Manning v. Schultz

2014 VT 22, 93 A.3d 566, 196 Vt. 38, 2014 WL 840815, 2014 Vt. LEXIS 19
CourtSupreme Court of Vermont
DecidedFebruary 21, 2014
Docket2012-121
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2014 VT 22 (Manning v. Schultz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Vermont primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manning v. Schultz, 2014 VT 22, 93 A.3d 566, 196 Vt. 38, 2014 WL 840815, 2014 Vt. LEXIS 19 (Vt. 2014).

Opinion

Burgess, J.

¶ 1. The principal question presented in this appeal from a final judgment of divorce is whether, as husband contends, the trial court erred in its division of the marital estate by including an offset for the disparity in value between the parties’ *41 projected Social Security retirement benefits. We conclude that this was error, and therefore reverse and remand.

¶ 2. The facts may be summarized as follows. The parties were married in 1992, and had three children who were still minors at the time of these proceedings. The parties separated in March 2010, and wife filed a complaint for divorce shortly thereafter. The trial court held a contested hearing over two days in February and April 2011. At the time of the hearing, wife worked part-time for a school district, earning approximately $14,000 a year with health insurance benefits. The court found that wife intended to return to school to obtain a master’s degree in public administration, which could triple her earnings. During the marriage, husband worked for more than twelve years as a vice president at the University of Vermont, earning approximately $155,000 per year. Due to events not directly relevant to this appeal, husband resigned his position shortly after the conclusion of the hearing and the University provided him with a severance package. The court found that husband’s future employment prospects were “unknown and speculative.”

¶ 3. The parties did not agree on the assets to be included in the marital estate. Wife submitted a list of assets (“Exhibit D”) with a total value of $1,152,325.86, including $88,158 identified as the difference between the present value of husband’s and wife’s projected Social Security benefits. The value was determined by wife’s accountant and credited toward husband’s suggested share of the marital estate, with a corresponding offset in value for wife. Wife proposed that she be awarded either sixty percent of the value of the entire estate plus spousal maintenance, or eighty percent without maintenance. Husband submitted a separate list of marital assets which totaled $978,504 and did not include the Social Security differential. Husband proposed an award to wife of sixty percent of the value of the estate plus rehabilitative maintenance for a period of several years.

¶ 4. In its written ruling, the trial court found that wife’s proposed property division as set forth in her Exhibit D was “a reasonable one” and gave her the option of choosing either the eighty/twenty division that she had proposed or an award of sixty percent plus maintenance until she reached the age of sixty-seven. Wife subsequently opted for the higher percentage of the marital estate without the maintenance, and the trial court entered a final judgment consistent with that choice and with the proposed *42 division set forth in Exhibit D, attached to the judgment. Husband’s two subsequent motions to reconsider were denied. This appeal followed.

¶ 5. Husband contends that, by including the Social Security differential in his portion of the marital estate and awarding wife $88,158 to offset the value, the trial court here violated both state and federal law. The federal claim is predicated on case law holding that the Social Security Act preempts state courts from treating Social Security retirement benefits in divorce proceedings as marital property to be valued and either divided or — as here — directly offset by other property. Wife maintains that the preemption claim was not raised in the trial court, and therefore, was not preserved for review on appeal. See Rutland Herald v. Vt. State Police, 2012 VT 24, ¶ 33, 191 Vt. 357, 49 A.3d 91 (‘We will not entertain arguments on appeal if they were not preserved in the trial court.”). Although husband observes, in response, that he objected to the trial court’s consideration of Social Security benefits as unduly “speculative” in both his proposed findings and subsequent motions to reconsider, we do not find this sufficient to fairly apprise the trial court of the federal preemption claim. 1 See State v. Ben-Mont Corp., 163 Vt. 53, 61, 652 A.2d 1004, 1009 (1994) (“To properly preserve an issue for appeal a party must present the issue with specificity and clarity in a manner which gives the trial court a fair opportunity to rule on it.”). As we have frequently cautioned, “[a]n objection on one ground does not preserve an appeal on other grounds.” State v. Bubar, 146 Vt. 398, 400, 505 A.2d 1197, 1199 (1985); see also State v. Hinchliffe, 2009 VT 111, ¶ 32, 186 Vt. 487, 987 A.2d 988 (holding that objection raising the “constitutional problem of notice” did not adequately preserve appeal based on claim that statute was “unconstitutionally vague and overbroad”); State v. Bissonette, 145 Vt. 381, 392, 488 A.2d 1231, 1237 (1985) (holding that objection to question on ground that matter was “collateral” did not preserve appeal on ground that it implicated prior bad act). Although, as discussed below, the claims are somewhat related, we cannot in good faith conclude that husband’s argument *43 based solely on the assertion that Social Security benefits are too speculative to be considered a marital asset fairly and reasonably apprised the trial court of a claim predicated upon federal preemption. Accordingly, we are compelled to conclude the claim was not properly preserved for review on appeal.

¶ 6. This does not, however, end our analysis. As discussed below, an important facet of the federal preemption decisions is their recognition that Social Security benefits are not a property or contractual right amenable to division but rather a product of social-welfare legislation that is open to alteration, modification, reduction, or even elimination at the will of Congress. Wholly apart from the question of federal supremacy, therefore, we may conclude under our own state statutes and case law that the inherently uncertain and changeable nature of such benefits renders them too intangible to be characterized as marital property or considered in the division of the marital estate. Husband’s objection on the ground that the parties’ anticipated Social Security benefits were unduly speculative, therefore, was sufficient to preserve the state-law issue for review.

¶ 7. In a seminal decision upholding a section of the Social Security Act providing for the termination of benefits to deported aliens, the U.S. Supreme Court held that the law did not deprive the petitioner of “an accrued property right.” Flemming v. Nestor, 363 U.S. 603, 608 (1960). As the Court explained, the “non-contractual interest” of an employee covered by the Act could not be analogized to that of holder of an annuity or pension bottomed on contractual premium payments. Id. at 610. The beneficiary’s interest rests, instead, on “a highly complex and interrelated statutory structure” continually responsive to “the manifold specific problems presented by the Social Security program.” Id.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2014 VT 22, 93 A.3d 566, 196 Vt. 38, 2014 WL 840815, 2014 Vt. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-v-schultz-vt-2014.