Lovell v. Lovell

490 So. 2d 330
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 28, 1986
Docket85 CA 0389
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 490 So. 2d 330 (Lovell v. Lovell) 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
Lovell v. Lovell, 490 So. 2d 330 (La. Ct. App. 1986).

Opinion

490 So.2d 330 (1986)

Barbara Foisy LOVELL
v.
Archie James LOVELL.

No. 85 CA 0389.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

May 28, 1986.
Rehearing Denied July 15, 1986.

J.P. Morella, Patterson, for plaintiff.

Allen A. McElroy, Jr., Berwick, for defendant.

Before GROVER L. COVINGTON, C.J., and WATKINS and SHORTESS, JJ.

WATKINS, Judge.

This is a suit to partition community property pursuant to LSA-R.S. 9:2801. Archie and Barbara Foisy Lovell were married on March 4, 1961. A petition for divorce was filed on March 10, 1981, and a judgment of divorce was signed on October 12, 1981. A petition to partition the community of acquets and gains was filed by Archie Lovell on July 15, 1981. Both parties filed sworn detailed descriptive lists of community assets and liabilities. Trial on the merits was held February 17, 1984, and judgment partitioning the community of acquets and gains was rendered on November *331 27, 1984. From that judgment, both parties have appealed.

Mr. Lovell essentially raises three assignments of error for our review: 1) the trial court erred in its partitioning of the community when it assigned a monetary value to the Schlumberger profit-sharing plan in which Mr. Lovell was given sole interest, as a result of which Mr. Lovell did not receive property of an equal net value as the law requires; 2) the trial court erred in not granting him reimbursement for the entire amount of payments he made on certain community obligations; and 3) the trial court erred in not allowing him a credit for Mrs. Lovell's use of the family home and automobile for the interval between dissolution and partition of the community. Mrs. Lovell answered the appeal alleging as her only assignment of error the manner in which reimbursement was made to Mr. Lovell for his payment of community debts with separate funds.

For the following assigned reasons, we reverse and remand.

PROFIT-SHARING PLAN

Among the assets held in the name of Mr. Lovell was a profit-sharing plan with his employer, Schlumberger Offshore Services. Under the rationale of T.L. James & Co., Inc. v. Montgomery, 332 So.2d 834 (La.1975), the rights of Mr. Lovell in that profit-sharing plan were community property. By virtue of his length of service with Schlumberger, he had become fully vested in this plan. In the partition of the effects of the marital community the trial court allotted the profit-sharing plan entirely to Mr. Lovell and set the value of the rights of Mr. Lovell in the plan as of the date of the termination of the community at $128,697.35. We have come to the conclusion that the trial court was in error in attempting to assign a value at the time of dissolution of community to the profit-sharing plan while Mr. Lovell lived and was still employed, and the plan remained in full effect.

T.L. James & Co., supra, at 851, on rehearing, contains the following passage, which applies to present facts:

... The value of the right to share in the retirement and profit-sharing funds is an incorporeal, movable right. When acquired during the existence of a marriage, the right-to-share is a community asset which, at the dissolution of the community, must be so classified-even though at the time acquired or at the time of dissolution of a community, the right has no marketable or redeemable cash value, and even though the contractual right to receive money or other benefits is due in the future and is contingent upon the happening of an event at an uncertain time. Messersmith v. Messersmith, 229 La. 495, 86 So.2d 169, 174-75 (1956). When a community is dissolved, the employee's spouse is thus entitled to be recognized as the owner of one-half the value of the right-to-share, insofar as attributable to the contributions paid into the fund as deferred compensation to the employee during the existence of the community (i.e., even though it may not by the contract be payable at that time).2 Id.; Laffitte v. Laffitte, 253 So.2d 120 (La.App.2d Cir. 1971), noted 33 La.L.Rev. 222-23 (1973)....

2 Although at the time of dissolution of the community, the right to share in the funds' proceeds may be a mere expectancy without marketable order or redeemable cash value, the wage earner and his spouse may at that time agree upon its value and partition it, along with the other assets of the community. In practice, usually this is done, after a separation or divorce, by the wage earner paying his spouse for the discounted value of her half of this community asset, either by cash or by the spouse receiving in exchange an agreed-upon equivalent share of the other community assets. See Comment, 25 La.L.Rev. 108, 140-41 (1964).

In the present case, however, the husband did not settle with his first wife for her interest in the contractual right to receive these proceeds eventually; and therefore, to the extent of the value of the contribution of the first community in these funds, the first community's interest remains an unpartitioned assets of that community. See Langlinais v. David, 289 So.2d 343 (La.App.3d Cir.1974).

*332 It should be noted that footnote 2 supports our conclusion as it indicates that the parties to a community property settlement usually enter into a voluntary partition of the community effects in which they allot the wage earner the right to receive the funds with the non-wage earner being paid the discounted value of his or her half of the community asset.

In the present case, there is no voluntary partition of community effects. The partition is judicial. It is, as is stated in T.J. James & Co., impossible, and to some extent, unjust to attempt to fix the value of a profit-sharing plan while the wage-earner remains employed, as the plan does not have a real value to holder until maturity. The following passage in Sims v. Sims, 358 So.2d 919, at 923 (La.1978), which treated the rights of the spouses under a United States government retirement plan upon dissolution of the community, is relevant:

At the time of the dissolution of the community, as well as of the present date (at which, we are informed by the briefs, the husband is still employed as an air traffic controller), the community interest in the retirement plan has no immediate redeemable cash value. Until the employee is separated from the service, dies, retires, or becomes disabled, no value can be fixed upon his right to receive an annuity or upon lump-sum payments or other benefits to be paid on his account. (Footnote omitted)

Similarly to Sims, until Mr. Lovell becomes separated from his employment, dies, retires, or becomes disabled, no value can be set upon his rights in the Schlumberger profit-sharing plan as he can receive nothing from it and cannot use it. The value cannot be set with a degree of precision consonant with the requirements imposed upon us as a court of justice. Further, the courts are constrained by T.L. James & Co., and Sims not to attempt to set a present value upon the profit-sharing plan. The trial court made a conscientious and thoughtful effort to do so. However, this, we must hold, was error, and must be reversed.

The proper method of partition of a retirement plan (and hence by analogy from T.L. James & Co., a profit-sharing plan) is set forth in Sims at 358 So.2d 924. We reverse the holding of the trial court.

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Bluebook (online)
490 So. 2d 330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovell-v-lovell-lactapp-1986.