Kendre Jones v. Vieanna Jones

505 P.3d 224
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 2022
DocketS17977
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 505 P.3d 224 (Kendre Jones v. Vieanna Jones) 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
Kendre Jones v. Vieanna Jones, 505 P.3d 224 (Ala. 2022).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.gov.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

KENDRE JONES, ) ) Supreme Court No. S-17977 Appellant, ) ) Superior Court No. 3AN-18-07745 CI v. ) ) OPINION VIEANNA JONES, ) ) No. 7586 – March 4, 2022 Appellee. ) )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third Judicial District, Anchorage, Andrew Guidi, Judge.

Appearances: Kendre A. Jones, pro se, Hephzibah, Georgia, Appellant. Roberta C. Erwin, Palmier ~ Erwin, LLC, Anchorage, for Appellee.

Before: Winfree, Chief Justice, Maassen, and Borghesan, Justices. [Carney, Justice, not participating.]

BORGHESAN, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION Federal law prohibits state courts from dividing military disability pay when equitably dividing marital property upon divorce. In this case a divorcing couple’s property settlement agreement required the husband to pay the wife $1,200 per month from the non-disability portion of the husband’s military retirement. The agreement also provided that if the husband took any action that reduced the wife’s share of this payment, the husband would directly pay the wife so as to indemnify her against the reduction. After the husband’s retirement was converted to disability pay and the wife stopped receiving her monthly payment, she moved to enforce the settlement agreement’s indemnity provision. The superior court initially concluded that the indemnity provision was unenforceable because it violated federal law. But when the wife then moved to set the settlement agreement aside, the court decided to enforce the indemnity provision and ordered the former husband to make the monthly $1,200 payment and to pay arrears. We affirm, holding that federal law does not preclude enforcing one spouse’s promise to pay another a sum of money each month even if the source of the money is military disability pay. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Facts Vieanna and Kendre A. Jones were married in October 1993 and separated in June 2018. After working with a mediator, Vieanna and Kendre reached an agreement to divide their property. They then filed for divorce in July 2018. Vieanna filed proposed orders reflecting the parties’ mediated agreement in superior court. One of these orders set forth the terms for dividing Kendre’s military retirement pay. It stated that Vieanna was awarded “$1,200.00 per month from the non-disability portion [of Mr.] Jones’[s] military retirement monthly benefit.” It then defined “military retirement” as including “all amounts of retired pay HUSBAND actually or constructively waives or forfeits in any manner and for any reason or purpose, including but not limited to any post-divorce waiver made in order to qualify for Veterans Administration benefits . . . . It also includes any sum taken by Husband in addition to or in lieu of retirement benefits.” Paragraph 12 of the order contained an indemnification provision: If HUSBAND takes any action that prevents, decreases, or limits the collection by WIFE of the sums to be paid

-2- 7586 hereunder (by application for or award of disability compensation, combination of benefits with any other retired pay, waiver for any reason, including as a result of other federal service, or in any other way), he shall make payments to WIFE directly in an amount sufficient to neutralize, as to WIFE, the effects of the action taken by HUSBAND. HUSBAND shall indemnify WIFE as to any sums paid to HUSBAND that this court order provides are to be paid to WIFE so she will not suffer a reduction in her share of the retired pay as a result of any of his post-divorce actions. After a hearing at which the superior court received testimony from the parties, the court signed all the proposed orders and granted the parties’ divorce. B. Proceedings 1. Motion to enforce Almost a year later Vieanna filed a motion to enforce the property settlement and related orders. She claimed that she had stopped receiving her monthly share of Kendre’s retirement because Kendre was now receiving 100% veterans’ disability pay in lieu of retirement pay. The court held a hearing on Vieanna’s motion in July 2019. Vieanna testified that since the divorce she had been receiving $1,200 a month, but that the payments stopped in June 2019. Kendre presented evidence that in May 2019 he began receiving 100% disability benefits instead of retirement benefits. He testified that he had not “tr[ied] to change anything so that Ms. Jones wouldn’t get money.” Rather, he had been determined unemployable after a physical exam. The superior court entered what it first described as “preliminary thoughts” and then ultimately described as a “partial ruling” on the record. The court invoked our

-3- 7586 decision in Guerrero v. Guerrero,1 which recognized that federal law prevents a state court from awarding military disability pay to the non-military spouse as part of a property division incident to divorce. We also ruled in Guerrero that when a property settlement agreement awards the non-military spouse a share of military retirement pay and then the military spouse elects to receive disability pay in lieu of retirement pay — cutting off the non-military spouse’s ability to receive the payments provided for in the settlement agreement — “extraordinary circumstances” may exist to set aside the agreement under Alaska Civil Rule 60(b).2 In light of this decision, the superior court reasoned that federal law precluded it from enforcing Vieanna’s right to the $1,200 per month provided for in the settlement agreement because the money would be coming from Kendre’s disability benefits. But the court noted that if Vieanna had entered the settlement on the assumption that she would receive $1,200 a month, she “may be entitled to a re­ evaluation and a re-jiggering, if you will, of the overall settlement that [she] entered into.” Accordingly the court said that it would treat Vieanna’s motion “as a request for Rule 60(b) relief, and a reconfiguration of the original property settlement.” Vieanna responded by telling the court that she would attempt to work out an agreement with Kendre. The court suggested that Vieanna confer with Kendre’s attorney and “if you’re not able to work something out, you file a motion . . . setting forth how you think the property settlement should be re-done.” 3. Motion for Rule 60(b) relief In August 2020 Vieanna moved to set aside the property settlement agreement under Rule 60(b). She claimed that “extraordinary circumstances” were

1 362 P.3d 432, 440-41 (Alaska 2015). 2 Id. at 444 (discussing Rule 60(b)).

-4­ 7586 present sufficient to justify relief because the fundamental underlying assumption of the dissolution agreement had been destroyed. Kendre opposed the motion, presenting evidence that after Vieanna’s motion to enforce had been denied in July 2019, she had filed a similar pleading in Tennessee, which had been dismissed. He argued that Vieanna’s motion was barred by the law of the case and res judicata; that Rule 60(b) relief was inappropriate because too much time had expired since the parties’ divorce; and that he could not afford to pay the $15,600 in accumulated back payments that Vieanna claimed he owed her. The superior court ruled that it was unnecessary to set aside the settlement agreement under Rule 60(b) because the agreement could be enforced: The terms of the parties’ agreement contemplate[] the eventuality that has transpired (i.e., the elimination of [Kendre]’s non-disability retirement) and requires him to indemnify [Vieanna]. Therefore, the issue is not one of 60(b) relief but rather of enforcement.

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Bluebook (online)
505 P.3d 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendre-jones-v-vieanna-jones-alaska-2022.