Patrick H. Poziombke v. Sharon M. Poziombke

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedFebruary 14, 2006
Docket1150051
StatusUnpublished

This text of Patrick H. Poziombke v. Sharon M. Poziombke (Patrick H. Poziombke v. Sharon M. Poziombke) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patrick H. Poziombke v. Sharon M. Poziombke, (Va. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Elder, Clements and Haley Argued by teleconference

PATRICK H. POZIOMBKE MEMORANDUM OPINION* BY v. Record No. 1150-05-1 JUDGE JAMES W. HALEY, JR. FEBRUARY 14, 2006 SHARON M. POZIOMBKE

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH Edward W. Hanson, Jr., Judge

Robert N. Pritchard for appellant.

Philip A. Liebman for appellee.

In this cause, Patrick H. Poziombke (husband) maintains: (1) that those provisions of a

divorce decree dealing with his military pension are void ab initio; and (2) that the trial court

erred in ordering indemnification of Sharon M. Poziombke (wife) for any diminution in sums

received resulting from a partial reclassification of his pension benefits as disability payments

and the continuation of payments in an undiminished amount. The core of husband’s argument

is based upon 10 U.S.C. § 1408(a)(4)(B), the Uniformed Services Former Spouses Protection

Act (“the Act”), and the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Mansell v. Mansell, 490

U.S. 581 (1989). Wife assigns as cross-error the failure of the trial court to award interest and

attorney’s fees. Finding no error, we affirm, and we deny wife’s request for an award of

attorney’s fees on appeal.

* Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. I.

The parties were divorced by final decree entered September 19, 1995. The parties had

not entered into any form of property settlement agreement. The divorce decree contained the

following provisions:

ADJUDGED, ORDERED AND DECREED that the Defendant shall pay the Plaintiff immediately upon his retirement from active duty military service on the first day of the month immediately following such retirement and on the first day of each month thereafter, by military allotment, from the United States Navy Finance Center, or other appropriate United States Government Agency, a portion of his disposable monthly retirement, and/or retainer pay resulting from and/or related to his retirement and/or release from active duty military service each month, and that (“portion”) hereafter called the (“martial share”) shall be calculated as follows: The Plaintiff shall have and be paid monthly fifty percent (50%) of a fraction of the monthly disposable retirement/retainer pay, the numerator of that fraction shall be 11.5 and the denominator of that fraction shall be the total number years and months of Defendant’s active duty military service up to the date of his release from such active duty service, to include the same percentage of any cost of living increases. Should the United States Navy Finance Center or other appropriate United States Government Agency fail to pay the Plaintiff hereinafter, the Defendant shall pay the Plaintiff directly on all of his obligations under this paragraph; and it is further ADJUDGED, ORDERED AND DECREED that Defendant shall not take any action which would defeat, reduce, or limit Plaintiff’s right to receive her share of Defendant’s military pension benefits, including merging retired pay with other pensions or waiving any portion of retired pay in order to receive increased disability pay. If Defendant breaches this provision, he shall indemnify and pay directly to Plaintiff, all sums reduced by such action, if any . . . .

When the divorce decree was entered in 1995, husband was on active duty with the

military and receiving no retirement or disability payments. The parties agree that under the

formula provisions of the decree, quoted above, wife was entitled to 28.3591% of husband’s

“disposable retirement/retainer” benefit when received. The final decree was entered without

exception or objection. -2- In June 1998, husband retired and paid wife the quoted percentage of that benefit. In

October 1998, husband began receiving a Veterans’ Administration disability benefit, which

reduced the amount of his “disposable retirement/retainer benefit” in an amount equal to the

disability benefit. Thereafter husband paid wife the quoted percentage of that net benefit. At a

show cause hearing on March 11, 2005, wife demonstrated that the disability payments received

by husband from October 1998 through November 2004 totaled $34,988.41. She sought

28.3591% of that sum, and an order directing husband to begin paying her a sum equivalent to

that which he would have received without the disability benefit conversion.

By order entered April 12, 2005, the trial court held the September 19, 1995 decree was

final and that husband “shall indemnify and pay directly to the [wife] all sums to which she

would have been entitled had he not taken disability payments[,] . . . as required by the Final

Decree of Divorce.” The trial court did not order that any such sum be paid from husband’s

veterans’ disability benefits.

II.

ANALYSIS

A.

AUTHORITY OF COURT TO ORDER PAYMENT OF SUM EQUAL TO HUSBAND’S MILITARY RETIREMENT PAY

Succinctly stated, in Mansell v. Mansell, 490 U.S. 581, 594-95 (1989), the United States

Supreme Court held that 10 U.S.C. § 1408(a)(4)(B) denies “state courts the power to treat as

property divisible upon divorce military retirement pay that has been waived to receive veterans’

disability benefits.” Husband maintains that the provisions of the September 19, 1995 decree

dealing with his military pension, quoted above, are void ab initio as violative of the Act as

interpreted in Mansell, and, thus, the decree is void ab initio.

-3- Initially we note that this Court has held that a trial court effecting an equitable

distribution may, without violating the Act and Mansell, order a party to pay a sum equivalent to

a percentage of existing or anticipated military retirement or veterans’ disability benefits, or a

combination of both, via an indemnification provision ensuring such payments, as long as

veterans’ disability payments are not ordered to serve as the source of those payments. See

Boedeker v. Larson, 44 Va. App. 508, 516-18, 605 S.E.2d 764, 768-69 (2004); McLellan v.

McLellan, 33 Va. App. 376, 381-84, 533 S.E.2d 635, 637-39 (2002); Cook v. Cook, 18 Va. App.

726, 728, 446 S.E.2d 894, 895 (1994); Holmes v. Holmes, 7 Va. App. 472, 478, 375 S.E.2d 387,

391 (1988).

On brief, husband acknowledges this principle but cites McLellan and Owen v. Owen, 14

Va. App. 623, 419 S.E.2d 267 (1992), for the proposition that a court has such authority only if a

final divorce decree incorporates a property settlement agreement in which a military spouse has

agreed not to take any action to defeat the nonmilitary spouse’s entitlement to a share of military

retirement pay.

In Owen, we held that the parties may enter into a property settlement agreement to

guarantee a particular level of income, to be determined by considering the amount of disability

benefits and retirement benefits, because the agreement “does not offend the federal prohibition

against a direct assignment of military disability pay.” Id. at 628, 419 S.E.2d at 270. In

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