OPALA, Justice.
This certiorari presses for our decision two first-impression issues: (1) What portion, if any, of the in-marriage
increase in the hus
band’s retirement fund is divisible as marital property? and if any be divisible, (2) What cut-off date should be set for valuation of this marital asset? We hold: (a) that the in-marriage enhancement (or growth) in the husband’s retirement fund
which is attributable to .the employer’s participatory payments
or to either spouse’s monetary contribution, skill or effort is a divisible marital asset, but any increase in the husband’s separate (pre-marital) interest in that fund, produced by investment (managed by neither spouse),
appreciation, inflation, changing economic conditions or circumstances beyond the parties’ control
is to be deemed the husband’s separate property; and (b) the cut-off date to be set for valuation of the divisible marital interest in the fund is the date the nisi prius court reached this suit for trial that is now on certiorari review. Because the record is insufficient for this court to determine
the value of the divisible in-marriage enhancement component of the marital asset in the retirement fund,
we remand the cause for further proceedings.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
Eugene and Charlene Thielenhaus [husband and wife] had been married for ten years when the husband sought a divorce. Both parties brought separate property into the marriage. No children were born of the union. Each spouse was awarded his (or her) separate property; the marital assets were equitably divided.
The wife was awarded support alimony in the amount of $15,000 and an attorney’s fee for trial-related services of $2,500. At the commencement of the proceedings the husband was 60 years old and had worked for Martin Tractor Company for nearly 40 years. He had participated in the company profit sharing retirement plan since 1960. The company retirement account,
managed as an independent fund,
consisted mainly of certificates of deposit, stocks and other investments.
Both the husband and the employer made annual contributions to the fund.
Neither spouse had any involvement in the management of this investment. The husband appraised his share of the fund’s value on the
date of marriage
at approximately $76,733.75 and the
total
in-marriage increase, effective April 15, 1990 (which appears to be the husband-provided
date of separation),
at approximately $317,-550.99.
Only $79,226.83 of the enhancement, the husband urged, constitutes divisible marital property. The wife, on the other hand, valued the conjugal portion of the pension fund (on
the date of
trial) by subtracting the value of the fund on the date of marriage from the value on the date of trial to reach an approximate (total divisible fund enhancement) amount of $300,000. She claimed one-half of this sum as her share of the marital asset.
The trial court found that the wife was entitled to an equitable portion of the husband’s profit-sharing and pension fund. It awarded her one-half interest in the marital component in that property, valuing her share at $50,000.00.
No exact valuation date was ever identified, either by the proof or by the judge’s direction, and none appears on the record.
The wife appealed and the husband counter-appealed.
The Court of Appeals’ Pronouncement
A.
The wife argued on appeal that the trial court
erred in failing
(a)
to make
an equita
ble allocation of the marital debt, (b)
to find,
that the husband had “depleted” the marital estate by secreting some assets, (c)
to find
that certain industrial bonds are marital property, (d)
to award
sufficient support alimony, and (e)
to award
her a reasonable counsel fee. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s resolution of all these disputed issues, holding that it is not clearly contrary to the weight of the evidence.
The correctness of the appellate court’s pronouncement upon these issues is not before us now. None
is tendered for corrective relief by the husband’s petition for certiora-ri.
B.
The wife next argued on appeal that the trial court erred in its distribution of the
divisible
portion of the enhanced value in the husband’s retirement fund. The parties disagreed on both (a) the
method for valuation
of the jointly-acquired fund component and (b) the
valuation date
to be set for that asset’s appraisal (i.e., whether its worth is to be calculated from the date of marriage to the date of separation or beyond this point to the date of trial). The husband’s counter-appeal urged error in the trial court’s “overvaluing” the marital portion of the retirement fund. The Court of Appeals agreed with the latter contention and reversed this decretal element of nisi prius decision, directing that on remand the trial court (a) determine the value of the pension fund
at the time of marriage
as well as
at the time of trial
and (b)
treat the entire difference
between the two figures as a divisible asset of the marital estate. Because the appellate Court was concerned that its pronouncement might have a significant impact upon the previously effeet-ed nisi prius division of
other
spousal assets and upon the award of support alimony, its opinion directed the trial court to
reconsider on remand
both its alimony grant and the distribution of all joint assets.
