The main issue in this case is whether the residuary clause in a property settlement agreement incident to a divorce, granting the wife the community property rights in the husband’s unidentified intangible property, must expressly mention military retirement benefits to comply with the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act, 10 U.S.C. § 1408(c)(1). The court of appeals held that the statute requires the divorce decree to expressly mention the military retirement benefits to “treat (or reserve jurisdiction to treat)” the benefits, without which an award or partition is unenforceable under the statute.
I. THE FACTUAL BACKGROUND
Alene and Norbert Buys married in 1953 and divorced in 1970. The divorce decree incorporated the parties’ property settlement agreement. The residuary clause of the agreement stated:
All of the other properties, financial assets and belongings of the parties hereto, whether separate or community, not specifically set aside to the defendant [Norbert Buys] under Paragraph I. above shall be and is hereby specifically set apart, assigned, given, granted and conveyed to plaintiff [Aleñe Buys] as the separate property of the plaintiff herein and the defendant herein expressly releases, assigns, gives, grants and conveys to the plaintiff herein all the defendant’s right title and interest in and to the property hereby set apart to Plaintiff that he now has or may have, free of and waiving any and all claims at law or in equity that he has or may have, in whole or in part to such property.
The agreement did not specifically mention military retirement benefits. The rest of the agreement, read as a whole, has nothing to conflict with giving the residuary clause its plain meaning.
During their marriage, Norbert served on active duty in the United States Air Force. He also served as an active reservist. He was in the Reserve when the parties divorced. After the divorce, Norbert served over twenty more years in the Reserve. He retired with military pension rights on February 3, 1990. Norbert, who had worked in the Civil Service during the marriage, also retired from Civil Service with retirement benefits in February 1985.
On July 13,1990, Aleñe sued Norbert for a share of both the military and Civil Service retirement benefits. She sued for declaratory judgment that the property settlement agreement residuary clause covered both retirement benefits. Alternatively, she sued for partition of the community part of the benefits as community property not expressly divided in the divorce decree. Norbert defended, in part, on the ground that the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act and its 1990 amendment prevents division of benefits from military retirement if the divorce was granted before 1981 and the benefits were not expressly divided in the divorce decree.
II. CASE LAW AND LEGISLATIVE HISTORY
To consider the federal statutes we review their legal history. When perhaps a majority of the states held to the contrary — that military retirement benefits did not become property until it vested — we held that military retirement and disability benefits earned during the marriage were community property subject to division upon divorce.
Cearley v. Cearley,
In 1981, the United States Supreme Court halted state suits to divide military nondisa-bility retirement, whether by divorce suit, partition proceedings or otherwise. In this significant decision, the Court held that because of the government’s interest in national defense, Congress intended that only the persons expressly specified, under the conditions set out in the military retirement statutes, could collect. The Court prohibited the division of military retirement benefits by state courts and further proscribed any adjustment in the award of other community property to offset the loss of these benefits.
See McCarty v. McCarty,
In 1982, Congress responded to
McCarty
by enacting the Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act, Pub.L. No. 97-252, 96 Stat. 730 (codified as amended at 10 U.S.C. § 1408 (1983)). The purpose of this Act was to reverse
McCarty
⅛ effect and to once again allow state courts to treat retired pay of a spouse with military service as marital property subject to division under state law.
Mansell v. Mansell,
Effective November 5, 1990, Congress amended the Act. This time Congress sought to limit the power of state courts that were abusing the original Act. The amendment states:
A court may not treat retired pay as property in any proceeding to divide or partition any amount of retired pay of a member as the property of the member and the member’s spouse or former spouse if a final decree of divorce, dissolution, annulment, or legal separation (including a court ordered, ratified, or approved property settlement incident to such decree) affecting the member and the member’s spouse or former spouse (A) was issued before June 25, 1981, and (B) did not treat (or reserve jurisdiction to treat) any amount of retired pay of the member as property of the member and the member’s spouse or former spouse.
