Knisley v. United States

817 F. Supp. 680, 1993 WL 104930
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedApril 1, 1993
DocketC-3-91-144
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 817 F. Supp. 680 (Knisley v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knisley v. United States, 817 F. Supp. 680, 1993 WL 104930 (S.D. Ohio 1993).

Opinion

DECISION AND ORDER FOR JUDGMENT

MERZ, United States Magistrate Judge.

This is an action under the Federal Tort Claims Act by Plaintiff Judith Knisley to recover for legal malpractice with respect to the Separation Agreement between herself and her former spouse, Master Sergeant Carl Knisley.

The parties unanimously consented to full magistrate judge trial authority under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c) and the case was referred on that basis (Doe. # 34) and tried to the Court without a jury on March 22-24, 1998.

The Court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law as required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 52 are embodied in the following opinion.

Plaintiff Judith Knisley was married in September, 1966, to Carl Knisley, an enlisted member of the United States Air Force. 1 While Ms. Knisley was not employed outside the home for most of her marriage, by 1985 she had become travel coordinator for the 1815th Test Evaluation Squadron, stationed at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio (“WPAFB”). At that time her husband was notified of reassignment to Mons, Belgium, at NATO SHAPE (Supreme Headquarters, Allied Powers, Europe). Because of a one year break in service, MSgt. Knisley would not reach his twentieth anniversary of enlistment for some time. His wife understood that he had an option of accepting a two-year assignment in Belgium, unaccompanied by his family, or a three-year assignment accompanied by them. Although their marriage *682 had been undergoing some difficulties because she suspected him of infidelity, Ms. Knisley decided to accompany her husband to Europe, at the urging of friends at work.

The Knisley family had acquired a home in Greenfield, Highland County, Ohio, and had recently put a second mortgage on it to finance remodeling. Nonetheless, they were only able to lease it as of January 1,1986, for approximately $300 per month less than the mortgage payments. The family had also acquired a new car which was heavily financed. Ms. Knisley took an unpaid leave of absence from her job at WPAFB, but expected to be able to find employment shortly after arriving in Belgium.

Living conditions in Belgium were not what Ms. Knisley had hoped. She and MSgt. Knisley had talked for years about a European tour of duty as an occasion to see Europe, but initially she found herself stuck in a country home with her three children, no transportation, no telephone, and a frequently-absent husband because of his TDY assignments. Nor was she able to find employment promptly and she was concerned about the family’s financial situation. By March she had decided to return to the United States and go back to her job at WPAFB.

Ms. Knisley testified that she told her husband of her intention but he was not cooperative in arranging transportation. Finally, in March, 1986, she went to the Army Legal Assistance office in Brussels, where she had been directed from the Legal Assistance Office in Mons. She was then introduced to Captain David Riddle, an active duty Army officer then serving as an Army Legal Assistance Officer in Brussels. She told him that she wanted to return to the United States without her husband or children.

Ms. Knisley testified Captain Riddle did not talk to her about a separation agreement during this first visit, but told her to discuss the separation with her husband and if they wanted to proceed, to draw up a list of property and debts and return to see him. MSgt. Knisley’s recollection is that his first notice of any intended separation was when Ms. Knisley handed him a draft separation agreement with blanks to be filled in and he then proceeded to prepare lists of property and debts. Captain Riddle did not testify on this precise point. Whatever the exact sequence, the first draft of a separation agreement which is in evidence, Joint Exhibit VI (which is also the first draft any witness remembered), is clearly more than an arrangement to cover a military spouse’s returning from an overseas assignment without her husband; indeed, it does not deal at all with what Ms. Knisley testified was the most important detail: who was going to pay for the travel. Instead, it reads as if it were arranging a permanent separation of a married couple in anticipation of a possible divorce. Although Ms. Knisley testified she never contemplated a divorce or even a permanent separation, her testimony on this point is not credible under the circumstances. She is a highly literate person, having handled complex secretarial work and all of the family business matters. Captain Riddle had advised her that if she went back to the United States without her husband or children, she could be charged with desertion, but a simple acknowledgment in writing by her husband of his agreement with what she intended to do would have been sufficient if a permanent separation were not contemplated. Whatever her initial intentions when she approached Captain Riddle, she understood by the time she signed Joint Exhibit 8 that the agreement at least was permanent, whether or not she and her husband might ever decide to live together again.

The second draft of the Separation Agreement, JX VII, included a choice of law clause, Ñ18, mistakenly designating the State of Washington for the governing law. It also contained Ñ17 which was an express waiver of any rights Ms. Knisley might have to participate in MSgt. Knisley’s military retirement pay. By the time this second draft was prepared, MSgt. Knisley was being represented by Captain Thomas Emswiler of the Army Legal Assistance Office in Mons. By Army policy, to prevent conflicts of interest, lawyers from different Legal Assistance Offices were to represent the spouses in any contested family law matter. By arrangement between Captains Riddle and Emswiler, the latter always handled the military *683 member and the former always handled the dependent. Captain Emswiler believed he may have inserted ÑÑ 17 and 18. A choice of law clause naming Ohio would have made sense since both parties resided in Ohio. Ñ 17 represented MSgt. Knisley’s desires; he testified he was not willing to divide his military pension because he was assuming all the marital debts and Ms. Knisley had her own retirement under federal Civil Service.

While MSgt. Knisley wanted an explicit waiver of the military pension, Ms. Knisley would not sign the separation agreement with Ñ 17 in it; it is stricken out on JX VII in her own hand. MSgt. Knisley was willing to sign with the Separation Agreement silent on the subject. Captain Riddle had at trial only a general recall of what he told Ms. Knisley about the separation agreement, but that general recall was that he told her she had rights to the retirement pay which she would waive if she signed the separation agreement in the form of JX VI or VIII, even though they both do not expressly mention the subject. Presumably this is because of the effect of Ñ2 which is a general waiver of rights not dealt -with. Ms. Knisley’s more specific recall is that Captain Riddle passed on to her what he remembers he was told by Major Johnson, the Deputy JAG in Mons, to wit, that a sympathetic court might allow later litigation of the pension rights in a divorce action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
817 F. Supp. 680, 1993 WL 104930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knisley-v-united-states-ohsd-1993.