Wilson v. Uzzel

953 S.W.2d 384, 1997 WL 430030
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 17, 1997
Docket08-96-00339-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 953 S.W.2d 384 (Wilson v. Uzzel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilson v. Uzzel, 953 S.W.2d 384, 1997 WL 430030 (Tex. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

McCLURE, Justice.

Judith Wilson, Appellant, appeals on behalf of the estate of her deceased husband, Joe Woodrow Wilson Jr. (“Wilson”). Wilson originally filed a motion for enforcement and clarification of a 1977 decree of divorce, challenging the percentage of a defined benefit plan that had been awarded to his former wife, Appellee Pamela Lynn Uzzel (“Uzzel”). Following Wilson’s death, Appellant filed a suggestion of death and proceeded in the suit as the petitioner in her role as executrix of Wilson’s estate. She claimed that her husband’s employer had miscalculated the benefits payable to Uzzel, and she sought a refund of the alleged overpayments.

SUMMARY OF THE EVIDENCE

Joe Woodrow Wilson Jr. (“Wilson”) began working for Southwestern Bell Telephone on February 6, 1967. He and Uzzel were married from 1967 until 1977. The divorce decree provided:

The Court finds that for the purposes of the equitable settlement of the retirement benefits of [Wilson] with Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, that [Wilson] and [Uzzel] have been married the entire time that [Wilson] has been employed by Southwestern Bell Telephone Company and for the full length of time that he has accrued retirement benefits. The Court finds that for the purposes of calculating the retirement benefits due and payable to [Uzzel], [Wilson] and [Uzzel] have accumulated ten (10) years of community property interest towards the retirement benefits of [Wilson]. The Court finds that the ten (10) years accumulated is community property and that one-half of the ten (10) years retirement benefits ought to be paid to [Uzzel] as her interest in the community property if, as and when [Wilson] retires and receives his retirement benefits with Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, then, and in such event, [Uzzel] is to receive one-half of ten of the fraction of the number of years of service with Southwestern Bell Telephone Company until retirement. For the purpose of this Order, the Court finds that [Uzzel] is to receive one-half of the retirement benefits by calculating her community property interest by using the ten years as the numerator over the entire number of years of service, using the entire number of years of service until retirement as the denominator. [Emphasis added].

Wilson continued to work at Southwestern Bell until he was 48 years old, and on September 21, 1993, he retired. Wilson’s actual years of service totaled 26 years, 7 months, and 15 days. At the time of divorce, Southwestern Bell offered only one pension plan, which is referred to in the record as Plan A. At the time of Wilson’s retirement, however, Southwestern Bell had two plans in place, Plan A and Plan B. In order to qualify for Plan A, an employee was required to be 55 with 20 years of service, 50 years old with 25 years of service, or any age with 30 years of service. Wilson was never eligible for Plan A. He retired under Plan B, which became available to all management employees who were on the payroll as of December 30, 1991, the date the plan was implemented. Plan B allowed a management-level employee to receive five years’ credit for purposes of calculating pension benefits, with credit calculated from December 31, 1991. Since Wilson retired on September 21,1993, Plan B credited him with approximately three years of ser *387 vice. The number used to calculate Wilson’s pension was 29 years, 10 months, and 25 days.

A Southwestern Bell litigation support consultant testified that Plan B enhanced the incentive for management employees to retire. She explained that Southwestern Bell used the added “years” solely for the purpose of calculating Wilson’s pension, and did not actually consider him to be an employee who had worked 29 years. When Wilson retired in September 1993, Southwestern Bell calculated the division of his pension on the basis of the formula spelled out in the divorce decree. Wilson’s monthly benefits totaled $2,131.73. Uzzel was to receive one-half of the retirement benefits calculated by a fraction in which the ten years of marriage served as the numerator and the entire number of years of service at retirement served as the denominator. Southwestern Bell construed the phrase “entire number of years of service” as 26 years and paid Uzzel $409.95 per month based on the following formula:

1 X 10 X $2,131.73 = $409.95 2 26

Wilson died on June 22, 1995. Because he had elected a single life annuity, all retirement benefits terminated at his death.

Appellant’s suit, brought pursuant to former Tex.Fam.Code Ann. § 3.72 (Vernon 1993) 1 , alleged that Southwestern Bell had improperly calculated Uzzel’s benefits. She advanced two alternative theories. The first urged that Uzzel should have received benefits under Plan A, which was the only plan in place at the time of divorce. Applying this theory, Uzzel should have been paid “the sum of $298.00 which is calculated based upon one-half of 10/26 under the Formula A Pension Plan based upon the actual years of service (26) of Joe Woodrow Wilson Jr.” Because Southwestern Bell was paying Uzzel $409.95 instead of $298, Uzzel had allegedly received overpayments in the amount of $2,390.95. 2

Alternatively, Appellant argued that Uzzel had been receiving Plan B benefits based upon the wrong formula: she was paid one-half of 10/26ths of the annuity ($409.95) when she should have been receiving one-half of 10/29ths of the benefit ($362.39). Applying this second theory, Uzzel had purportedly been overpaid in the sum of $998.76.

Both of these theories were predicated upon the argument that Wilson had been divested of a portion of his separate property benefits earned post-divorce in violation of Berry v. Berry, 647 S.W.2d 945 (Tex.1983). Appellant made no claim in the court below that the agreement incident to divorce contained terms which were ambiguous. Instead, she argued:

[Appellant] would show the Court that [Uzzel’s] claim of entitlement to [Wilson’s] retirement benefits constitutes a claim to property that was not a part of the community estate of [Uzzel] and [Wilson]. [Appellant] requests the Court to specify in its clarifying order the duties, obligations or acts necessary for the enforcement of the Decree and a reasonable time period within which compliance will be required.
[Appellant] would show the Court that [Uzzel] has received retirement benefits which were not part of the community estate of the marriage of [Uzzel] and [Wilson] and [Appellant] requests the Court to order [Uzzel] to reimburse the Estate of [Wilson] for all sums which have been paid to [Uzzel] that were not part of the community estate.

The trial court determined that since Wilson was not eligible for benefits under Plan A, Uzzel’s benefits could not be calculated under Plan A. Further, the phrase “entire number of years of service until retirement” as used in the decree of divorce meant actual service, not credited service.

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Bluebook (online)
953 S.W.2d 384, 1997 WL 430030, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-uzzel-texapp-1997.