10 U.S.C. § 1408(e)(l)(emphasis added). Legislative history indicates that Congress did not intend for state courts to use the Former Spouses’ Protection Act to reopen pr e-McCarty divorces to divide military retirement benefits. “A number of courts ... interpreted the law differently, and ... reopened pr e-McCarty decisions in order to award a share of retired pay to former spouses.” H.R. Rep. No. 923, 101st Cong., 2d Sess., v.6, at 609 (1990), U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News 2931, 3166. Congress enacted the amendment to stop that practice. One report elaborated on this abuse:
The committee is concerned because some state courts have been less than faithful in their adherence to the spirit of the law [Former Spouses’ Protection Act]. The reopening of divorce cases finalized before the Supreme Court’s decision in McCarty v. McCarty that did not divide retired pay continues to be a significant problem. Years after final divorce decrees have been issued, some state courts, particularly those in California, have reopened cases (through partition actions or otherwise) to award a share of retired pay. Although Congress has twice stated in report language that this result was not intended, the practice continues unabated. Such action is inconsistent with the notion that a final decree of divorce represents a final disposition of the marital estate.
H.R. Rep. No. 665, 101st Cong., 2d Sess., v.6 at 279, reprinted in 1990 U.S.Code Cong. & Admin. News 2931, 3005. Our task is to apply the amendment to the Buys’ property settlement agreement incorporated into the divorce decree.
III. THE RESIDUARY CLAUSE
The court of appeals held that, as a matter of state law, the residuary clause did not reach the military retirement. The court further concluded that as a pure partition action, Alene’s suit was prohibited by the 1990 amendment because the residuary clause does not “treat” the military retire *372 ment benefits. We reject the court of appeals’ first holding. Consequently, we reach a somewhat different issue on the construction and application of the federal amendment.
A.Construction of the Residuary Clause
The rules of contract law govern the construction of a property settlement agreement incorporated into a divorce decree. If the agreement is worded so that we can give it a certain or definite legal meaning, it is not ambiguous and we construe it as a matter of law.
Coker v. Coker,
B.Decisions of the Courts of Appeals
In concluding that the Buys’ residuary clause did not reach military retirement benefits, the court of appeals divided the reported cases into two inconsistent “lines.” The court then chose to follow the “line” it construed as requiring express mention of military retirement somewhere in the settlement agreement. We conclude the court of appeals erred in analyzing “residuary clause” opinions of other courts of appeals, as well as its own prior opinions. The court of appeals’ analysis looked only at whether an opinion held that a residuary clause covered retirement benefits. The court of appeals did not differentiate the eases based on the different provisions in the residuary clauses, particularly whether the language of the specific residuary clauses at issue necessarily included retirement benefits.
As examples, the court of appeals relied on
Dunn v. Dunn,
In contrast, the courts in
Tharp v. Tharp,
C.Application of 1990 Amendment
Because we hold that the residuary clause was effective to award the community retirement benefits to Aleñe, our evaluation of how the 1990 amendment applies differs greatly from the court of appeals’ analysis. The community part of the unaccrued and unma-tured military retirement benefits were subject to division as a marital property asset. Under state law, Aleñe owns the retirement benefits because of the property settlement *373 contract incorporated into the divorce judgment. For the 1990 amendment to the Former Spouses’ Protection Act to mean that the divorce judgment did not “treat” the military retirement, Congress would have had to intend that residuary clauses legally effective under state law were nullified by the amendment about military retirement benefits. Put another way, Congress would have had to intend that military retirement benefits the divorce decree already gave to a party years ago under applicable state law were taken away by enactment of the statute. Nothing on the face of the federal statute requires such a result. The statute’s language just as easily leads to the conclusion that a state court judgment effective to award community military retirement “treats” military retirement. Construing the statute to take away the existing award would violate a primary principle of federal statutory construction — that in construing federal statutes courts should strive to leave state family law unaltered.
