Susan Nixon Bailey v. David Keith Nixon

CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Alabama
DecidedJanuary 9, 2026
DocketCL-2025-0299
StatusPublished

This text of Susan Nixon Bailey v. David Keith Nixon (Susan Nixon Bailey v. David Keith Nixon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Susan Nixon Bailey v. David Keith Nixon, (Ala. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinion

Rel: January 9, 2026

Notice: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the advance sheets of Southern Reporter. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Alabama Appellate Courts, 300 Dexter Avenue, Montgomery, Alabama 36104-3741 ((334) 229-0650), of any typographical or other errors, in order that corrections may be made before the opinion is published in Southern Reporter.

ALABAMA COURT OF CIVIL APPEALS OCTOBER TERM, 2025-2026 _________________________

CL-2025-0299 _________________________

Susan Nixon Bailey

v.

David Keith Nixon

Appeal from Russell Circuit Court (DR-12-900036.03)

FRIDY, Judge.

Susan Nixon Bailey ("the former wife") appeals from a judgment of

the Russell Circuit Court ("the trial court") finding David Keith Nixon

("the former husband") in contempt, awarding her a monthly payment of

$252.20 from the amount the former husband receives as a retirement CL-2025-0299

benefit based on his work as a firefighter for the City of Columbus,

Georgia ("the city"), and awarding her an arrearage in the amount of

$6,052.80. For the reasons set forth herein, we reverse the judgment and

remand the case to the trial court with instructions.

Background

The parties married on April 9, 1992, and divorced in March 2013.

When they divorced, the parties reached a mediated agreement that the

trial court incorporated into the divorce judgment. Under the divorce

judgment, the trial court awarded the former wife "a portion of the

[h]usband's retirement with the City of Columbus ... calculated as 50% of

the retirement proceeds accumulated during the course of the marriage

and terminating as of the date of the issuance of the final decree of

divorce."

On July 27, 2023, the former wife filed a complaint seeking to hold

the former husband in contempt, alleging that the husband had retired

in November 2022 but had failed to pay her the 50% portion of his

retirement benefits to which she was entitled under the divorce

judgment. She sought payment of her share of those benefits retroactive

to November 2022, an award of attorney's fees, and other relief. The

2 CL-2025-0299

former husband filed an answer denying the allegations of the former

wife's complaint. He later amended his answer to assert that his

retirement plan was a defined-benefit pension that was not vested at the

time of the entry of the divorce judgment and that it was therefore not

subject to division.

The trial court held a trial on the former wife's contempt complaint

on December 2, 2024. The former husband's counsel conceded that the

former husband owed the former wife a portion of his retirement pension,

and the dispute concerned only the amount that the former husband was

to pay the former wife each month. The former wife's counsel maintained

that, upon the former husband's retirement, the former wife "was to

receive the full benefit of [the former husband's] retirement, minus the

number of months that he earned after the divorce."

The trial court explained that the language in the divorce judgment

-- "accumulated during the course of the marriage and terminating as of

the date of the issuance of the final decree of divorce" -- could be read in

two ways: either (1) that the former wife was entitled to 50% of the

portion of the retirement benefits accumulated during the marriage,

payable when the former husband retired, or (2) that the former wife's

3 CL-2025-0299

interest was limited to the value of those benefits as of the date of the

entry of the divorce judgment, which would result in only a few hundred

dollars per month. The trial court noted that the parties likely had not

intended for the former wife to receive only a few hundred dollars each

month after she relinquished claims to two other retirement accounts.

The former husband testified that he was forty-five years old at the

time of the divorce and that he retired at age fifty-five in November 2022,

after more than thirty-two years of service with the city. He confirmed

that he currently received $2,746 per month in retirement benefits. He

said that he did not recall what his salary was in 2013, but he testified

that he earned approximately $50,000 in 2022, and, he said, his 2022 W-

2 form reflected $62,880 in income as a result of his having worked

overtime. The former husband testified that, under the city's pension

plan, employees cannot retire until age fifty and that early retirement

before age fifty-five results in a 6% reduction per year in the retirement

benefit, which, he said, would yield only 30% of the unadjusted amount

if retirement occurred at age fifty. He testified that the 6% adjustment

applied under both the plan that was in effect when he began working for

the city and the plan that became effective on July 1, 2012.

4 CL-2025-0299

The former husband testified that he had understood the divorce

judgment to require him to pay half of the retirement benefits

accumulated during the marriage as a lump sum -- half of $1,600 -- rather

than monthly payments. He testified that, using the formula the city

used to calculate pensions, he had calculated that his unadjusted

retirement benefit at the time of the entry of the divorce judgment would

have been $1,916.82 per month. He said that, had he retired at age fifty,

applying the 30% early-retirement provision, he would have received

$575.04 per month, i.e., 30% of $1,916.82, and that the former wife's 50%

share would be $261.66 per month -- adjusted to account for the

approximately two years that they were not married when he began his

employment with the city -- based on the twenty-one years of service that

he had during the marriage. He testified that he was willing to pay the

former wife $261.66 per month.

The former wife testified that, during mediation, she had waived

alimony in exchange for receiving lifetime monthly pension payments to

begin upon the former husband's retirement. She said that, because the

former husband was not retired when they divorced, the amount of those

monthly pension payments could not be determined at that time. When

5 CL-2025-0299

she learned of the former husband's retirement, she said, she contacted

the city and learned through discovery that he was receiving $2,746 per

month in retirement benefits based on roughly thirty years of service.

She said that she prepared an exhibit showing her calculation of what

she believed to be a fair division of the monthly benefits, seeking 40%

rather than 50% to credit him for his 109 months of postdivorce service.

She said that she was requesting $1,098 per month and $26,352 in

arrearages for the twenty-four months that had passed since his

retirement, along with attorney's fees.

The former wife explained that, based on her understanding of the

pension plan as described on the city's Web site, the plan calculates

retirement benefits by averaging the employee's three to five highest

annual salary amounts -- although she was unsure which number of

years the plan uses -- and then provides 60% of that average as the

retirement benefit. She testified that the former husband had told her

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
Susan Nixon Bailey v. David Keith Nixon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/susan-nixon-bailey-v-david-keith-nixon-alacivapp-2026.