Callahan v. Callahan (2007-267)
2008 VT 94
[Filed 26-Jun-2007]
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2008 VT 94 |
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Trial Judge: Harold E. Eaton, Jr. |
In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:
¶ 1. Husband appeals from denial of his Vermont Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) motion for relief from judgment. Husband sought relief from a provision in a final divorce order requiring him to pay 25% of his retirement pay to wife, and the court denied the motion because it was untimely filed. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying husband’s motion, and we therefore affirm.
¶ 2.
The relevant facts are as follows. Husband is a career Air Force officer
who retired from active duty in August 2006. Wife served four years in
the military, during which time she met husband. Husband and wife were
first married in 1990, and had three children during the marriage. In
April 1997, the parties were divorced in
¶ 3.
The parties remarried in July 1997. Husband was deployed to
¶ 4.
In September 1998, wife sent husband a second letter, outlining the
terms of a proposed settlement agreement. In the proposed agreement, wife
did not claim an interest in husband’s retirement pay, nor did she expressly
waive any claim to the retirement pay as in the previous letter. Husband
agreed to the proposed terms, and wife prepared a stipulation with the
assistance of counsel which she sent to husband in
¶ 5. In November 1999, prior to the final hearing, husband, through his counsel, moved to set aside the terms of the stipulation, arguing that he was not represented at the time he signed the agreement, and that he would not have agreed to its terms if he had known that wife was living with another man and was pregnant with the man’s child. The court denied the motion on the grounds that he had an opportunity to consult with counsel prior to signing the stipulation and did not establish any legal basis for setting the stipulation aside. Husband’s counsel filed a motion to reconsider on January 25, 2000, but withdrew it at the time of final hearing on January 28, 2000. Husband was not present at final hearing, but his counsel participated by telephone. The court entered a final divorce order on January 28, 2000, incorporating the terms of the May 1999 stipulation, including the military-pension provision at paragraph 13. Neither party appealed from the final order.
¶ 6.
In March 2006, five months prior to husband’s anticipated retirement
date, wife emailed husband regarding the status of his retirement pay.
Shortly thereafter, husband obtained a copy of the final divorce order
and attempted without success to negotiate a lump-sum settlement with wife in
lieu of the pension provision in paragraph 13. Husband retired from
military service on August 1, 2006. Following a series of email
correspondences, in November 2006, husband authorized the government to
directly deposit $433.16 per month in an account held by wife, which by his
calculation fulfilled his responsibility under paragraph 13. On November
20, 2006, wife filed a motion to enforce paragraph 13 of the final divorce
order, claiming that she was entitled to 25% of husband’s gross retirement
pay. Husband filed a pro se motion to clarify or modify the final order
with respect to the pension provision on December 12, 2006. On May 15,
2007, after retaining new counsel, husband filed a motion for relief from
judgment pursuant to Rule 60(b)(6). He claimed
that he was ignorant of the pension provision until he received a copy of the
final order in March 2006, and that he had simply relied on wife’s
representations that the stipulation was the same as the
¶ 7. The trial court denied husband’s Rule 60(b) motion, concluding that he had not filed it within a “reasonable time” as required by the Rule. Furthermore, it granted wife’s motion to enforce paragraph 13 of the divorce order, and ordered husband to pay $646.63 to wife for past due amounts and to begin making monthly payments of $1,538 to wife, a figure representing 25% of husband’s gross military retirement pay. This appeal followed.
¶ 8. Husband’s primary argument on appeal is that the court abused its discretion in determining that his Rule 60(b)(6) motion was not timely filed. He contends that he filed the motion within a reasonable time, and that the court should have granted the it on the merits. First, he argues that the court erred in denying his 1999 pre-order motion to set aside the stipulation without hearing. Next, he claims that in its decision to enforce the terms of paragraph 13, the court erroneously interpreted the pension provision against husband and furthermore failed to consider his equitable estoppel claim. Finally, he argues that, even if the provision is enforceable, the court erred in its calculation of the amount owed to wife.
¶ 9.
Husband’s first argument—that the court abused its discretion in
determining that his Rule 60(b)(6) motion was untimely
filed—is unsupported by the record. Under Rule 60(b)(6),
the court may grant relief from a final judgment for
“any . . . reason justifying relief from the operation of
the judgment,” so long as the motion is “filed within a reasonable time.” V.R.C.P. 60(b). Rulings on motions for relief from
judgment are left to the sound discretion of the trial court, and may not be
reversed on review absent a showing that the court “clearly and affirmatively”
abused or withheld its discretion. Cliché v. Cliché,
143
¶ 10. Husband
filed his Rule 60(b) motion for relief from judgment on May 15, 2007, claiming
that the provision in paragraph 13 was inherently inequitable because he signed
the stipulation without reading it based on wife’s representation that its
provisions were the same as the
(1) he had an opportunity to read the stipulation before he signed it in May 1999, (2) he had an opportunity to discuss all the terms of the stipulation . . . with the attorney representing him in the divorce, when she filed a motion to set aside the stipulation on his behalf, (3) he had yet another opportunity to consider the provision when, presumably, his attorney sent him a copy of the Final Order, and (4) he discussed implementing the terms of [paragraph] 13 with [wife], in correspondence beginning in the Spring of 2006 yet he still waited until December of 2006 before filing his motion to reopen.
