Mellard v. Mellard

168 P.3d 483, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 111, 2007 WL 2745190
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 2007
DocketS-11987
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 168 P.3d 483 (Mellard v. Mellard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mellard v. Mellard, 168 P.3d 483, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 111, 2007 WL 2745190 (Ala. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Milton Mellard appeals the property division in his divorce. He argues that the trial court erred when it failed to value Cathleen Mellard's retirement account. Milton also challenges the trial court's failure to provide for Milton's future medical expenses in the property division and its award of $1,500 in attorney's fees to Cathleen. Because the trial court failed to place any value on Cathleen's retirement account, we remand the case so that the account can be valued and the property division reevaluated. The trial court's decisions regarding future medical expenses and attorney's fees are affirmed.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Milton and Cathleen Mellard were married on July 14, 1979 and separated in June of 2004. They have three children from the marriage, all of whom were adults at the time of the divorce. The parties had accumulated a substantial amount of property over their marriage and had no marital debt to allocate. Both parties had vested IBEW retirement accounts at the time of separation.

After trial on May 3-4, 2005, the court awarded each party his or her own retirement account. But while the trial court valued Milton's retirement at $346,819, placing that value in Milton's column, it failed to value Cathleen's retirement account. Instead, it assigned to Cathleen the value of her survivorship benefit in Milton's retirement, placing that value of $168,808 in her column. The resulting division of the remaining assets required Milton to pay Cathleen $5,999.44 to balance out the larger award to Milton. The amount was to come out of the investment account, life insurance policies, and other assets awarded to Milton. The trial court also ordered a number of marital items sold, with the amount divided equally between the parties. The court awarded Cathleen $1,500 in attorney's fees, bringing the total amount that Milton was to pay Cathleen to $7,499.44.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

The trial court has broad discretion in dividing property in a divorce proceeding. 1 The trial court uses a three-step procedure for a property division. 2 First, the trial court determines what property is available for division. 3 Second, the court values that property. 4 Third, the trial court determines *485 how to equitably divide the property. 5 The valuation of property available for division is a factual determination that will only be reversed if it is clearly erroneous. 6 The equitable valuation of property is reviewed under an abuse of discretion standard and will only be reversed if it is "clearly unjust." 7 The award of attorney's fees in a divorce case is within the broad discretion of the trial court and will be overturned where the attorney's fees award was manifestly unreasonable. 8 An award of attorney's fees in a divorce action is based on the relative economic situation and earning power of the spouses and is designed to assure that both spouses are able to litigate on an even playing field. 9

IV. DISCUSSION

Prior to trial, Cathleen retained an expert to perform a formal valuation of Milton's retirement account. Milton's present value interest in his retirement account was valued at $346,819. Cathleen's survivorship benefit in Milton's retirement was valued at $168,808. Milton did not retain an expert to value Cathleen's retirement account but instead provided a pension worksheet which reported all of the contributions that had been made to Cathleen's retirement account. The trial court awarded to the parties their respective retirement accounts but did not place a value on Cathleen's retirement account because the court did not "have a dollar value" for it. Instead, the court assigned to Cathleen the value of her survivor-ship benefit in Milton's retirement in order to "balance the estate."

After proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law were submitted, but before the trial court's final divorce decree, Milton objected to various provisions of Cathleen's proposal, including the treatment of the retirement accounts. Milton specifically objected to a proposed finding that "[the court is unable to value Defendant Cathleen C. Mellard's IBEW retirement because no evidence was presented as to its value." Milton pointed out that he presented evidence at trial that contributions to Cathleen's retirement account totaled $124,992.52 as of March 2005 and that even after subtracting Cathleen's post-separation contributions, the value of her pension contributions alone was $116,040.52. Milton also objected to the proposed finding that valued Cathleen's surviv-orship benefit in Milton's retirement, arguing that he should be permitted to cancel Cathleen's survivorship benefit in his retirement. The court entered Cathleen's proposed findings without making the changes advocated by Milton.

On appeal, Milton argues that the superior court was required to value Cathleen's retirement account, renewing his argument that he supplied enough information for the court to calculate the value of the contributions made to the retirement account during the marriage, and that under this method, the value of Cathleen's retirement would be at least $116,040.52. Milton also argues that under Root v. Root, 10 the trial court should have ordered the parties to fill the evidentiary void regarding the value of Cathleen's retirement account. Milton also contends it was error for the court to award Cathleen surviv- or status under Milton's retirement plan without valuing the award of survivorship. 11 Cathleen counters that the superior court did not order that Cathleen be granted survivor-ship benefits in Milton's retirement, but rather, Milton made an irrevocable survivorship election at the time he retired. Cathleen maintains that the trial court valued the sur-vivorship benefit in lieu of Cathleen's retirement and used it to equalize the property division. Cathleen contends that if Milton's suggestion of $116,040.52 as the value of Cathleen's retirement is accepted, then Mil *486 ton was not prejudiced because Milton's valuation of her retirement is less than the valuation of the survivor benefit. Cathleen also maintains that under Tanghe v. Tanghe, 12 a case decided after the Mellards' trial, it was improper for the court to value a spouse's survivorship benefit, and therefore Milton has actually benefited from the trial court's valuation .of Cathleen's survivorship benefit instead of the retirement account.

A. Cathleen's Retirement

The trial judge divided the property evenly between the parties.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 P.3d 483, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 111, 2007 WL 2745190, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mellard-v-mellard-alaska-2007.