The husband’s certiorari challenges the appellate court’s (a) view of what is the retirement fund’s
divisible
in-marriage enhancement; (b) adoption of the wrong date for appraisal of the fund’s
divisible
component; and (c) undue enlargement of post-remand proceedings to include reconsideration of the alimony grant and of the entire marital estate whose division was found to be clearly supported by the weight of the evidence.
II
THE DIVISIBILITY OF THE PENSION FUND’S ENHANCED VALUE
The husband asserts that
only those
in-marriage increases in the net worth of his retirement fund, which are attributable to the
personal
effort, skill or monetary contributions by either spouse, would constitute a
divisible
conjugal asset. He urges that any
enhancement
in the net worth
of the fund’s pre-marital balance,
produced (a) by the growth of the fund’s investment
managed by neither spouse
or (b) by appreciation, inflation, changing economic conditions or circumstances beyond the parties’ control must be characterized as his
separate property,
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OPALA, Justice.
This certiorari presses for our decision two first-impression issues: (1) What portion, if any, of the in-marriage
increase in the hus
band’s retirement fund is divisible as marital property? and if any be divisible, (2) What cut-off date should be set for valuation of this marital asset? We hold: (a) that the in-marriage enhancement (or growth) in the husband’s retirement fund
which is attributable to .the employer’s participatory payments
or to either spouse’s monetary contribution, skill or effort is a divisible marital asset, but any increase in the husband’s separate (pre-marital) interest in that fund, produced by investment (managed by neither spouse),
appreciation, inflation, changing economic conditions or circumstances beyond the parties’ control
is to be deemed the husband’s separate property; and (b) the cut-off date to be set for valuation of the divisible marital interest in the fund is the date the nisi prius court reached this suit for trial that is now on certiorari review. Because the record is insufficient for this court to determine
the value of the divisible in-marriage enhancement component of the marital asset in the retirement fund,
we remand the cause for further proceedings.
I
THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION
Eugene and Charlene Thielenhaus [husband and wife] had been married for ten years when the husband sought a divorce. Both parties brought separate property into the marriage. No children were born of the union. Each spouse was awarded his (or her) separate property; the marital assets were equitably divided.
The wife was awarded support alimony in the amount of $15,000 and an attorney’s fee for trial-related services of $2,500. At the commencement of the proceedings the husband was 60 years old and had worked for Martin Tractor Company for nearly 40 years. He had participated in the company profit sharing retirement plan since 1960. The company retirement account,
managed as an independent fund,
consisted mainly of certificates of deposit, stocks and other investments.
Both the husband and the employer made annual contributions to the fund.
Neither spouse had any involvement in the management of this investment. The husband appraised his share of the fund’s value on the
date of marriage
at approximately $76,733.75 and the
total
in-marriage increase, effective April 15, 1990 (which appears to be the husband-provided
date of separation),
at approximately $317,-550.99.
Only $79,226.83 of the enhancement, the husband urged, constitutes divisible marital property. The wife, on the other hand, valued the conjugal portion of the pension fund (on
the date of
trial) by subtracting the value of the fund on the date of marriage from the value on the date of trial to reach an approximate (total divisible fund enhancement) amount of $300,000. She claimed one-half of this sum as her share of the marital asset.
The trial court found that the wife was entitled to an equitable portion of the husband’s profit-sharing and pension fund. It awarded her one-half interest in the marital component in that property, valuing her share at $50,000.00.
No exact valuation date was ever identified, either by the proof or by the judge’s direction, and none appears on the record.
The wife appealed and the husband counter-appealed.
The Court of Appeals’ Pronouncement
A.