¶ 11. Husband
now argues that the unique circumstances of his case warranted a finding that
seven years was not an unreasonable delay in filing the Rule 60(b)
motion. Specifically, he claims that because he was on active duty in the
Air Force until August 2006, and paragraph 13 was not enforceable until his
retirement, it was reasonable for him to file the motion to reopen when he
did. Despite husband’s contention, however, the trial court determined
that husband had ample opportunity to challenge paragraph 13 both before and after it was incorporated into the final
order—either by filing a timely appeal, or by filing the motion to reopen in
March 2006, when wife began inquiring about the impending retirement payments
pursuant to paragraph 13—and these findings are supported by the record.
Thus, the court exercised its broad discretion in determining that the
seven-year delay in filing the motion was unreasonable given the circumstances,
and we affirm the court’s decision. Lyddy
v. Lyddy, 173
¶ 12. Husband’s
remaining claims presuppose that the trial court erred in denying his motion
for relief from judgment on timeliness grounds. Nonetheless, we briefly
address each of his challenges to the pension provision of the stipulation.
First, husband’s claim that the court was required to hold a hearing on his
1999 motion to set aside the stipulation is unavailing. Under Rule 78,
the family court has discretion to dispose of motions without hearing.
V.R.C.P. 78(b)(2) (“[T]he court may decline to hear
oral argument and may dispose of the motion without argument.”).
Husband’s 1999 request to set aside the stipulation was based largely on his
distaste for wife’s living arrangement rather than any claim of fraud, unconscionable
advantage, or misrepresentation. Thus, the court found that husband
“show[ed] no legal ground to warrant setting aside
the stipulation,” and exercised its discretion appropriately in declining to
set aside the voluntary settlement without hearing. See Pouech v. Pouech,
2006 VT 40, ¶ 23, 180
¶ 13. Husband
next argues that the court incorrectly construed the pension provision of
paragraph 13 against him. He claims that the provision requires him to
pay 25% of his “Air Force pension,” but that there is no such thing as an “Air
Force pension,” and that federal law recognizes a spouse’s interest only in “disposable
retired pay,” defined as the total monthly retired pay to which a military
retiree is entitled less applicable deductions. See 10 U.S.C.
§ 1408(a)(4). The court, however, determined that
the parties understood “pension” and “retirement pay” to be synonymous.
Based specifically on husband’s transfer of $433.16 to wife, the court found
that he both understood the meaning of pension, and was able to comply with the
provision by directly depositing the funds from his retirement pay into wife’s
account. While the court was required—as husband argues—to look first to
the plain meaning of the provision to determine whether an ambiguity existed,
it was not required to do so in a vacuum. Isbrandtsen
v. N. Branch Corp., 150
¶ 14. Furthermore,
husband contends that the court abused its discretion in failing to consider
his equitable estoppel claim against wife.
Husband claimed that the pension provision should not have been enforced
because he detrimentally relied on wife’s representation that the stipulation
contained the same provisions as the
¶ 15. Lastly,
husband claims that even if the pension provision of paragraph 13 is
enforceable, the court erred in its calculation of the amount of retirement pay
husband owes wife. Specifically, husband argues that the court erred by
failing to apply a coverture fraction to its
calculation of 25% of husband’s retirement pay despite the fact that the
parties’ second marriage effectively lasted only ten months.*
In a contested divorce, equity requires that the family court distribute only
the part of a spouse’s pension that accrued during the period of the
marriage. Golden v. Cooper-Ellis, 2007 VT 15, ¶ 15, 181
¶ 16. As
a final matter, we decline to consider husband’s argument that under the Servicemembers Civil Relief Act, 50 App. U.S.C. §§ 501-596,
the statutory period for filing a 60(b) motion was tolled during the time that
he was serving on active military duty. To begin, husband presented this
argument for the first time at oral argument. See Guiel
v. Guiel, 165
Affirmed.
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BY THE COURT: |
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Paul L. Reiber, Chief Justice |
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John A. Dooley, Associate Justice |
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Denise R. Johnson, Associate Justice |
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Marilyn S. Skoglund, Associate Justice |
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Brian L. Burgess, Associate Justice |
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* Husband also
notes that, in its calculation, the trial court “ignore[d] the applicable
deduction from gross disposable retirement pay, including premiums paid by the
member for the Survivor Benefits plan annuity and Veteran’s benefits,” mandated
by the Federal Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act, 10 U.S.C.
§ 1408(a)(4). Whether or how the provisions of the Act affect the
amount of husband’s retirement pay that is subject to property division was
inadequately briefed, however, and we therefore do not consider it. Johnson v. Johnson, 158