The matter before us stems from the parties’ divorce in 1993. The plaintiff, Susan Cifaldi, appeals from the judgment of the trial court denying her postjudgment request for an order that the defendant, Anthony Cifaldi, Jr., pay to the plaintiff her share of pension disbursements made to him. On appeal, the plaintiff claims that (1) the order requested was necessary to effectuate and to preserve the integrity of the original dissolution judgment and (2) the court improperly applied the defense of laches. After careful consideration of the plaintiffs claims, we hold that under the allocation of marital property per the marriage dissolution judgment, the plaintiff became entitled to a defined portion of the defendant’s pension benefits. The defendant has received the plaintiffs portion of his pension benefits. Therefore, the court should have fashioned an order compelling the defendant to pay the moneys to her. Additionally, we hold that the court improperly relied on laches as an alternate ground to deny the relief requested. Accordingly, the judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
The following facts and procedural history are relevant to the plaintiffs appeal. The parties’ marriage was dissolved on October 25, 1993. On that date, the court approved a separation agreement between the parties and incorporated the terms of the separation agreement into the dissolution judgment. Pursuant to that agreement, the parties agreed that two qualified domestic relations orders (QDROs)
1
would
In their respective briefs, both parties agreе that the defendant retired in 2005 and began receiving retirement benefits from both the Travelers Corporation pension and the military pension shortly thereafter. The parties also agree that, as of the date the defendant retired, neither pension administrator had processed QDROs against the defendant’s pensions. 4 As such, the payments the defendant began receiving from each pension included the portions that had been allocated to the plaintiff in the parties’ separation agreement.
Not having received her portion of the defendant’s pension benefits, the plaintiff filed a motion to open the judgment on February 1, 2008. In her motion to open the judgment, the plaintiff sought to require the defendant to sign new QDROs to be submitted to the administrators of the defendant’s pension plans so that she could begin to receive, prospectively, the payments promised to her under the dissolution judgment.
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The plaintiff also sought to require the defendant to “reimburse to [the plaintiff] the amount of payments retained by [the defendant] that are the
The court denied the plaintiffs requests that the defendant pay to the plaintiff her portion of his pension benefits. The court found that its decision declining to order the defendant to pay to the plaintiff her share of the pensions did not constitute a modification of the property settlement that had been incorporated into the dissolution judgment. As an alternate ground, the court went on to find that, even if the plaintiff were entitled to the moneys at issue, the defense of laches had been established, and the plaintiff was not entitled to the relief sought. The plaintiff appealed.
I
The plaintiff first claims that the order she requested, namely, that the defendant pay to her portions of the prior pension disbursements, was necessary to effectuate and to preserve the integrity of the dissolution judgment. We agree with the plaintiff.
We begin by setting forth our standard of review. “The standard of review in family matters is well settled. An appellate court will not disturb a trial court’s orders in domestic relations cases unless the court has abused its discretion or it is found that it could not reasonably conclude as it did, based on the facts presented. . . . In determining whether a trial court has abused its broad discretion in domestic relations matters, we allow every reasonable presumption in favor of the correctness of its action. . . . Appellate review of a trial court’s findings of fact is governed by the clearly erroneous standard of review. The trial court’s findings are binding upon this court unless they are сlearly erroneous in light of the evidence and the pleadings in the
record as a whole. ... A finding of fact is clearly erroneous when there is no evidence in the record to support it . . . or when although there is evidence to support it, the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Kaczynski
v.
Kaczynski,
When an agreement of the parties to the dissolution of marriage is incorporated into the judgment, it becomes a contract of the parties.
Sachs
v.
Sachs,
As an initial matter, we must determine whether there was a distribution of property and whether this distribution hаs been violated. It is well established that pension benefits are a form of property under General Statutes § 46b-81. Our Supreme Court has held “that ‘property’ as used in § 46b-81, includes the right, contractual in nature, to receive vested pension benefits in the future.”
Krafick
v.
Krafick,
Section 12 of the parties’ separation agreement is titled “Pensions.” Subsection A of § 12 of the agreement states that “[a] [QDRO], shall enter, in favor of [the plaintiff], against [the defendant’s] Travelers [Corporation] pension, in an amount equal to one-half the benefits payable [to the defendant] as of the date of dissolution.” Subsection B of § 12 states that “[a] QDRO shall enter, in favor of [the plaintiff], against [the defendant’s] military pension, in an amount equal to [five sixteenths] of the current value of said pension as of the date of judgment, whether or not vested.” The clear import of § 12 of the agreement is that one half of the defendant’s pension from the Travelers Corporation, determined as of the date of judgment, and fivе sixteenths of the military pension, also valued as of the date of judgment, are the property of the plaintiff. A QDRO is merely an administrative tool used to effectuate the transfer of marital property, in this case pension benefits, from an employee to a nonemployee spouse. Given the well recognized importance of pension benefits as a piece of marital property, the obvious significance of pension benefits to any property allocation
made as part of a dissolution judgment and the expectations of the parties to that judgment, we do not read the parties’ agreement in the case before us to make the vesting of the plaintiffs property interest in a portion of the defendant’s pension benefits to be in some way contingent on the successful processing of the QDROs.