The wife argued on appeal that the trial court
erred in failing
(a)
to make
an equita
ble allocation of the marital debt, (b)
to find,
that the husband had “depleted” the marital estate by secreting some assets, (c)
to find
that certain industrial bonds are marital property, (d)
to award
sufficient support alimony, and (e)
to award
her a reasonable counsel fee. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s resolution of all these disputed issues, holding that it is not clearly contrary to the weight of the evidence.
The correctness of the appellate court’s pronouncement upon these issues is not before us now. None
is tendered for corrective relief by the husband’s petition for certiora-ri.
B.
The wife next argued on appeal that the trial court erred in its distribution of the
divisible
portion of the enhanced value in the husband’s retirement fund. The parties disagreed on both (a) the
method for valuation
of the jointly-acquired fund component and (b) the
valuation date
to be set for that asset’s appraisal (i.e., whether its worth is to be calculated from the date of marriage to the date of separation or beyond this point to the date of trial). The husband’s counter-appeal urged error in the trial court’s “overvaluing” the marital portion of the retirement fund. The Court of Appeals agreed with the latter contention and reversed this decretal element of nisi prius decision, directing that on remand the trial court (a) determine the value of the pension fund
at the time of marriage
as well as
at the time of trial
and (b)
treat the entire difference
between the two figures as a divisible asset of the marital estate. Because the appellate Court was concerned that its pronouncement might have a significant impact upon the previously effeet-ed nisi prius division of
other
spousal assets and upon the award of support alimony, its opinion directed the trial court to
reconsider on remand
both its alimony grant and the distribution of all joint assets.
The husband’s certiorari challenges the appellate court’s (a) view of what is the retirement fund’s
divisible
in-marriage enhancement; (b) adoption of the wrong date for appraisal of the fund’s
divisible
component; and (c) undue enlargement of post-remand proceedings to include reconsideration of the alimony grant and of the entire marital estate whose division was found to be clearly supported by the weight of the evidence.
II
THE DIVISIBILITY OF THE PENSION FUND’S ENHANCED VALUE
The husband asserts that
only those
in-marriage increases in the net worth of his retirement fund, which are attributable to the
personal
effort, skill or monetary contributions by either spouse, would constitute a
divisible
conjugal asset. He urges that any
enhancement
in the net worth
of the fund’s pre-marital balance,
produced (a) by the growth of the fund’s investment
managed by neither spouse
or (b) by appreciation, inflation, changing economic conditions or circumstances beyond the parties’ control must be characterized as his
separate property,
even though the growth in value did actually occur during coverture.
The formula he fashions and tenders for determining the
non-divisible enhanced value of his separate property
(as distinguished from the
divisible
marital portion) is: (1)
multiply
the fund’s beginning balance ($76,733.75, rounded off to $76,734)
at the date of marriage (March 6, 1980) (2)
times
the average earning of the- pension account from 1980 to 1991 (12.36%, rounded off to 12%) and (3)
compound annually
the interest until the date of separation (April 15, 1990), arriving at a total of $238,324.16 (the non-divisible enhanced value of his separate property), (4) subtract that amount- from $317,550.99 (the value of the fund on April 15, 1990) to arrive at a
divisible marital asset of $79,226.83.
The latter figure, the husband argues, represents the
divisible
enhanced value of the fund and urges that the distinction between enhanced/separate (non-divisible) and enhaneed/marital (divisible) property is consistent with statutory law, 43 O.S.1991 § 121,
and extant jurisprudence.
The wife asserts the appellate court correctly determined that the
total in-marriage increase in the retirement fund
(the growth of the fund) is
divisible
marital property. She makes no claim to the retirement fund’s
non-divisible pre-marital
balance, apparently
conceding
on certiorari that it had a value of $76,733.75.
The wife claims an equal share of the
total in-marriage increase
(or enhancement) in the retirement fund for the period between the
date of marriage
and the
trial date.
Section 121
requires a fair and equitable division of property acquired during the marriage by the joint industry of .the husband and wife. Jointly-acquired property is that which is accumulated by the
joint industry
of the spouses during the marriage.
