Zito v. Zito

969 P.2d 1144, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 172, 1998 WL 881175
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1998
DocketS-8220, S-8229
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 969 P.2d 1144 (Zito v. Zito) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zito v. Zito, 969 P.2d 1144, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 172, 1998 WL 881175 (Ala. 1998).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

Eight years after dissolving the marriage of Kathleen and William Zito, the superior court granted Kathleen’s motion to approve a qualified domestic relations order that divided the marital share of William’s retirement benefits; at the same time, the court denied Kathleen’s request for survivor benefits. Both parties appeal. We hold that the court had authority to approve the post-dissolution QDRO and that it properly did so because the parties agreed when they dissolved their marriage to divide William’s retirement benefits; but the court also should have awarded Kathleen survivor benefits, since they are an integral part of what the parties agreed to divide.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

William and Kathleen Zito dissolved their twenty-two-year marriage in 1988. Kathleen prepared the petition for dissolution, which contained a stipulated division of marital property. Kathleen and William discussed the property division and agreed upon it before filing it. William had been working for approximately twelve years as an electronics technician at the University of Alaska’s Geophysical Institute in Fairbanks. Among the marital assets for division listed in the petition was William’s retirement fund. The parties agreed to divide it as follows:

Retirement Fund (12 yrs invested). Value $22,500. Owned by H. (Awarded to [Joint]). Wife to be entitled to ½ of the amount accrued during the life of the marriage.

On July 19, 1988, the superior court issued an order of dissolution, which incorporated the parties’ property agreement.

Following the dissolution, William continued to work for the Geophysical Institute, making additional contributions to his retirement fund. Eight years after the dissolution, he informed Kathleen that he interpreted the property agreement’s stipulation concerning his retirement fund to require only that he pay Kathleen half the fund’s stated $22,500 value, and interest accruing from the date of dissolution. After unsuccessfully seeking to obtain information concerning the status of William’s retirement fund, Kathleen filed a motion for court approval of a qualified domestic relations order (QDRO) to enforce her understanding of the agreement. She asserted that the agreement was intended to give her half of the fund’s benefits accrued during the marriage.

William opposed Kathleen’s motion, arguing that the plain language of the original agreement entitled Kathleen to no more than one-half of the 1988 stated cash value of his retirement fund. William also insisted that, without a showing of grounds to modify the dissolution decree under Alaska Civil Rule 60(b), the court lacked jurisdiction to alter the decree by adding a QDRO.

Superior Court Judge Mary E. Greene held an evidentiary hearing to determine the meaning of the original agreement fund. After considering testimony from William and Kathleen, Judge Greene granted Kathleen’s motion to approve a QDRO. Judge Greene found that the dissolution petition’s provision distributing William’s retirement benefits was ambiguous:

I find that it could be read either of two ways. You could read it as one-half of the amount in the benefits account, which [implies] a buy-out or a cash-out, or it- could be read as one-half of the marital portion of retirement benefits, which is one-half of the amount of retirement benefits.

Judge Greene went on to resolve the ambiguity in Kathleen’s favor, finding it most likely that the parties intended Kathleen to receive half of the retirement benefits accrued during the marriage, “distributed at the time of retirement, or whatever the plan allow[s].”

In reaching this conclusion, Judge Greene considered the totality of the evidence bearing on the meaning of the original agreement. Noting that another provision in the property division agreement expressly called for Kathleen “to be bought out of ½ the equity” in the marital residence, the judge *1146 found the absence of express buy-out language in the retirement-fund provision to be a telling indicator of the parties’ intent to divide William’s pension benefits rather than to arrange a buy-out of Kathleen’s interest.

The judge also found the provision dealing with division of equity in the marital residence significant in another. respect. The dissolution petition listed the value of the parties’ equity as $52,900; yet the parties’ testimony established that they actually settled William’s buy-out of Kathleen’s interest for considerably less than half of the listed equity value. They based this settlement on an appraisal prepared after the dissolution petition had been filed but before the dissolution was finalized. This suggested to the court that they did not regard the values listed in the petition as binding, thus making it unlikely that they meant to rely on the listed value of the retirement fund as a basis for a buy-out. The court thought it more likely that the agreement concerning William’s retirement fund reflected “a process [for dividing the benefits] as opposed to necessary values [for use in a buy-out].”

Judge Greene noted several other factors favoring the same conclusion, including William’s failure to make any post-dissolution efforts to pay Kathleen the buy-out value that he claimed he had agreed to pay her, the wording of the retirement-fund provision, which Judge Greene found consistent with language that laypersons might be expected to use in dividing future retirement benefits, and the fact that a buy-out agreement for the present value of a retirement benefit was not the most common practice at the time of dissolution.

Although Judge Greene approved a QDRO, she declined to order that Kathleen be given survivor benefits covering her interest in the retirement plan. Finding no “agreement as to either life insurance or survivor benefits,” the court struck from Kathleen’s proposed QDRO a paragraph directing that Kathleen “shall be treated as a surviving spouse to the extent of benefits acquired during the marriage[.]”

William appeals, challenging the court’s jurisdiction to issue the QDRO and its interpretation of the original property-division agreement. Kathleen cross-appeals, challenging the court’s refusal to award survivor benefits.

II. DISCUSSION

A. William’s Appeal

Although William’s brief lists sixteen specific issues, these issues raise two basic points; (1) that the court lacked authority to modify the original dissolution decree by adding a QDRO, and (2) that the court misinterpreted the clear language of the agreement dividing William’s pension. Neither point is well taken.

William argues that the superior court has no inherent power to modify the terms of a property settlement incorporated in a final dissolution order. 1 He asserts that the court thus lacked jurisdiction to issue a QDRO unless Kathleen established grounds for relief from judgment under Alaska Civil Rule 60(b). William points out that Kathleen neither alleged nor proved any such grounds. But no such grounds were necessary.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
969 P.2d 1144, 1998 Alas. LEXIS 172, 1998 WL 881175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zito-v-zito-alaska-1998.