Sellers v. Sellers

221 S.W.3d 43, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 595
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 7, 2006
StatusPublished

This text of 221 S.W.3d 43 (Sellers v. Sellers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sellers v. Sellers, 221 S.W.3d 43, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 595 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

SHARON G. LEE, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., and D. MICHAEL SWINEY, JJ„ joined.

When the parties were divorced in 2000, Mrs. Sellers was not awarded any alimony, but was awarded $900 per month from Mr. Sellers’s military retirement benefits as a division of marital property. Mr. Sellers made the payments directly to Mrs. Sellers, and later, the payments were made to her by the Department of Defense. Subsequently, Mr. Sellers’s military disability benefits were increased, and his retirement benefits were decreased, which resulted in Mrs. Sellers’s monthly payment from the Department of Defense being lowered from $900 to $90. Mrs. Sellers filed a contempt petition, alleging that Mr. Sellers had modified his retirement benefit *44 program in an attempt to defraud her of alimony and requesting that Mr. Sellers be ordered to pay back alimony payments. The trial court granted Mrs. Sellers a judgment for unpaid alimony and attorney’s fees and directed that Mr. Sellers make future alimony payments directly to her. The trial court later vacated this order and set a hearing on Mrs. Sellers’s petition for contempt. Upon rehearing, the trial court denied Mrs. Sellers’s petition for contempt and declared its prior order holding Mr. Sellers in contempt to be null and void. Mrs. Sellers appeals, arguing that the trial court erred in setting aside its order granting her petition for contempt and in failing to award her alimony in an amount to compensate for the diminishment in the monthly payments she had received from Mr. Sellers’s retirement benefits. We hold that the trial court did not err in setting aside its order of contempt because the order had no basis in law or fact. Because Mr. Sellers was never under an obligation to pay Mrs. Sellers alimony, he cannot be liable for an alimony arrearage or held in contempt of court for nonpayment. Further, because Mrs. Sellers was not awarded any alimony in the divorce decree, the trial court had no authority to subsequently modify the decree to award alimony. We affirm the decision of the trial court.

I. Background

For twenty years of the parties’ thirty-seven year marriage, Gary T. Sellers (“Husband”) served in the United States Navy, and upon his retirement for medical reasons in 1987, he began receiving retirement payments from the Department of Defense and disability payments from the Department of Veterans Affairs (“VA”). When the parties were divorced in December of 2000, Husband was receiving retirement benefits of $1,800 per month and disability benefits of $460 per month. The trial court did not award Judith R. Sellers (“Wife”) any alimony, but determined that Husband’s retirement benefits were marital property and included the following provision in the divorce decree:

The Court, having found that [Wife] was married to [Husband] for more than twenty (20) years, during which time [Husband] was in the United States military, [Wife] is hereby awarded ... $900.00 ... per month from [Husband’s] retirement benefits with the United States Navy, effective December 1, 2000. Husband shall make a payment of ... $900.00 ... per month directly to [Wife] on or before the 10th day of each and every month, until such time as this FINAL DECREE becomes final and the appropriate action can be taken to permit the Department of Defense to begin enforcement of the division of [Husband’s] retired pay, as provided herein. The Court finds that it has jurisdiction over [Husband] for purposes of dividing his retired pay due to the fact that [Husband] has filed pleadings in this cause and has consented to the jurisdiction of the Court.

This provision was authorized under the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act (“USFSPA”), codified at 10 U.S.C. § 1408, et seq. In enacting the USFSPA, Congress provided twofold relief to an ex-spouse of a member of the military. “First, it permitted state courts to treat a military retiree’s ‘disposable retired pay’ as community property and to divide it among both ex-spouses. Second, it provided a mechanism by which the military retiree’s ex-spouse could receive payment of his or her ordered allocation of the ‘disposable retired pay’ directly from the military.” Johnson v. Johnson, 37 S.W.3d 892, 893 (Tenn.2001).

After the divorce and until May of 2001, Husband paid Wife the monthly pay *45 ments. In May of 2001, the Department of Defense began making the payments to Wife. In the spring of 2003, Husband was required to undergo a medical evaluation by the VA. Based upon this examination, the VA increased Husband’s disability payments. Because the increase in Husband’s disability payments resulted in a commensurate decrease in Husband’s monthly retirement benefits, beginning in July of 2003, Wife’s payment went from $900 per month to approximately $90 per month. Husband’s disability benefits were not available to Wife because federal law prohibits the division of disability benefits as marital property in a divorce proceeding. Mansell v. Mansell, 490 U.S. 581, 109 S.Ct. 2023, 104 L.Ed.2d 675 (1989).

After the reduction of benefits awarded her in the divorce decree, Wife filed a petition for contempt against Husband charging that he “went to the Navy Department and had the provisions for his pension changed so that the benefits [Husband] received were labeled ‘disability benefits’ and paid by the Veteran’s Administration” and that “[f]or [Husband] to have his benefit program modified in an attempt to defraud [Wife] her alimony is unconscionable.” Among other things, the petition requested that Husband be directed “to pay the back alimony payments to [Wife], i.e. $810.00 per month from and after July 1, 2003,” and that he “be required to make directly to [Wife] the payments of $900.00 per month from and after the date of the entry of an order pursuant to this petition.”

Husband did not attend the hearing on Wife’s petition for contempt. Thereafter, on June 11, 2004, the trial court entered an order nunc pro tunc to April 19, 2004, granting Wife a judgment against Husband in the amount of $9,790 for “unpaid alimony” and $5,000 for attorney’s fees. The order further directed the United States Government “to correct the inappropriate lack of payment to the petitioner out of [Husband’s] retirement funds by paying to [Wife] the sum of $900.00 per month ... from this point forward in payment of the continuing obligation on the part of [Husband] to pay alimony” and that “[Husband] shall promptly make all future $900.00 per month alimony payments to [Wife] unless that payment is made [b]y the Government.” Finally, the order provided that “until such time as [Husband] fully pays to [Wife] [the $9,790 ‘unpaid alimony’ and the $5,000 attorney’s fees] and reinstates (and makes) the continuing payment of all future alimony, he be incarcerated in Tennessee and/or extradited from for [sic] the State of Georgia 1 pursuant to the Uniform Interstate Families Support Act until such time as the judgments are paid in full.”

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Bluebook (online)
221 S.W.3d 43, 2006 Tenn. App. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sellers-v-sellers-tennctapp-2006.