Separate property includes,
inter alia,
property owned by a spouse before the marriage, which retains its separate status during coverture because it is maintained in an uncommingled state
as a spouse’s indi
vidual property.
Where, as here, a spouse brings separate property to the marriage, its increased or enhanced value, produced by investment managed by neither spouse or by
appreciation, inflation, changing economic conditions, or circumstances beyond the parties’ control,
cannot be treated as a divisible marital asset unless, of course, there be proof that the increase resulted from efforts, skills or funds of either spouse.
The non-owning spouse’s
interest in the increased separate estate of the other, when established through efforts, skills or expended funds, stands confined to the enhanced value of that separate property.
The burden is upon the non-owning spouse to show that the enhancement is the result of either spouse’s endeavors.
In
May v.
May
the court fashioned a formula for determining the non-owning spouse’s' quantum of interest in the other’s separate property. The three critical value-assessment elements identified there are: (a) the cost/value of the separate property; (b) the non-divisible in-marriage enhancement caused by inflationary factors or other marketplace forces producing appreciation in price levels (unrelated to efforts of labor); and (e) the increase in value, if measurable by proof, which is due to personal efforts, skills or expended funds of the spouses’ labor. The non-owning spouse would be entitled to any quantifiable increase that may be ascribable,
not to mere appreciation in value, but purely to efforts of labor and expenditure of funds.
It is the latter increase alone that is reachable for an equitable division as a joint spousal interest. The
May
formula was bottomed on Moyers
which holds that enhancement in value of a spouse’s separate estate, attributable to personal efforts of labor by the other, constitutes divisible marital property.
Carpenter v.
Carpenter
teaches that a pension which has been
“purchased
through
joint efforts
of the spouses
to the extent
that it has been
acquired or [has become] enhanced
during the marriage” is divisible marital property.
Pension rights which result
from employment occurring before and after marriage
partake of dual (separate and marital) property character.
Like any other asset which draws from both sources,
the retirement pension fund
must be apportioned
before the quantum of its conjugal component may be isolated and then divided between the parties.
The husband’s formula for separating the divisible in-marriage enhanced portion of the retirement fund — by ascertaining the value of his non-divisible separate property (the pre-marital fund balance and its enhanced value) and then subtracting that
from the total value of the retirement fund at the cut-off point—is not, under the facts of this case, an unreasonable method for calculating the quantum of his interest.
Moreover, the approach he counsels is quite consistent with the marital-property regime laid down in Moyers,
Templeton
and
May.
The trilogy teaches that any in-coverture enhancement in a spouse’s separate asset, which is effected
without
any effort on the part of the other spouse does not qualify as
divisible
marital property. The wife’s quest for one-half of the
total enhanced value
would call upon us to abrogate this State’s long-standing regime of equitable distribution and to embrace the community property’s concept of “acquets and gains.”
This may not be done sans legislative
authority.
While we do not disapprove of the computation method pressed by the husband, we recognize that
another approach
might be just as, or even more, equitable in valuing this conjugal interest. There is always room for nisi prius exercise of discretion to achieve a fair and equitable result.
This case is no different.
The proceedings to be conducted on remand shall stand confined to the
single
issue of ascertaining the extent of the
marital component
in the husband’s retirement fund and to the equitable
division of that component
alone.
All other provisions in the trial court’s decree shall stand
undisturbed.
On remand the trial judge is
not
precluded from utilizing, for value assessment of the marital component in the husband’s pension fund, some other appraisal method which is found to be equally, or even more, equitable and consistent with the generally accepted accounting practices.
Ill
THE DATE FOR THE VALUATION OF THE ENHANCEMENT IN THE HUSBAND’S PENSION FUND
The husband challenges -the trial court’s valuation of the jointly-acquired portion of the retirement fund. He asserts that the
divisible
portion of the fund should have been valued at $79,226 rather than $100,000. He arrived at the lower figure by using the parties’
separation date
(which he asserts is
April 15, 1990) as the cut-off point for determining the value of the marital component to be computed. The wife urges that the valuation date should be the
date of trial.
