Kathryn J. Landewee v. John E. Landewee

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 19, 2016
DocketED102483
StatusPublished

This text of Kathryn J. Landewee v. John E. Landewee (Kathryn J. Landewee v. John E. Landewee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kathryn J. Landewee v. John E. Landewee, (Mo. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Mn the Missourt Court of Appeals Eastern District

SOUTHERN DIVISION

KATHRYN J, LANDEWEE, ED 102483

) ) Appellant, ) ) Appeal from the Circuit Court VS. } of Cape Girardeau County ) 13CG-DR00319 ) JOHN E LANDEWEE, ) Honorable Scott E. Thomsen ) Respondent. ) Filed: July 19, 2016 Introduction Kathryn J. Landewee (Wife) appeals from the judgment of the trial court in the dissolution of her marriage to John E. Landewee (Husband). She challenges the trial court’s distribution of marital property. We affirm. Background Husband and Wife married in 199] and had two children of the marriage. During the marriage, the parties acquired property and debts, including Knaup Floral, Inc., Wife’s family’s business. Knaup Floral is located at 838 William Street, Cape Girardeau, Missouri, which is connected via a breezeway to the marital home, located at 136 South Pacific Street. At the time of the divorce, Wife owned and worked at Knaup Floral, and Husband worked for the City of Cape

Girardeau. Wife testified that Knaup Floral was struggling financially but that she was still able

to pay herself'a salary. Wife received a gross annual salary from Knaup Floral of $69,000 ($5,850

per month) and Husband received a gross annual salary of $51,792 ($4,316 per month), Husband had worked for the City for twenty-seven years, during which he had participated in a defined benefit pension plan through the Missouri Local Government Employees Retirement Benefit Plan {LAGERS).

The trial court divided the parties’ marital assets and debts as follows:

Wite Husband

Knaup Floral, valued at $0 LAGERS pension, valued at $0 real estate associated with Knaup Floral, valued at $410,000, less $52,000 owed ($358,000 total value)

Ford Transit van titled to Knaup Floral, valued at $6,500

The marital residence located at 136 South Pacific Street, valued at $143,500

2013 Toyota Highlander titled to Knaup | 2008 Toyota FJ Cruiser, valued at $21,000 Floral, valued at $27,000, less $30,248 owed ($-3,248 total value)

Her retirement account, valued at $62,611 His retirement account, valued at $136,316 Two life insurance policies, valued at $5,550 | Four life insurance policies, valued at $0, $0, and $5,135 respectively ($10,685 total value) | $9,097, and $10,000, respectively ($19,097 total value)

Bank account in Wife’s name with $300 Bank account in Husband’s name with $500 Knaup Floral Bank account with $1,432

two credit card debts of $4,552 and $3,507 respectively ($-8,059 total debt)

= total award of $571,721 = total award of $176,913

To equalize the awards, the trial court ordered Wife to pay te Husband $196,496.50, for total approximate awards of $375,224 to Wife and $373,410 to Husband.

With respect to Husband’s LAGERS pension, the trial court found it was a defined benefit plan, which would provide Husband a guaranteed benefit when he retired at the age of 60. Husband was vested in the plan, and, at the time of trial, the accrued guaranteed future benefit was

$1,676 per month, of which 82% was marital property. The trial court noted that both parties had

requested a present-value division of the LAGERS plan, but they did not agree on its value. Wife presented expert testimony that the total current value of the LAGERS pension plan was $216,121.62, with no reduction for estimated taxes. Wife’s expert used a 3.45% discount rate based on the U.S. Treasury Thirty- Year bond and assumed Husband would have a life expectancy of 81.5. Husband presented expert testimony that the current value of Husband’s LAGERS pension plan was $90,260, which the expert then reduced to $70,747 to account for estimated taxes. Husband’s expert used a 7.25% discount rate based on a 2012 LAGERS audit report listing its annual rate of return. Finally, noting that not ail of the LAGERS pension benefits were marital property, Husband’s expert calculated the marital portion of the post-tax present value of the LAGERS pension account as $53,300. Husband’s expert agreed that if Husband died before he retired, there would be no pension benefit.

The trial court, however, determined the current value of the plan at the time of the trial was $0, and it ordered, instead, that Wife shall receive a portion of the pension benefits once Husband began receiving them. The court noted that LAGERS is exempt from the terms of ERISA and cannot be divided by a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO), and thus it ordered that “THusband] shall pay to [Wife] the sum of $687.00 (half of the accrued marital benefit of $1,374.00 per month) less applicable income taxes per month beginning on the first day of the first month that [Husband] both becomes eligible to receive such benefits and does, in fact, receive such benefits from LAGERS.” This appeal follows.

Standard of Review

Following a judgment of dissolution, we will sustain the judgment of a trial court unless

there is no substantial evidence to support it, it is against the weight of the evidence, or it

erroneously declares or applies the law. Anderson v. Anderson, 55 $.W.3d 444, 445 (Mo. App.

_ ED. 2001) (citing Murphy v. Carron, 536 S.W.2d 30, 32 (Mo. bane 1976)). Discussion Point I

In her first point on appeal, Wife argues the trial court erred in its division of marital property because it failed to equitably divide the marital property and debts in a manner that was definite and capable of being enforced, in that it deferred the allocation of Husband’s LAGERS benefits until afier Husband retired. We disagree.

Section 452.330.1 governs the distribution of property in a dissolution of marriage, and it provides that the court “shall divide the marital property and marital debt in such proportions as the court deems just after considering all relevant factors.” Section 452.330.1.! The trial court has

broad discretion in dividing marital property. Coughlin v. Coughlin, 823 S.W.2d 73, 75 (Mo. App.

E.D. 1991). This Court will only interfere with the trial court’s distribution of marital property if the division is so heavily and unduly weighted in favor of one party that it amounts to an abuse of

discretion. Slattery v. Slattery, 185 S.W.3d 692, 697-98 (Mo. App. E.D. 2006). We presume the

trial court’s division of property to be correct, and the burden is on the party challenging the

division on appeal to overcome that presumption. Waite v. Waite, 21 S.W.3d 48, 51 (Mo. App. E.D, 2000).

Pension benefits accumulated during the course of a marriage are marital property and, accordingly, under Section 452.330 they must be considered in the division of marital property.

Kuchta v. Kuchta, 636 8.W.2d 663, 666 (Mo. bance 1982) (establishing general rules for division

of pension plans, not specific to LAGERS). There are three stages in the accumulation of a

' All statutory references are to RSMo. (Cum Supp. 2016), unless otherwise noted.

pension: before the plan vests, after the plan vests but before it matures, and after the plan both vests and matures. Id. at 665-66. The majority of difficulties arise in dividing plans that are vested but not yet matured. To account for these difficulties, trial courts are “authorized to apply a flexible approach to accommodate the particular facts of each case.” Id. at 665. The Missouri Supreme Court in Kuchta very specifically considered and refrained from establishing fixed rules for how trial courts should divide pension plans during a divorce. Id. at 666.

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