Marriage of Kelpe

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 11, 2021
DocketH045089
StatusPublished

This text of Marriage of Kelpe (Marriage of Kelpe) 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 Kelpe, (Cal. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

Filed 5/11/21 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re the Marriage of NICOLAS and LISA H045089 KELPE. (Santa Clara County Super. Ct. No. 2012-1-FL-161459)

LISA KELPE,

Appellant,

v.

NICOLAS CHARLES KELPE,

Respondent.

In this dissolution proceeding, we address the characterization of a lump-sum cash payment respondent received from a retirement plan upon leaving his employment with an accounting firm after a marital dissolution. As we will explain, we conclude the payment was not an enhanced community benefit derived from the retirement benefits respondent accrued during the marriage. Rather, the payment was an additional benefit respondent acquired when he became a partner in the firm, which occurred after the parties’ date of separation. We will therefore affirm the trial court’s order characterizing the payment as respondent’s separate property. I. BACKGROUND Lisa and Nicolas Kelpe married in 1997 and separated in 2010. The marriage was dissolved in 2013. Respondent was employed as a senior manager with Ernst & Young LLP throughout the marriage before separation. As a non-partner employee, he accrued benefits under a qualified defined benefit retirement plan and a 401(k) plan. In mid- 2012, Ernst & Young offered him an equity partnership in the firm. As a condition of becoming a partner, respondent made a $150,000 capital contribution to the partnership from his post-separation property. He executed the partnership agreement and became an equity partner effective January 1, 2012. As a partner-owner of the firm, respondent received profit distributions instead of a salary. The partnership agreement offered two deferred compensation retirement plans that were not available to respondent when he was a non-partner employee: the HR-10 Plan and the Top-Hat Plan. Benefits payable under the Top-Hat Plan are based on a formula that factors the average of the three highest fiscal years of partnership earnings and the partner’s total years of service. To vest in the Top-Hat Plan, the partner must be at least 58 years old and meet the “Rule of 75” (minimum age of 50 plus total years of service equals 75) or the “Rule of 65” (minimum age of 50 plus service years as a principal/partner equals 65). Partners who separate from the firm before vesting in the Top-Hat Plan are eligible for a lump sum buyout of their interest in the plan, provided they have either 20 years of total service, or 10 years of service as a partner. Respondent suffered a heart attack in 2014. In October 2015, Ernst & Young requested that he withdraw as a partner, and he resigned from the firm effective December 2015, before vesting in the Top-Hat Plan. Based on 20 years of service with the firm, 13 of which were during the marriage, respondent received under the Top-Hat Plan a single lump-sum payment reflecting “the actuarial equivalent present value of monthly payments that would otherwise be expected to be paid upon retirement, reduced by the monthly accrued benefit to which [he] is entitled under [the defined benefit retirement plan] and Ernst & Young’s H.R. 10 Plan.” The benefit was calculated at $928,243. The trial court ruled that the lump-sum payment was respondent’s separate property. Relying on In re Marriage of Brown (1976) 15 Cal.3d 838 (Brown) and In re Marriage of Frahm (1996) 45 Cal.App.4th 536 (Frahm), the trial court rejected the 2 argument that respondent’s right to receive the benefit accrued during the marriage by virtue of the years of service needed to qualify for the payout, even though he was not a partner and therefore not eligible for the benefit during the marriage. The trial court rejected the notion that respondent’s partnership rights accrued during the marriage because of an expectation of advancing to partnership during that time. The court also found respondent was not equitably estopped from claiming the Top-Hat payout as separate property despite a letter from his attorney to the parties’ joint expert expressing willingness to treat the asset as having a community component in order to reduce his tax liability and potentially his spousal support obligation. II. DISCUSSION Appellant argues that the Top Hat payout is community property under the time rule applied in In re Marriage of Gowan (1997) 54 Cal.App.4th 80 (Gowan), and that the trial court should not have relied on Frahm to conclude otherwise. We review de novo this predominantly legal question of property characterization. (In re Marriage of Lehman (1998) 18 Cal.4th 169 (Lehman).) A. CONTROLLING AUTHORITIES Addressing the division of nonvested pension rights in a marital dissolution, the California Supreme in Brown explained that pension benefits are a form of deferred compensation for services rendered, and an employee’s right to receive such benefits “is a contractual right, derived from the terms of the employment contract.” (Brown, supra, 15 Cal.3d at pp. 841, 845.) Whether or not vested, pension rights represent a property interest, and are acquired by the employee when he or she “enters upon the performance of [the] employment contract.” (Id. at pp. 842, 845.) To the extent pension benefits derive from employment during marriage before separation, they are a community asset subject to division in a dissolution proceeding. (Ibid.) In Lehman, the Supreme Court addressed the characterization of a post-dissolution early retirement incentive which enhanced a defined benefit retirement plan under which 3 the employee spouse had accrued benefits both during and after marriage. (Lehman, supra, 18 Cal.4th at pp. 174–175.) Several years after the marriage dissolved, the employee spouse accepted an early retirement incentive which added three putative years of service under the plan and waived an early-retirement penalty. (Id. at p. 175.) The Lehman court rejected the employee spouse’s argument that the community did not have an interest in the “retirement benefit[] as enhanced through a postseparation ‘contract’ between the employee spouse and the employer independent of any right to [the] retirement benefit[] that accrued, in some part, during marriage before separation.” It likened the enhancement to consideration given for immediate retirement. (Id. at p. 185.) The Lehman court explained that the actual amount realized from a community retirement asset may be affected by post-separation events or conditions, including changes in the retirement-benefit formula as well as the basis on which the formula operates, such as the employee’s age, years of service, and final salary. (Id. at p. 178.) The retirement incentive in Lehman was not a severance payment or tantamount to one, but “derivative of the right to retirement benefits that accrued, in some part, during marriage before separation.” (Id. at pp. 185–186.) It was no different than a benefit enhanced through additional years of service, an increase in earnings, or an increase in age. (Id. at p. 185.) “By its very terms, it results from ‘improvements to the retirement benefit formula’ under [the employer’s] existing defined benefit retirement plan, not from a new plan altogether.” (Id. at p. 186.) The Lehman court found no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s application of the time rule to apportion the pension benefits between the community and the employee spouse’s separate property interests. (Lehman, supra, 18 Cal.4th at p.

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Related

In Re Marriage of Lehman
955 P.2d 451 (California Supreme Court, 1998)
In Re Marriage of Brown
544 P.2d 561 (California Supreme Court, 1976)
In Re Marriage of Worth
195 Cal. App. 3d 768 (California Court of Appeal, 1987)
In Re Marriage of Frahm
45 Cal. App. 4th 536 (California Court of Appeal, 1996)
In Re Marriage of Gowan
54 Cal. App. 4th 80 (California Court of Appeal, 1997)
In Re Marriage of Gram
25 Cal. App. 4th 859 (California Court of Appeal, 1994)
Davis v. Davis
120 Cal. App. 4th 1007 (California Court of Appeal, 2004)

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Marriage of Kelpe, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-kelpe-calctapp-2021.