¶ 1. Wifе appeals from a superior court, family-division order requiring her to sign a waiver to correct a previously filed Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO), which erroneously gave her survivorship benefits in her former husband’s pension. We affirm.
¶ 2. The underlying facts are not in dispute. Wife and husband were married in 1976, legally separated in 2001, and divorced in 2003. The divorce order, fully incorporating the terms of the separation аgreement, awarded wife “one half of the pension, as of the date of separation and the [husband] is awarded the remainder.” A QDRO signed by wife’s attorney was filed in 2009 to implement the terms of the order. The QDRO mistаkenly awarded wife survivorship benefits in husband’s pension, contrary to the divorce order which merely provided wife with one-half of the pension, with remainder to husband. The family division approved the QDRO, and the plan administrator implemented it, which resulted in payments being made to wife. Husband did not object to the submission of the 2009 QDRO, and did not appeal its approval.
¶ 3. In 2010, wife and husband jointly filed a new QDRO, which omitted the erroneous section regarding survivorship benefits. The family division approved the QDRO. In January 2011, the plan administrator rejected the QDRO because payments had already begun under the 2009 QDRO. The plan administrator noted that wife could fix this problem by “waiv[ing] away her right” to the survivorship benefits. Husband’s attorney contacted wife’s attorney numerous times between January and March, inquiring as to her position on the waiver issue. Having not heard anything, husband filed a motion to enforce in March 2011.
¶ 4. The court held a chambers conference in August 2011 and issued an entry order the same month concluding that wife is not entitled to the survivorship benefits. The court fоund that the divorce order merely granted wife “a defined, independent right to one half the pension,” while husband was granted his own separate pension rights. The court ordered wife to execute the waiver to restore to husband and his family the sole right to any survivorship benefits. Wife appeals.
*81 ¶ 5. On appeal, wife contends that: (1) claim preclusion prevents altering the 2009 QDRO; (2) the court lacked jurisdiction to enter its order because husband had not filed a motion to modify; and (3) the court improperly failed to hold a hearing. 1 Husband argues that the QDRO is not a court order, but merely a tool to implement the divorce order, and here the waiver is required to implement the final order.
¶ 6. Normally, a property disposition that includes the division of retirement benefits proceeds in two steps. First, the family division enters a substantive order which equitably divides and assigns the parties’ property. See 15 V.S.A. § 751. Second, in order for the division of retirement benefits to be implemented, a QDRO is entered as a court order directing the plan аdministrator to make certain specified payments to the ex-spouse. See 2 B. Turner, Equitable Division of Property § 6:20, at 113 (3d ed. 2005).
¶ 7. A QDRO is defined in relevant part by the Employee .Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA) as a domestic relations order “which creates or recognizes the existence of an alternate payee’s right to, or assigns to an alternate payee the right to, receive all оr a portion of the benefits payable with respect to a participant under a plan.” 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(B)(i)(I). In order for the QDRO to be qualified — for the Q to be added to the DRO — certain requirements must be met. See
id.
§ 1056(d)(3)(C)-(D). Oncе the plan administrator qualifies the QDRO, payments are made in accordance with the requirements contained in the QDRO.
Id.
§ 1056(d)(3)(A). It is from this statutory scheme and general description of QDRO practice that we draw the conclusion that a QDRO is characterized properly as a procedural device that enforces an underlying substantive order. See
Kremenitzer v. Kremenitzer,
¶ 8. Wife contends that the family division erred in ordеring her to sign the waiver because the 2009 QDRO is entitled to preclusive effect and should continue in pay status for that reason. We review questions of law — here, the claim preclusion issue — de novo.
In re Town Highway No. 20,
¶ 9. The doctrine of claim preclusion is ill-suited for these particular facts. As wife points out, the principle of finality generally prohibits modification of the property division, “absent circumstances, such as fraud or coercion, that would warrant relief from a judgment generally.”
Youngbluth v. Youngbluth,
¶ 10. Wife also contends that the court’s order, requiring her to waive the survivorship benefits derived from the 2009 QDRO, was beyond the court’s jurisdiction. She contends that • “the pension rights are a part of the property settlement,” and that requiring waiver of the benefits would result in a modification of the underlying property division. We review this question of law de novo. See
In re Town Highway No. 20,
¶ 11. Wife’s final argument is that the court should have held a hearing before rendering its order. The cases cited by wife are inapposite insofar as they relate principally to modification of substantive divorce orders or involve disputes of fact. See
Manosh v. Manosh,
Affirmed.
Notes
Wife also argues that the 2010 QDRO is unenforceable because it was obtained under duress and because there was no consideration to modify the 2009 QDRO. Neither wifе’s May 12, 2011 response to husband’s motion to enforce, nor her August 2, 2011 supplemental memorandum specifically raised theories of duress or lack of consideration. Thus, we do not consider the issues beсause they were not sufficiently preserved. See
Bull v. Pinkham Eng’g Assocs.,
It is important to note that the interprеtation of the divorce order, which incorporated the separation agreement, is not at issue. It appears undisputed that the 2009 QDRO did not properly implement the correct terms of the divоrce order and gave wife survivorship benefits which were not otherwise available to her under the property division. Thus, we need not determine, as between the divorce order and the 2009 QDRO, which reflects the parties’ intent.
Wife argued at oral argument that if the court required her to sign the 'waiver, it would be invalid because it would not be voluntary. See, e.g.,
Sharkey v. Ultramar Energy Ltd,.,
