Lisa Ann Moses v. Jason Moses

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedDecember 17, 2024
Docket1815234
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lisa Ann Moses v. Jason Moses (Lisa Ann Moses v. Jason Moses) 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
Lisa Ann Moses v. Jason Moses, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA UNPUBLISHED

Present: Judges Malveaux, Friedman and Lorish Argued by videoconference

LISA ANN MOSES MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1815-23-4 JUDGE FRANK K. FRIEDMAN DECEMBER 17, 2024 JASON MOSES

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF LOUDON COUNTY James P. Fisher, Judge

Raymond S. Dietrich (Raymond S. Dietrich, PLLC, on brief), for appellant.

No brief or argument for appellee.

The circuit court entered a final order of divorce (“FOD”) for Lisa Ann Moses (wife) and

Jason Moses (husband) on September 22, 2023. The FOD implemented husband’s proposed

calculations of the Federal Employee Retirement System (“FERS”) benefit rather than deferring to

the Office of Personnel Management (“OPM”) for calculation. Wife appeals the FOD and alleges

that the circuit court erred by implementing husband’s calculation because husband and wife agreed

to defer to OPM in their marital settlement agreement (“MSA”). While wife complains that the

FOD contains significant mistakes, she has failed to provide a sufficient record to permit us to

review the alleged errors.

BACKGROUND

Wife and husband were married on May 30, 1999. Wife filed for divorce on August 29,

2022, on grounds of cruelty. The parties entered into a MSA on August 3, 2023. The MSA

* This opinion is not designated for publication. See Code § 17.1-413(A). outlined guidelines for a split of three of husband’s military benefits: Military Retired Pay, Federal

Pension, and Thrift Savings Plan1 benefits. The MSA awarded wife “50% the marital share of

[h]usband’s monthly disposable military retirement pay.” The MSA required that the “Marital

Share” of the retirement pay be calculated by the Defense Finance and Accounting Service

(“DFAS”), an agency within the Department of Defense (“DOD”) that manages payments to service

members, employees, contractors, and vendors. As for husband’s federal pension, the MSA

awarded wife “50% of the ‘Marital Share’ of [h]usband’s monthly annuity. The marital share is

defined as the monthly employee annuity after reduc[ing] the cost of survivor annuity.” The MSA

required that the “Marital Share” of the pension be calculated by the OPM.

For each of the military benefits, the MSA states that wife’s “counsel shall prepare the court

order” assigning wife her share of each of the three benefits. Despite the MSA’s requirement that

wife’s counsel prepare the order, on August 30, 2023, husband filed for entry of the final order of

divorce and entry of the retirement order. On September 1, 2023, wife moved to compel husband to

follow the MSA, asserting that the MSA “specifically states that [w]ife’s Military and Pension

attorney, Raymond Dietrich, prepare the Court Orders Acceptable for Processing (COAPs) for [the

Military Pension, Federal Pension and Thrift Savings Plan Retirement Account].” Wife went on to

argue that husband refused wife’s COAPs. Wife also filed a response to husband’s motion for entry

of decree on September 8, 2023, arguing that the trial court should accept her drafted orders, which

she stated would be brought to the hearing. A copy of those drafted orders, however, were not filed

as part of the appellate record. Husband filed a subsequent motion asking the court to dismiss

wife’s motion to compel, arguing that wife’s proposed court orders were “incorrectly done” “for a

host of reasons.”

1 The parties stipulated that husband’s Thrift Savings Plan was “wholly marital,” and thus wife “shall be entitled to 50% of the value of [h]usband’s TSP on the date of division.” -2- Over wife’s objections, on September 22, 2023, the trial court entered a COAP in

accordance with husband’s draft orders. The court awarded wife “fifty percent of the marital share

of Employee benefits under FERS.” The court determined that

[t]he marital share is a fraction, the numerator being 201 months (total months of creditable service earned during the marriage), and the denominator being 376 (total months of creditable service). Thus, the Former Spouse is assigned Twenty-six point Seven Percent (26.7%) of the Employee’s gross monthly annuity under FERS if and when received by the Employee.

The court did not indicate the source for its calculation, but fully incorporates the MSA in the

FOD—a separate order from the COAP. Wife refused to sign both the COAP and FOD.

ANALYSIS

On appeal, wife presents two assignments of error arguing that: 1) the circuit court erred by

failing to incorporate the FERS COAP into the FOD, which she alleges could abrogate the award of

survivor benefits; and 2) the circuit court erred by accepting husband’s FERS calculation rather than

deferring to the calculation of the OPM. Because certain indispensable transcripts are not part of

the record, we conclude that we are prevented from reviewing wife’s arguments.

Wife failed to timely file the transcript, limiting this Court’s review.

If the transcript is not a part of the record on appeal, [this Court] cannot consider it or any references to it in addressing wife’s arguments because “[a]n appellate court must dispose of the case upon the record and cannot base its decision upon [wife]’s petition or brief . . . . We may act only upon facts contained in the record.”

Browning v. Browning, 68 Va. App. 19, 26-27 (2017) (second and fourth alterations in original)

(quoting Smith v. Commonwealth, 16 Va. App. 630, 635 (1993)). The content of an appellate

record is determined by Rule 5A:7(a)(7) which states that the record includes “the transcript of any

proceeding . . . when made part of the record as provided in Rule 5A:8 . . . .” “The transcript of any

proceeding is part of the record when it is filed in the office of the clerk of the trial court no later

than 60 days after entry of the final judgment.” Rule 5A:8(a). The final order was entered on -3- September 22, 2023. The transcript was not filed until January 3, 2024, 103 days later. Thus,

the transcript is late, and wife is not provided the benefit of having the transcript considered in

this case.

Besides the transcript, the record is devoid of wife’s proposed COAPs, which are the

main issue of this case. In wife’s response to husband’s motion for entry of decree, wife asserted

that she would bring her proposed orders to the hearing. Without reviewing the transcript, we

cannot know for certain whether she brought the orders, or why the court did not accept them.

Furthermore, the MSA states that wife’s “counsel shall prepare the court order” assigning wife

her share of each of the three benefits. Based on the limited record, it appears wife was not

represented by counsel by the conclusion of the proceedings below. Wife therefore may have

been incapable of fulfilling the requirements of the MSA.

Without the context of the transcript, we cannot know for certain the difference between

husband and wife’s calculations of the military benefits. Wife argues in her brief that her share

should be 29.4%, not the 26.7% calculated by husband and the circuit court, but there is no

reference in her brief to how wife obtained this result. Similarly, we cannot review the reason

the trial court chose to incorporate the MSA in the FOD, but not the FERS COAP into the FOD.

We are also unable to determine what conclusions the court made about the survivor benefit.

Husband’s drafts and wife’s purported submissions clearly differed, but we have no way of

knowing why husband’s proposal prevailed at the hearing.

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