As the Supreme Court stated:
On the rare occasion when state family law has come into conflict with a federal statute, this Court has limited review under the Supremacy Clause to a determination whether Congress has positively required by direct enactment that state law is preempted. A mere conflict in words is not sufficient. State family and family-property law must do major damage to clear and substantial federal interests before the Supremacy Clause will demand that state law be overridden_ The pertinent questions are whether the right as asserted conflicts with the express terms of federal law and whether its consequences sufficiently injure the objectives of the federal program to require nonrecognition.
Hisquierdo v. Hisquierdo,
D. Opinions in Other Jurisdictions
In the trial court, Norbert Buys argued that the 1990 amendment deprived the court of jurisdiction because it did not mention military retirement, and therefore, under his analysis did not treat it. He filed a motion to dismiss, a second motion to dismiss and plea to the jurisdiction, and an amended second motion to dismiss and plea to the jurisdiction, all of which presented different shades of his jurisdictional argument. Norbert also pled and argued the statute as a defensive matter. He offered it as a ground for summary judgment and a conclusive defense in his motion for new trial. The diversity of language about the statute perhaps explains his positions. However, we find his position unpersuasive.
We acknowledge that language from opinions from other jurisdictions suggests or states that a divorce decree before June 25, 1981 must expressly mention military retirement benefits to “treat” them under section 1408(c)(1). We may distinguish all these cases because none of them considered an unambiguous residuary clause effective under state law to award the military retirement benefits. Further, by examining the factual context of each case, we conclude that the broad language was meant to apply only to the factual contexts at issue, and therefore not to a legally effective residuary clause. We review the factual contexts of several of these cases.
In
Kemp v. United States Department of Defense,
The
Kemp
opinion cited
Dunham v. Dunham,
Likewise, in
Johnson v. Johnson,
The court confronted a different construction issue in
Terry v. Lee,
A similar argument asking the appellate court to strain to find military retirement benefits “treated” under a general order was presented in
White v. White,
Opinions considering post-divorce suits to divide retirement rights “equitably” as “marital property” subject to division after a final divorce decree, with no claim that the divorce decree or its property settlement awarded the military retirement to a party, simply do not apply.
Cf. Johnson v. Johnson,
We do not hold that the residuary clause is only broad enough to embrace the one-half of the community interest the trial court awarded Aleñe. Because she limited the request for relief in her application for writ of error to the retirement benefit sums the trial court awarded, we do not consider the issue whether the clause conveyed greater interests. Similarly, we do not imply that the residuary clause touches only one-half of the community part of the Civil Service retirement. Because the clause covers the trial court sum, we reach the same result as the court of appeals judgment on Civil Service benefits. Also, we do not consider and express no opinion on whether the 1990 amendment preempts a community property state court’s ability to partition “tenancy in common” military retirement benefits earned during marriage but not awarded in the final divorce decree.
Compare Walton v. Lee,
IV. PRE-JUDGMENT INTEREST
There is another issue on which we reverse the court of appeals: whether to award pre-judgment interest. Both the trial court and court of appeals erroneously concluded that the basis for Alene’s recovery had to be a partition suit for retirement benefits held by both parties jointly as tenants in common until partition. The court of appeals based its holding denying pre-judgment interest on this conclusion.
V. SUMMARY
We hold that the unambiguous residuary clause at issue awarded community military retirement benefits to Aleñe Buys, and that she is entitled to pre-judgment interest on both military and Civil Service retirement benefits. We reverse the judgment of the court of appeals and render judgment that in addition to what the court of appeals awarded, Aleñe Buys recover the military retirement benefits stated in the trial court judgment and pre-judgment interest on both military and Civil Service retirement benefits awarded to her. We remand the cause to the trial court for determination of the pre-judgment interest and rendition of judgment consistent with this opinion.
