Light v. Light

599 S.W.2d 476, 1980 Ky. App. LEXIS 323
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedMay 9, 1980
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 599 S.W.2d 476 (Light v. Light) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Light v. Light, 599 S.W.2d 476, 1980 Ky. App. LEXIS 323 (Ky. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

HOWERTON, Judge.

Jo Ann Light appeals from that portion of a judgment of the Hardin Circuit Court dissolving her marriage with Charles Willis Light which divided the marital property and failed to award her permanent maintenance. She presents three allegations of error.

1. The court erred by failing to award her permanent alimony and by limiting her maintenance to a period ending upon the graduation of the parties’ 18-year-old son from high school.
2. The court erred in failing to consider Charles’s military pension for purposes of determining maintenance.
3. The court erred in failing to divide the military pension between the parties as part of the marital property.

Both parties petitioned the court to dissolve the marriage, and the actions were consolidated. The parties were married for 22½ years and had four children. Three of the children were residing in the home at the time of the dissolution — June, 1979. Their ages were 20, 18, and 16. The 18-year-old was in high school and was not due to graduate for another year.

Jo Ann was employed and earning approximately $400.00 per month. Charles Light is or was a master sergeant in the United States Army, and he was earning approximately $1,150.00 per month. He was to be eligible for retirement in October 1979, approximately four months after the judgment was entered. If he elected to retire at that time, his retirement pay would be approximately $544.00 per month. He was trained in hospital administration and intended to apply for a comparable civilian job which would pay between $11,-000.00 and $11,500.00 per year.

The parties had accumulated very little marital property during the marriage. What property did exist was divided somewhat equally.

Jo Ann was awarded custody of the 16-year-old child, and the court ordered Charles to pay $300.00 per month as child support until the dependent reached age 18. The time would be approximately 14 months. The court also awarded Jo Ann $200.00 per month as temporary maintenance to help support the 18-year-old until he finished high school, which would be in May 1980. The court made no other award of maintenance for Jo Ann.

We will consider Mrs. Light’s allegations of error in the reverse order. First, we conclude that the trial court did not err in refusing to declare the military pension to be divisible marital property. This Court has recently held in Russell v. Russell, Ky. App. (Rendered April 25, 1980), that a military pension may not be construed as “property,” which is divisible upon divorce. That opinion left open the possibility of considering the pension as a basis for awarding and paying future maintenance, however.

We also note that Charles Light’s military pension was not vested at the time of the dissolution of the marriage. A military pension vests only after completing 20 years of service. At the time of the dissolution, Charles had completed 19½ years. This Court held in the case of Ratcliff v. Ratcliff, Ky.App., 586 S.W.2d 292 (1979), that nonvested pension funds are too speculative to treat as marital property. The opinion goes on to read, at 293:

*478 There is one context in which it would not be inappropriate to consider the value, however speculative, of such nonvest-ed rights. KRS 403.190(1) calls upon courts to divide marital property in “just proportions.” Courts are directed to consider all relevant factors, including several enumerated in the statute. Subsection (d) shows one of the named factors to be, “[ejconomic circumstances of each spouse when the division of property is to become effective . . . .” A nonvested or contingent amount in a pension fund can, where equity so requires, be viewed as an “economic circumstance,” even though the nonvested fund is not marital property and therefore cannot be divided.

From a reading of Russell, supra, and Ratcliff, supra, we can see that even though the military pension, vested or nonvested, cannot be considered as divisible property, it may be used as a basis for paying maintenance if the equity of the total economic circumstances of the parties, including the spouse’s lack of property and ability to support herself, require that some amount of maintenance be awarded. We therefore turn to the second issue which is whether the trial court erred in failing to consider Charles’s share of the military pension for purposes of determining maintenance. Under the circumstances in this case, we must conclude that it did abuse its discretion in denying maintenance to Mrs. Light.

Generally, anything accrued and acquired during a marriage is marital property. KRS 403.190(2). A pension is a form of deferred compensation which is earned during each day of month of military service or other work. It cannot be considered as being earned on the day it matures. The value of a pension, if any should therefore be marital property for the portion accrued during coverture. This fact is true for any pension, whether nonvested or noncontributory. However, Russell, supra, prohibits a military pension from being considered as divisible property, and Ratcliff, supra, prohibits a nonvested pension from being considered marital property.

This case presents a situation where there was very little marital property to be divided. The contingent pension was the greatest potential asset accrued during the marriage. The earning ability of Jo Ann is considerably less than Charles, and when her children leave home, she will have little to show for her 22½ years of marriage. Charles, on the other hand, will have a pension of $544.00 per month, or more. He is also capable of earning a substantial additional income, based on the training he received in the Army. He is 41 years old and will undoubtedly continue to serve in the Army until he has reasonable assurance of some outside employment.

When we consider the overall economic circumstances of each spouse, together with Jo Ann’s lack of property, including what marital property was apportioned to her, we are forced to remand this action to the circuit court for a reevaluation of the facts, in light of KRS 403.190 and 403.200, together with the reasoning in this opinion.

Most pensions, and all military pensions, whether vested or nonvested, are contingent in one form or another. The nonvest-ed pension is contingent as to whether anything will ever be paid, and both vested and nonvested military pensions are contingent as to how much will be paid and for how long. Payment is only for the life of the serviceman (except for some survivor benefits to which an ex-spouse is ineligible).

Justice will be served when a contingent interest in pension benefits is settled at the time a marriage is dissolved.

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Bluebook (online)
599 S.W.2d 476, 1980 Ky. App. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/light-v-light-kyctapp-1980.