Marriage of Erndt & Terhorst

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 11, 2021
DocketA157876
StatusPublished

This text of Marriage of Erndt & Terhorst (Marriage of Erndt & Terhorst) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of Erndt & Terhorst, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 1/11/21 CERTIFIED FOR PARTIAL PUBLICATION *

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

In re the Marriage of NANCY G. ERNDT and A157876 MICHAEL A. TERHORST ____________________________ (Solano County Super. Ct. No. FFL113303) NANCY G. ERNDT,

Plaintiff and Appellant, v.

MICHAEL A. TERHORST

Defendant and Respondent.

Nancy G. Erndt (wife) and Michael A. Terhorst (husband) entered into a settlement agreement, in the form of a verbal stipulation, regarding the terms of their marital dissolution (“the stipulation”). The stipulation included an equal division of the community property portion of wife’s retirement plan without any mention of the plan’s survivor benefits. Thereafter, the parties could not agree as to whether

* Pursuant to California Rules of Court, rules 8.1105(b) and 8.1110, this opinion is certified for publication with the exception of the following portions of the Discussion: Section I. The Trial Court Rulings Regarding Division of Community Retirement Plan and Refusal to Set Aside Stipulation; and Section III. Husband’s Motion for Sanctions on Appeal.

1 husband had survivor benefits under wife’s retirement plan and they asked the court to resolve their dispute; in the alternative, wife asked the court to vacate the stipulation. The trial court ruled as follows: the survivor benefits were found to be an “omitted asset” (Fam. Code, 1 § 2556) subject to an equal division under section 2610, subdivision (a)(2); wife was not entitled to an order vacating the stipulation; and judgment was to be entered accordingly. The court also awarded husband $800 in attorney fees and $180 in costs in the nature of sanctions under section 271. On appeal, wife contends the court erred in treating the survivor benefits as an omitted asset as the stipulation provided husband would not receive a survivor benefit by virtue of its silence on the topic. Alternatively, she seeks to vacate the stipulation in its entirety based on there being no “meeting of the minds” concerning the division of survivor benefits. We see no merit to wife’s contentions and, accordingly, we affirm that portion of the judgment that provides husband is to receive a survivor benefit related to his community property share of the retirement plan. We reverse, in part, that portion of the judgment and order awarding husband the sum of $800 in attorney fees as section 271 does not permit an award of fees to a self- represented party. We deny husband’s separate motion for sanctions for the filing of a frivolous appeal and to cause delay.

1 All further statutory references are to the Family Code unless otherwise specified.

2 Factual and Procedural Background The parties were married in 1986 and wife filed a petition for dissolution in 2010. In January 2018, after a three-day settlement conference with the trial court, the parties entered into a stipulation to resolve the entire matter and the settlement terms were recited in open court. Relevant to this appeal, the stipulation included the following provisions: Wife had certain retirement benefits through the federal government commonly known as FERS . . . for Federal Employees Retirement System. The parties will be equally dividing the community property portion of Wife’s FERS retirement, with the exception that Wife had purchased some additional retirement benefit of service years based on her prior service in the military. Several years of that prior service in the military [were] during the marriage.

Husband is waiving his right to receive, in his share of the FERS retirement, those service credits that were for community property years from the military service.

The stipulation did not mention the retirement plan’s benefits (basic pension, survivor, death), specific exclusion of any benefit from the equal division of the “Wife’s FERS retirement”, or waiver of either party’s right to receive their community property share of any plan benefit. The trial court confirmed the parties understood the terms of the stipulation, were entering into the stipulation freely and voluntarily, and had adequate time to consult with counsel. The parties also agreed the court would retain jurisdiction to resolve any disputes. Husband was directed to prepare a stipulated judgment and, over the course of several months, the parties unsuccessfully attempted to

3 agree on a stipulated judgment. Ultimately, husband submitted for wife’s approval a proposed stipulated judgment that largely mirrored the stipulation (the parties “[would] be equally dividing the community property portion of Wife’s FERS retirement” other than the additional retirement benefit based on wife’s prior service in the military), but also included a sentence awarding each party “any survivor’s benefits . . . related to their share of the community interest awarded to them.” 2

Wife refused to sign the proposed judgment, and the parties proceeded to file separate requests asking the court to adjudicate their dispute regarding the survivor benefit and for entry of a stipulated judgment reflecting their respective views. Husband’s proposed judgment included an award of a survivor benefit as an omitted asset under section 2556, which grants the court “continuing jurisdiction” to award community assets to the parties that have not been previously adjudicated by a judgment in the proceeding; if the court finds there was an omitted asset it is directed to “equally divide the omitted or unadjudicated community estate asset . . ., unless the court finds upon good cause shown that the interests of justice require an unequal division of the asset.” Wife asked the court to enter judgment based on the terms of the stipulation (thereby excluding any award for survivor benefits) and, in the alternative, sought an order setting aside the stipulation in its entirety. The parties lodged no objections when their

2 This sentence also provided for an award to each party of “any death benefits” related to their share of the community interest. However, wife made no separate argument directed at the award of a death benefit either in the trial court or on appeal. Consequently, we do not further mention the death benefit except to give context to our decision.

4 requests were assigned to the same trial court judge who had conducted the settlement conference. A. March 14 and April 3, 2019 3 Hearings On March 14, the trial court presided at a hearing concerning husband’s request to award him a survivor benefit. Wife was represented by counsel and husband, an attorney, appeared in propria persona after the court granted his counsel leave to withdraw. Both parties testified concerning the settlement conference negotiations that led to the stipulation. Husband testified that during negotiations no one – not the parties, either of their counsel, or the trial court – mentioned the issue of a survivor benefit. He was not aware of a survivor benefit or that there was any issue concerning a survivor benefit until his former counsel included it in the proposed stipulated judgment that wife then refused to sign. Wife never told him she wanted the survivor benefit solely for herself or that she wanted him to waive his right to a survivor benefit. Nor did husband’s former counsel ever tell husband that wife wanted a survivor benefit “to go to . . . [her] only.” Wife testified that she did not say anything during negotiations about a survivor benefit because she did not want husband to receive that benefit. During her private discussions with the trial judge 4, wife asked the court if husband had mentioned a survivor benefit. The judge replied she had not and asked if wife wanted the issue to be raised; she declined. Wife also did not tell her counsel to say that she

3 All further unspecified dates occurred in 2019.

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Marriage of Erndt & Terhorst, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-erndt-terhorst-calctapp-2021.