Rachell Lynette Daniels v. Nathaniel Hamilton Daniels Jr.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedDecember 15, 2020
Docket53224-7
StatusUnpublished

This text of Rachell Lynette Daniels v. Nathaniel Hamilton Daniels Jr. (Rachell Lynette Daniels v. Nathaniel Hamilton Daniels Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rachell Lynette Daniels v. Nathaniel Hamilton Daniels Jr., (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed Washington State Court of Appeals Division Two

December 15, 2020

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

DIVISION II In the Matter of the Marriage of No. 53224-7-II

RACHELL DANIELS,

Appellant,

And

NATHANIEL DANIELS, UNPUBLISHED OPINION

Respondent.

GLASGOW, J.—The dissolution decree for Rachell Daniels (k/n/a Rachell Bonds) and

Nathaniel Daniels provided that the present value of the marital portions of their retirement

accounts were to be divided equally. In 2013, the trial court granted the parties’ joint motion for

an addendum to the dissolution decree and an order requiring Bonds to divide her military

retirement to achieve equal division of retirement assets. The parties agreed, and in 2014 the trial

court ordered that Daniels would receive a portion of Bonds’s monthly disposable military

retirement payments. The order also contemplated possible changes in the nature of the military

retirement benefits and required Bonds to pay Daniels a monthly payment regardless of the specific

character of the retirement benefit.

The army then deemed Bonds permanently disabled. It began paying her military disability

retirement instead of disposable retirement and the government stopped paying Daniels his

monthly portion. Daniels moved to enforce the 2014 order. In 2019, the trial court entered a No. 53224-7-II

judgment establishing the total amount still owed and requiring Bonds to pay Daniels a monthly

amount equivalent to what he received under the 2014 order.

Bonds appeals from the trial court’s order enforcing the prior, unappealed final orders and

requiring Bonds to make monthly payments to Daniels.

We hold that the dissolution decree and the subsequent orders were valid, unappealed final

judgments on the merits. Accordingly, res judicata prevented Bonds from collaterally challenging

the validity of those final judgments in her response to Daniels’s motion to enforce. We also hold

that the trial court properly denied Bonds’s CR 60(b) motion to vacate. We affirm.

FACTS

Bonds and Daniels married in 1994, separated in 2006, and entered into a CR 2A agreement

in 2007. The Pierce County Superior Court dissolved their marriage in 2008. At the time of the

dissolution decree, Bonds was a United States Army captain in good health and she planned to

receive military retirement when she retired. Daniels worked for the federal government and

planned to receive a federal pension.

Together, Bonds and Daniels had six retirement accounts and the marital portions of all six

were community property. According to the dissolution decree, the present value of the marital

portions of Bonds’s and Daniels’s retirement accounts would be “totaled and divided such that the

end result is each party receives one-half of the present value of the marital portion.” Clerk’s

Papers (CP) at 10. The decree stated, “[N]either the husband[’]s nor the wife’s military retirement

accounts shall be divided. Rather, the spouse with the greater valued accounts” would equalize the

division by paying the difference to the other spouse. Id. The decree contained a list of assets that

2 No. 53224-7-II

the spouse with the higher valued accounts would use to pay the other. Bonds’s military retirement

was not one of those assets.

Expert valuation conducted after the decree was entered showed that Bonds’s accounts

were worth more than Daniels’s and Bonds therefore owed Daniels. In 2012, Daniels filed a motion

to enforce the retirement account provision of the dissolution decree because Bonds had not yet

paid him. Based on the valuation and the division formula in the dissolution decree, Daniels argued

that Bonds owed him $146,191.30. However, Bonds’s nonmilitary retirement accounts did not

contain enough money to cover the amount she owed. Daniels asked the trial court to enter an

order requiring Bonds to pay him from her military retirement.

Bonds agreed that she owed Daniels $146,191.30, asked the trial court to divide her

military retirement, and filed a proposed order to that effect. In 2013, the trial court ruled that

Bonds “owed [Daniels] $146,191.30 pursuant to the decree of dissolution” and stated, “This

amount shall come from [Bonds’s] military retirement.” CP at 48.1

In 2014, Bonds and Daniels jointly moved for an addendum to the dissolution decree

dividing Bonds’s military retirement. The parties agreed and the trial court ordered that Bonds

would pay Daniels $593.22 monthly from her military retirement upon her retirement “for . . . 20

years and 6 months, plus on[e] final payment in the amount of $259.18.” CP at 50. The trial court

entered the addendum to the dissolution decree, granting the parties’ joint request.