At the time of trial (February 24 and 27, 1992), the husband, although he had not yet retired, was eligible to draw from the retirement fund. According to him, the company allows pensions to be drawn once a year. If he had retired on July 1, 1992, he would not have received his initial payout until one year from the next September (September 1993). This delay is imposed to give the company time to liquidate investments. The record is not clear whether he would have been entitled to a lump-sum payment or to installments due over a period of time.
Before any price tag can be placed upon the
divisible
retirement component, the trial court must first establish its valuation date. Oklahoma jurisprudence provides
no
definitive rule to be used for the appraisal of marital property. The issue pressed is of utmost importance since in complex, “mega-buck” urban divorce contests protracted pretrial proceedings and other calendar delays often produce a significant interval between the commencement of an action and the time of trial. During the interim, property values might not — and probably would not — remain constant.
In other jurisdictions, in which the equitable distribution system for spousal property is in force, there has been no clear judicial consensus on the cut-off time for valuation of marital assets. In some states the date of trial is used.
In others, courts utilize the date the petition was filed
or the divorce is granted.
Some states have approved trial court decrees that anchor the value of marital property to the date of separation or specifically recognize that temporal point as a benchmark date.
Many courts have declined to fashion a rigid rule, holding the date of valuation is to be determined by the trial court
after
due consideration to all of the circumstances in a ease.
We ‘prefer to afford the litigants flexibility of the latter approach.
While the cut-off date
must
always be tailored to suit the circumstances of a case, the court should, in the interest of certainty, set a reasonable temporal point for valuing
each
marital asset, making proper allowances for different types of conjugal property.
Trial courts should generally be free to choose the most appropriate appraisal date for the pension interest like that in contest here. Because nearly three years have lapsed since the
February 27, 1992
trial hearing, we limit the court’s discretion
in this case
by holding that
for this post-remand proceeding
the valuation point of the marital component in the husband’s pension
must
be anchored to the date of original trial (February 27, 1992).
In equity cases we may generally render that judgment which the trial judge should have rendered.
We do affirm today all the in-kind and monetary nisi prius awards
except only that which affects the retirement fund’s apportionment.
The trial court’s
post-remand monetary award for the wife’s share of the marital component in the husband’s retirement fund shall operate with effect from the date of its post-remand entry.
Incomplete appraisal proof requires that we remand this cause for the retirement interest’s nisi prius re-valuation. The critical evidentiary deficiency disclosed by the record comprises the absence of: (1) the
exact valuation date
ordered' and used and (2) the fund’s
total value on the critical established appraisal date.
The trial court set the sum of $50,000 as the wife’s one-half marital interest in the pension fund’s
divisible
enhancement, but the record is utterly
silent
on how that figure came to be determined. The February 27th valuation date, ordered by this pronouncement to be used upon remand, calls for appraisal evidence which targets that temporal point. The proof must (1)
include
the critical pension plan financial reports and (2)
identify
each of the sources which contributed to the fund’s in-marriage
appreciation
in value as well as (3)
show
the amount of in-marriage monetary
contributions
by the husband and that of the employer’s participatory payments.
If the post-remand valuation is to withstand appellate scrutiny, the proof must overcome the present deficits in the appraisal evidence of record. Accordingly, we remand the cause for further proceedings in which (a) February 27, 1992 is to be used as the
valuation date
of the pension fund and (b) the extent of the husband’s
nondivisible separate
property in the retirement fund as well as the marital estate’s
divisible interest
must be computed by some equitable and acceptable accounting method and (c) on re-appraisal, the trial court shall divide
equitably
the retirement fund’s
divisible
component of the
in-marriage enhancement.