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Having held that the defendant received marital property that belonged to the plaintiff, the remaining inquiry before us is whether the defendant is obligated to return the plaintiffs property. The defendant concedes in his appellate brief that the court lacks jurisdiction to modify property division orders. Our Supreme Court has held that “[b]y its terms, [§ 46b-81] deprives the Superior Court of continuing jurisdiction over that portion of a dissolution judgment providing for the assignment of property of one party to the other party under General Statutes § 46b-81.”
Bunche
v.
Bunche,
“A modification is [a] change; an alteration or amendment which introduces new elements into the details, or cancels some of them, but leaves the general purpose and effect of the subject-matter intact.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Roos
v.
Roos,
II
We next address the issue of laches.
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Laches is an equitable defense
“The standard of review that governs appellate claims with respect to the law of laches is well established. A conclusion that a plaintiff has been guilty of laches is one of fact .... We must defer to the court’s findings of fact unless they are clearly erroneous.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.)
Caminis
v.
Troy,
We first note that in our review of the record, we cannot find any evidence that the defendant has in fact paid taxes on the pension payments he received. Although the defendant’s attorney made statemеnts to the effect that the defendant has paid taxes, “[t]he court [can] not properly rely on argument by the defendant’s attorney or on matters not in evidence in finding prejudice to the defendant.”
Burrier
v.
Burrier,
supra,
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
“A QDRO is the exclusive means by which to assign to a nonemployee spouse all or any portion of pension benefits provided by a plan that is governed by the Employee Retirement Income Security Act, 29 U.S.C.§ 1001 et seq.”
Krafick
v.
Krafick,
This refers to а Travelers Corporation pension plan in which the defendant was a participant. Due to a merger between the Travelers Corporation and Citigroup, the defendant’s Travelers Corporation pension is now administered by Citigroup. We will continue to refer to this pension as the Travelers Corporation pension throughout this opinion.
This refers to a pension plan that the defendant was a part of through his military service. The defendant’s military pension is administered by the United States Department of Defense.
There is some disagreement as to the reason why these QDROs were not processed by the pension plan administrators. The court file contains two QDROs dated October 25, 1993, signed by the plaintiff, the defendant and Judge Klaczak, who rendered the dissolution judgment. The plaintiff testified that she sent the signed QDROs by сertified mail to the plan administrators in 1995 and received return receipts indicating that they had been delivered. The plaintiff testified that the return receipts were not available because she had lost them. As such, there are documents in the file showing that the plaintiff prepared the QDROs and that the defendant signed them; however, there is no documentary evidence to support the plaintiffs testimony thаt she actually submitted the QDROs.
The court found that after the plaintiff filed her motion to open, a QDRO was signed by agreement of the parties, approved by the court and delivered to the Citigroup pension administrator. The court also noted that the parties had drafted a QDRO applying to the defendant’s military pension benefits and appeared likely to work out the terms of the QDRO to conform to the оriginal judgment. Therefore, the only issue before us is the pension payments the defendant received before corrective QDROs were put in place to pay benefits to the plaintiff as per the dissolution judgment.
We note that although the plaintiffs April 8, 2008 motion was captioned a motion for contempt, consistent with the relief sought therein, it would have been more accurate for the plaintiff tо have captioned the motion as a motion for contempt and for order. Despite the inaccurate label, the court properly considered the substance of relief sought in the subject motion,
which requested, in addition to an order for contempt, postjudgment orders for payment to the plaintiff of the portions of the defendant’s pensions to which she was entitled. See
Bijur
v.
Bijur,
In any evеnt, subsection E of § 12 of the agreement stated that the “[plaintiffs attorney shall prepare said QDROs.” The file contains two QDROs prepared by the plaintiffs attorney and signed by the parties and the court, dated October 25, 1993. Thus, even if the plaintiffs right to her share of the defendant’s pensions was subject to some sort of condition precedent, the plaintiff clearly satisfied that condition when her attorney prеpared QDROs that were signed by the court and all parties.
The plaintiff claims that she has brought an action at law, and, therefore, the court improperly applied the defense of laches, which is purely an equitable defense. “Laches is purely an equitable doctrine, is largely governed by the circumstances, and is not to be imputed to one who has brought an action at law .... It is an equitable defense allowed at the discretion of the trial court in cases brought in equity.” (Citation omitted; internal quotation marks omitted.)
Giordano
v.
Giordano,
Beyond the issue of taxes, no other evidence was submitted that the defendant detrimentally relied on the overpayments or was led to change his position.
Because we agree with the plaintiff that no prejudice was established, we do not address the conclusion of the court that the delay was inexcusable.
