Lisa Kay Kunstman Pirosko v. Joseph J. Pirosko, III

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 24, 2023
Docket2022CA1000
StatusUnknown

This text of Lisa Kay Kunstman Pirosko v. Joseph J. Pirosko, III (Lisa Kay Kunstman Pirosko v. Joseph J. Pirosko, III) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lisa Kay Kunstman Pirosko v. Joseph J. Pirosko, III, (La. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

aoaz ca i000

LISA KAY KUNSTMAN PIROSKO

v. VERSUS

JOSEPH J. PIROSKO, III

JUDGMENT RENDERED: - FB 2 4 2023

Appealed from The Twenty -First Judicial District Court Parish of Tangipahoa • State of Louisiana Docket Number 2004- 0001017

The Honorable Jeffery T. Oglesbee, Presiding Judge

Brett K. Duncan COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE/ Hammond, Louisiana PLAINT[ FF— Lisa Kay Kunstman Pirosko

Glen R. Galbraith COUNSEL FOR APPELLANT/ Rebecca Gilson DEFENDAN'i= Joseph J. Pirosko, III Hammond, Louisiana

T. Jay Seale, III Georgia Kobos Thomas April F. Jackson Madisonville, Louisiana

BEFORE: WELCH, PENZATO, AND LANIER, M. WELCH, J.

Joseph J. Pirosko, III appeals a judgment in favor of his ex- wife, Lisa Kay

Kunstman Pirosko ( now " Gingles"), which sustained her peremptory exception

raising the objections of res judicata and peremption and dismissed, with

prejudice, Mr. Pirosko' s motion seeking a modification of the parties' consent

judgment that partitioned Mr. Pirosko' s military benefits.' For reasons that follow,

we reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand for further proceedings.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Mrs. Gingles and Mr. Pirosko were married on August 10, 1979. Mrs.

Gingles filed a petition for divorce on March 26, 2004, seeking among other things

a divorce from Mr. Pirosko, as well as a partition of their community property. A

judgment of divorce was signed on June 14, 2004; the judgment of divorce also

terminated the parties' community retroactive to the date Mrs. Gingles filed her

petition for divorce. On April 25, 2005, Mrs. Gingles filed her sworn detailed

descriptive list of community assets and liabilities, and included therein as an asset

was Mr. Pirosko' s military pension benefits with the United States Army. On

October 6, 2005, the trial court signed a consent judgment that the parties had

2 entered into with regard to the partition of Mr. Pirosko' s military benefits .

According to the terms of the October 6, 2005 consent judgment, it was

entered into specifically to divide Mr. Pirosko' s " Disposable Retired Pay" and to

grant Mrs. Gingles " a [ S] urvivor [ B] enefit [ P] Ian." More specifically, the

1 The original judgment appealed in this matter, which was signed on April 18, 2022, lacked appropriate decretal language. After the record was lodged with this Court and examined, on October 6, 2022, this Court issued a rule to show cause why the appeal should not be dismissed based on this deficiency in the judgment. Thereafter, this matter was remanded to the trial court for the limited purpose of requesting the trial court to sign an amended judgment correcting the deficiencies in the original judgment. See Lisa Kay Kunstman Pirosko v. Joseph J. Pirosko, 111, 2022- 1000 ( La. App. 1St Cir. 12/ 9/ 22) ( unpublished action). An amended judgment was subsequently signed by the trial court on January 4, 2023, and the appellate record supplemented with that amended judgment. Therefore, we maintain this appeal.

2 Other than the consent judgment partitioning Mr. Pirosko' s military benefits, the record does not reflect that the remainder of the parties' former community has been partitioned— by consent or otherwise.

2 judgment provided that Mrs. Gingles was to receive a specific fraction of Mr.

Pirosko' s total Disposable Retired Pay commencing on the date Mr. Pirosko began

to receive his Disposable Retired Pay and ending ( except for the Survivor Benefit

Plan) on his death. ( R27- 29) It also provided that Mrs. Gingles " shall be covered

by the Survivor Benefit Plan, [ as set forth in] 10 U. S. C. §§ 1447, et seq., and shall

receive the maximum annuity allowed by law under the Survivor Benefit Plan."

This consent judgment contained " Reservation of Jurisdiction" clauses, wherein

the trial court reserved jurisdiction " to amend or modify the provisions of [ the

October 6, 2005 consent] U] udgment," for several specific purposes, including " to

terminate or suspend the payment of benefits to [ Mrs. Gingles] as a result of

remarriage, cohabitation, attainment of a certain age, ... or other events justifying a

change in payments ...."

Importantly, under the Survivor Benefit Plan set forth in 10 U.S. C. § 1447, et

seq., if a former spouse remarries before the age of 55, any annuity payable to that

former spouse under the Survivor Benefit Plan terminates effective as of the first

day of the month in which eligibility is lost; however, in such cases, the payment

of the annuity may resume upon the termination of the remarriage effective as of

the first day of the month in which the marriage is so terminated. See 10 U.S. C.

1450( b).

It is undisputed that Mrs. Gingles remarried in April 2010, that she remains

married to date, and that at the time of her remarriage, she had not reached the age

of 55. It is also undisputed that Mr. Pirosko retired in September 2017, that there

is a deduction from Mr. Pirosko' s monthly retirement benefit for the Survivor

Benefit Plan annuity granted in favor of Mrs. Gingles under the October 5, 2005

consent judgment, and that Mrs. Gingles does not actually receive an annuity under

the Survivor Benefit Plan because Mr. Pirosko is still living and she is currently

3 remarried. These undisputed facts lie at the core of the following litigation that has

occurred between the parties,

On November 26, 2018, Mr. Pirosko filed a rule to show cause, seeking to

retroactively "[ a] mend/ [ c] orrect and/ or [ v] acate" both the June 14, 2004 judgment

of divorce and the October 6, 2005 consent judgment partitioning his military

benefits. Mr. Pirosko claimed that the judgments were null because the trial court

lacked jurisdiction and venue; he also claimed that the judgments were obtained by fraud and ill practices. With respect to the partition of Mr. Pirosko' s military

benefits, he claimed that Mrs. Gingles was receiving an improper fraction of his

Disposable Retired Pay and that she was not eligible for the Survivor Benefit Plan

because she remarried in April 2010 prior to the age of 55. Therefore, Mr. Pirosko

sought to have both the June 14, 2004 judgment of divorce and the October 6, 2005

consent judgment partitioning his military benefits amended, corrected, and/ or

declared null.

In response to this pleading, Mrs. Gingles filed a declinatory exception

raising the objections of insufficiency of service of process and insufficiency of

citation, a dilatory exception raising the objection of unauthorized use of a

summary proceeding, a peremptory exception raising the objections of no cause of

action and res judicata, and a motion to strike. Pursuant to a judgment signed by

the trial court on May 24, 2019, the trial court sustained all of the exceptions,

granted the motion to strike, and dismissed Mr. Pirosko' s claims with prejudice. 3

Mr. Pirosko filed a motion to appeal the judgment; however, the appeal was

subsequently abandoned and dismissed by this Court. See Lisa Kay Kunstman

Pirosko v. Joseph J. Pirosko, III, 2019- 0912 ( La. App. I' Cir. 1. 17120)

unpublished action).

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Lisa Kay Kunstman Pirosko v. Joseph J. Pirosko, III, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lisa-kay-kunstman-pirosko-v-joseph-j-pirosko-iii-lactapp-2023.