IV
THE WIFE’S APPEAL-RELATED ATTORNEY’S FEE QUEST
The wife claims
in this court
the sum of $9,061.17 in appeal-related attorney’s fee and costs because “she prevailed in the Court of Appeals on the retirement fund issue.” Counsel fees on appeal, much like taxable costs, may be judicially authorized
in the case in which the services were performed.
Widespread courthouse folklore— that either the
prevailing party
in the case or the
principal spousal provider
is under a duty to pay counsel fees in matrimonial litigation — is
not
the law in Oklahoma.
It is a hard-to-repress legal myth.
The terms of 43 O.S.1991 § 110 plainly provide that
either spouse
may be required to pay “reasonable expenses of the other in the prosecution or
defense of the action as may be just and proper considering the respective parties and the means and property of each.” Counsel-fee allowances, which
never
depend on one’s status as prevailing party in the case,
must
be granted only to that litigant who qualifies for the benefit through the process of a
judicial balancing of the
equities.
Property set apart to the wife consists of: (a) 2 vehicles ($6,850); (b) real estate (equity-$48,415); (c) one-half of the retirement fund’s in-marriage enhancement ($50,000); and (d) personal property ($2,500). She was allocated the debt of $24,500. The husband received: (a) camper ($4,500); (b) tractor ($9,000); (e) motorcycle ($1,000); (d) 2 cars ($8,200); (e) personal property ($1,500); (f) real property (equity-$3,570) and (g) one-half of the retirement fund’s in-marriage enhancement ($50,000).
The division of marital assets, considered with the debt allocation, resulted in a
net award of $83,265 to the wife and $77,770 to the husband.
The wife also received support alimony of $15,000 payable over 15 months at the rate of $1,000 a month as well as trial-related attorney’s fee of $2,500.
Based on our careful consideration of the equities that affect these parties, we conclude that
each
should bear
its own
counsel-fee and other litigation expenses incident to the appeal and certiorari process. The trial court is not precluded from entertaining pleas for a counsel-fee award and for litigation expenses to be
connected with legal services to be rendered and expenses to be incurred in the proceedings upon remand.
These pleas should be brought
after
the post-remand evi-dentiary process has been concluded.
SUMMARY
The enhanced value
of
a spouse’s
separate
property produced (a) by investment managed by neither spouse or (b) by appreciation, inflation, changing economic conditions, or circumstances beyond the parties’ control cannot be treated as a divisible marital asset unless, of course, there be proof that the increase resulted from efforts, skills or expended funds of either spouse. The cut-off date for valuation of divisible marital assets is to be determined by the trial court after due consideration of all the circumstances in a case. The trial court should set a reasonable date for valuing each marital asset, making proper allowances for different types of conjugal property.
Because nearly three years have lapsed since the trial date, we hold that in this case the valuation point for the marital component in the husband’s pension must be anchored to the date of original trial (February 27, 1992). Incomplete appraisal evidence requires that we remand this cause for nisi prius re-valuation of the divisible marital component in the husband’s retirement fund, to be computed by some equitable and acceptable accounting method approved by the trial court. On reappraisal, the trial court shall equitably apportion the retirement fund’s divisible portion of the in-marriage enhancement. Each party shall bear its own counsel-fee and other litigation expenses connected with their appeal and this certiorari proceeding.
On certiorari previously granted, the Court of Appeals’ opinion is vacated
only
insofar as it reverses the trial court’s division of the parties’ marital interest in the husband’s retirement fund and authorizes the trial court’s post-remand reconsideration of spousal property division as well as of support alimony; the trial court’s decree is reversed
only
insofar as it deals with the spouses’ marital interest in the husband’s retirement fund; each party is ordered to bear its own appeal- and
certiorari-related litigation expenses and those for services of legal counsel; and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with today’s pronouncement.
ALMA WILSON, C.J., KAUGER, V.C.J., and HODGES, LAVENDER, OPALA and SUMMERS, JJ., concur;
SIMMS, J., concurs in part and dissents in part;
HARGRAVE, J., concurs in result;
WATT, J., concurs in Parts I, II and IV and dissents from Part III.