1 Bonds suggested two alternative approaches for paying Daniels from her military retirement. One involved fixed monthly payments beginning upon Bonds’s retirement and the other was based on a formula involving the length of Bonds’s military service during marriage, the length of Bonds’s total service, and the percentage of retirement to which Daniels was entitled. The trial court instructed Daniels to select one option. Daniels chose fixed monthly payments.

3 No. 53224-7-II

The trial court simultaneously entered an order dividing Bonds’s military retirement. That

order provided that “the Member shall pay the Former Spouse, [Nathaniel] Daniels, a portion of

her disposable military retirement pay in the amount of $593.22 per month.” Suppl. CP at 224

(sealed). Monthly payments from her disposable military retirement were to be sent directly from

the Defense Finance Accounting Service (DFAS) to Daniels. As the dissent notes, this order also

interpreted “military retirement” broadly to include other sources of military retirement benefits.

Id.

Significantly, the 2014 order also included separate language requiring Bonds to pay

Daniels $593.22 per month without any limitation as to the source of the money. The order also

gave the trial court continuing jurisdiction “to entertain a motion for maintenance, alimony or other

award of money to compensate the Former Spouse for any diminution in the amount he receives

as his portion of the Member’s disposable retired pay.” Suppl. CP at 226 (sealed).

In 2016, the army placed Bonds on temporary disability retirement status and she began

receiving retirement payments. DFAS began paying Daniels $593.22 per month. DFAS made 15

payments to Daniels between 2016 and 2018, totaling $8,898.30.

In 2018, the army determined that Bonds was 70 percent disabled and medically unfit for

duty, so it discharged her, placing her on permanent disability retirement status. This was not an

election or voluntary change of status. Bonds began receiving military disability retirement instead

of disposable military retirement. As a result of this change, DFAS stopped sending payments to

Daniels.

Daniels filed a motion to enforce or clarify the dissolution decree and the 2014 military

retirement division order. He also moved under CR 60(b)(6) and (11) to vacate the property award

4 No. 53224-7-II

and spousal maintenance provisions of the dissolution decree and award new spousal maintenance

or require Bonds to pay the balance of her debt from other sources. Daniels noted that Howell v.

Howell,2 a recent United States Supreme Court decision, prohibited state courts from ordering a

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McCarty v. McCarty
453 U.S. 210 (Supreme Court, 1981)
Mansell v. Mansell
490 U.S. 581 (Supreme Court, 1989)
Dike v. Dike
448 P.2d 490 (Washington Supreme Court, 1968)
In Re the Marriage of Kraft
832 P.2d 871 (Washington Supreme Court, 1992)
Matter of Marriage of Brown
653 P.2d 602 (Washington Supreme Court, 1982)
In Re the Marriage of Thompson
988 P.2d 499 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1999)
Lindgren v. Lindgren
794 P.2d 526 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1990)
In Re the Marriage of Yearout
707 P.2d 1367 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1985)
State Ex Rel. Green v. SUP. CT. FOR KING CTY.
361 P.2d 643 (Washington Supreme Court, 1961)
In the Matter of Marriage of Tang
789 P.2d 118 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1990)
In Re Marriage of Shoemaker
904 P.2d 1150 (Washington Supreme Court, 1995)
Bjurstrom v. Campbell
618 P.2d 533 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1980)
In Re Marriage of Mansell
217 Cal. App. 3d 219 (California Court of Appeal, 1989)
Williams v. Leone & Keeble, Inc.
254 P.3d 818 (Washington Supreme Court, 2011)
Ensley v. Pitcher
222 P.3d 99 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2009)
Columbia Rentals, Inc. v. State
576 P.2d 62 (Washington Supreme Court, 1978)
Matter of Marriage of Knight
800 P.2d 71 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 1994)
Perkins v. Perkins
26 P.3d 989 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2001)
Lynn v. STATE DEPT. OF LABOR & INDUSTRIES
125 P.3d 202 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2005)
State v. Gaut
46 P.3d 832 (Court of Appeals of Washington, 2002)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Rachell Lynette Daniels v. Nathaniel Hamilton Daniels Jr., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rachell-lynette-daniels-v-nathaniel-hamilton-daniels-jr-washctapp-2020.