient

evidence, an award of attorney’s fees is not supported by law, and; the award of attorney’s fees is

excessive; as this Court lacks jurisdiction to order [Randolph] to revoke [CRSC].” The court

then denied Randolph’s motion for certification of this latest order as an appealable interlocutory

order.

In January 2022, the parties appeared for a final hearing. There, Randolph’s counsel

informed the court, “In December when [Randolph] received his opportunity to . . . elect or

decline the CRSC, he declined,” as the court had ordered. His counsel also highlighted the

substantial lifetime tax ramifications Randolph faced from his non-taxable CRSC reverting to

taxable retired pay.

The court entered a final order dismissing the show cause petition, finding Randolph not

in contempt. The order also required Randolph to “revoke the Combat Related Special

Compensation election at his earliest opportunity,” which he had done the month before. By

separate order the same day, the court ordered Randolph to pay $5,000 more in attorney fees.

Randolph objected on both orders, making the same arguments he now raises on appeal.

ANALYSIS Randolph argues that the court abused its discretion by ordering him to revoke his CRSC

because the court lacked jurisdiction to do so.

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Jody Bart Randolph v. Kerry Ann Sheehy, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jody-bart-randolph-v-kerry-ann-sheehy-vactapp-2023.