Phipps v. Phipps

864 P.2d 613, 124 Idaho 775, 1993 Ida. LEXIS 184
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1993
Docket20126
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 864 P.2d 613 (Phipps v. Phipps) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phipps v. Phipps, 864 P.2d 613, 124 Idaho 775, 1993 Ida. LEXIS 184 (Idaho 1993).

Opinion

BISTLINE, Justice.

BACKGROUND AND PRIOR PROCEEDINGS

Mr. and Mrs. Phipps were divorced by decree of the district court in Washington County, Idaho, on August 10, 1982. Because Mr. Phipps received more than one-half of the couple’s community property in the divorce, he and Mrs. Phipps executed an agreement whereby he would pay her either the greater of $300, or one-third of his monthly retirement benefits until she either remarried or died. The agreement stated as follows:

4. ADDITIONAL AGREEMENTS: That as an equalizhtion of the community property, as the husband is receiving more than half of the community property, and not as alimony, the husband shall be ordered to pay to the wife the sum of $300.00 per month until such time as he retires or she remarries, whichever comes first. At the time of the husband’s retirement, that the wife should receive one-third of the husband’s total retirement from whatever source, excluding his Veterans’ Administration compensation, or the sum of $300.00, whichever is greater. That said one-third retirement or $300.00 monthly payment shall be paid to the wife until such time as she dies or remarries, (emphasis added).

When Mr. Phipps retired in early 1984, his monthly retirement benefits totalled $1,065.89. At that time the parties orally agreed that increases in payments to Mrs. Phipps were to be calculated as one-third of Mr. Phipps’ Social Security benefits, one-third of his Boilermaker-Blacksmith National Pension Trust retirement benefits, and one-third of another retirement fund from which he subsequently never received any benefits. Despite the existence of this agreement, and at least one inquiry by Mrs. Phipps, Mr. Phipps failed to inform her about the increases in his retirement benefits. Subsequently, in November of 1990, the administrators of the Boilermaker retirement fund began to pay one-third of Mr. Phipps’ Boilermaker benefits directly to Mrs. Phipps. Although Mr. Phipps sporadically increased the amount of the payments to Mrs. Phipps, these increases did not correlate with the increases which he received from his retirement sources. In November of 1990, Mr. Phipps ceased paying to Mrs. Phipps anything attributable to his Social Security benefits, and commencing in January of 1991, he paid her only $300 per month.

Mrs. Phipps filed a complaint on January 1, 1991, alleging fraud and a shortfall of $3,692.59 in the payments. The magistrate *777 judge ruled that because the agreement assigned Mr. Phipps’ retirement benefits, it violated 42 U.S.C. Sec. 407 (Sec. 407 of the Social Security Act), which prohibits the attachment of Social Security benefits, and was unenforceable. The magistrate judge also held that enforcing the agreement without considering Mr. Phipps’ Social Security benefits would defeat the “entire property division of the divorce.”

When Mrs. Phipps appealed, the district judge, sitting in an appellate capacity, reversed on the issue of the enforceability of the agreement. The district judge held that plain language of the agreement and the subsequent conduct of the parties illustrated that the intent of the parties was that Mr. Phipps make monthly payments to compensate Mrs. Phipps for the unequal division of community property. The district judge further ruled that Mrs. Phipps did not claim to assign Mr. Phipps’ Social Security benefits; Mrs. Phipps only sought to obtain monetary judgment for unpaid monthly payments which was readily enforceable against Mr. Phipps’ Boilermaker retirement fund.

ANALYSIS

I. Standard of Review

Because the issues appealed here are the same as those that were appealed to the district court, we review the record before the magistrate judge independently of the decision of the district court. Robinson v. Joint School Dist. No. 231 Minidoka, 105 Idaho 487, 670 P.2d 894 (1983); First Interstate Bank of Idaho, N.A. v. West, 107 Idaho 851, 852-53, 693 P.2d 1053, 1054-55 (1984).

II. Did Mrs. Phipps Preserve the Issue of the Enforceability of the Agreement?

At Mr. Phipps’ motion for summary judgment, the following colloquy took place between Mrs. Phipps’ attorney and the magistrate judge:

MRS. PHIPPS [per her attorney]: [T]he real issue here in this proceeding that we brought is not the Social Security payments ... Then you get back to the issue of now can the Court order him to continue making those payments from Social Security, and I would agree that the Court cannot order him specifically to pay one-third of those over ... And the Court also can say, okay, you don’t pay that one-third Social Security benefits as you agreed to do. I can’t make you do it, but if you don’t, then you have to make them up somewhere else ...
THE COURT: [W]ill you agree then the Court cannot — that Social Security benefits are not attachable and the Court cannot compel assignment of those, involuntarily.
MRS. PHIPPS [per her attorney]: Involuntarily.

Mr. Phipps alleges that this discussion and Mrs. Phipps’ written arguments to the magistrate judge discloses her concession that the agreement violated 42 U.S.C. Sec. 407 and was unenforceable. Thus, he says, this issue was not properly before the magistrate judge or the district judge. This contention is without merit. In the above colloquy, Mrs. Phipps agreed that 42 U.S.C. Sec. 407 prohibits the assignment of Social Security benefits. Thus, the magistrate judge would not have the power to attach such benefits when entering a judgment against Mr. Phipps. Mrs. Phipps did not concede, however, that the agreement itself assigned Mr. Phipps’ Social Security benefits or that such benefits could not be used as a measure of how much Mr. Phipps was to pay her on a monthly basis.

A close analysis of Mrs. Phipps’ briefs to the magistrate judge also weakens Mr. Phipps’ contention. In her first brief, Mrs. Phipps stated:

Defendant further argues that defendant is under no obligation under Federal law to share social security benefits with the plaintiff. That issue was previously briefed, and as set forth in those briefs, there is no assignment of those benefits by Court Order, and the defendant could voluntarily spend money from Social Security benefits to meet other obligations ....

In her second brief, she stated:

[Defendant is basically arguing that there was never an agreement by the *778 defendant to pay a portion of social security benefits to the plaintiff, and if so, that agreement is void_ The payments from social security are not void if voluntarily made by the defendant to pay an existing obligation.... It would be inequitable to now have the Court go back and determine that because social security benefits were not assignable, that the defendant could receive more than one-half of the community property assets, thereby voiding an agreement almost ten years old.

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Bluebook (online)
864 P.2d 613, 124 Idaho 775, 1993 Ida. LEXIS 184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phipps-v-phipps-idaho-1993.