*997 Majority: SAUFLEY, C.J., and CLIFFORD, ALEXANDER, and LEVY, JJ.
Dissenting: DANA, and CALKINS, JJ.
[¶ 1] David Depot appeals from a divorce judgment entered in the District Court (Lewiston, Lawrence, J.) contending that the court erred when it awarded Carol Depot marital property to offset a portion of an accountant’s estimate of the present value of David’s expected Social Security benefits. Because we agree, we vacate the judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
[¶ 2] Carol Depot filed for divorce after thirty-three years of marriage. At the time of the divorce, she was fifty-five years old and David Depot was fifty-seven. The court entered a detailed divorce judgment with extensive findings of fact and legal analysis. In identifying the parties’ marital property, the court explicitly included the present value of the parties’ expected Social Security benefits 1 and attempted to accomplish an equal division of the parties’ retirement related assets in its overall distribution of the marital property:
Carol David
Social Security benefits $116,976 $256,382
Maine State Retirement System benefits 67,623
Carol’s IRA (Auburn Savings and Loan) 4,047
David’s IRA (Fidelity) 85,868 19,132
$274,514 $274,514
[¶ 3] The court awarded Carol almost eighty-two percent ($85,868) of David’s Fidelity IRA account to balance the perceived “present value” of all of their existing retirement assets, including Social Security benefits:
The court is considering the value of the Social Security benefits based upon the Law Court decision in Pongonis v. Pongonis,606 A.2d 1055 (Me.1992) (held that the deferred distribution value of Social Security benefits is a relevant factor to be considered in this division of marital property). Defendant’s Social Security benefits have a value significantly greater than the combined value of Plaintiffs IRA account, Social Security benefits and Maine State Retirement Account and this disparity is directly relevant to the determination of the parties’ Fidelity IRA account.
The court also awarded Carol general spousal support in the initial amount of $200 a month, increasing to $400 a month until 2007, and then increasing to $600 per month to continue until she dies or remarries, or until David dies or reaches the age of sixty-six. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
[¶ 4] David argues that Social Security benefits are not marital property and any consideration of anticipated Social Security benefits that impacts the division of marital property amounts to an offset prohibited by
Hisquierdo v. Hisquierdo,
[¶ 5] We address, in turn: (A) whether Social Security benefits may be treated as “property” pursuant to 19-A M.R.S. § 953 (2005); (B) whether other marital property may be used as an offset to compensate one spouse for the anticipated Social Security benefits to be received by the other spouse; and (C) the extent to which anticipated Social Security benefit payments are a relevant factor in the division of marital property.
A. Social Security Benefits are not Marital Property
[¶ 6] Courts that have considered the issue have universally acknowledged that Social Security benefits are not marital property and are not subject to division in divorce actions.
2
Several reasons support this principle. In the Social Security Act, Congress created an extensive and highly regulated benefit scheme,
cf. Helvering v. Davis,
[¶ 7] Of particular importance to this discussion, in § 407(a) of the Act, Congress prohibited a beneficiary from transferring or assigning Social Security benefits to another, and prohibited the use of legal process to reach those benefits:
The right of any person to any future payment under this subchapter shall not be transferable or assignable, at law or in equity, and none of the moneys paid or payable or rights existing under this subchapter shall be subject to execution, levy, attachment, garnishment, or other legal process, or to the operation of any bankruptcy or insolvency law.
42 U.S.C.A. § 407(a) (West 2003). Although the Act creates a narrow exception *999 to this rule by allowing for the collection of child and spousal support, 42 U.S.C.A. § 659(a) (West 2003), Congress has specifically excluded any similar payment obligation arising from “any community property settlement, equitable distribution of property, or other division of property between spouses or former spouses.” 42 U.S.C.A. § 659(i)(3)(B)(ii) (West 2003).
[¶ 8] Federal law preempts any state law that otherwise authorizes the distribution of these benefits.
See Hisquierdo,
[¶ 9] As the trial court noted in its judgment, we previously addressed whether a trial court may consider a spouse’s anticipated Social Security benefits as a relevant factor in arriving at its division of the parties’ pensions and other marital assets in
Pongonis,
[¶ 10] Pongonis does not stand for the proposition that a divorce court may attribute a lump-sum value to Social Security benefits, based on either deferred distribution or present value formulas, and treat the Social Security benefits as marital property. This is in harmony with § 407(a)’s prohibition on transfers and assignments of Social Security benefits. Thus, a Maine court may not assign a lump sum value to Social Security benefits and either transfer or offset those benefits when exercising its authority to divide marital property pursuant to 19-A M.R.S. § 953.
B. Marital Property May not be Used as an Offset to Compensate One Spouse for the Anticipated Social Security Benefits to be Received by the Other Spouse
[¶ 11] Although the United States Supreme Court has not directly addressed the issue of whether a state court may use marital property to offset anticipated Social Security benefits, in
Hisquierdo,
the Supreme Court addressed a similar question-pertaining to Railroad Retirement benefits. In that case, the Supreme
*1000
Court held that (1) a direct division of Railroad Retirement benefits violated the nonassignment provision of the Railroad Retirement Act; and (2) using other assets to balance or offset one spouse’s expected Railroad Retirement benefits was tantamount to anticipating and dividing those benefits in violation of the Act.
[¶ 12] In this case, the trial court attributed lump sum values to Carol’s and David’s expected Social Security benefits and divided David’s Fidelity IRA in order to offset the greater value it attributed to David’s Social Security benefits. Pursuant to Hisquierdo, the court’s valuation and allocation of the parties’ anticipated Social Security benefits runs afoul of § 407(a)’s prohibition on the transfer or assignment of such benefits because it constitutes an offsetting of those benefits. Accordingly, we vacate the judgment. Because the trial court will be faced on remand with dividing the marital property without an offset for anticipated Social Security benefits, we proceed to address the extent to which the trial court is authorized to consider those benefits in any way as a factor in its equitable distribution of marital property.
C. Social Security Benefits as a “Relevant Factor” Pursuant to 19-A M:R.S. § 953 in Dividing Marital Property
[¶ 13] After
Hisquierdo,
courts have adopted two broad approaches to the relationship between marital property and Social Security benefits. A minority of jurisdictions have outright prohibited the consideration of Social Security benefits by a divorce court when dividing marital property.
See, e.g., In re Crook,
[¶ 14] Most courts, however, have taken a less restrictive approach, allowing consideration of a party’s anticipated Social Security benefits as a factor among others, when dividing marital property:
[W]hile the anti-reassignment clause of the Social Security Act precludes a trial court from directly dividing social security income in a divorce action, a trial court may still properly consider a spouse’s social security income within the more elastic parameters .of the court’s power to formulate a just and equitable division of the parties’ marital property.
In re Marriage of Zahm,
[¶ 15] Our decision in
Pongonis
adopted this latter approach, expressly finding that “the provisions of (§ 407(a) do not prohibit] the court’s consideration of [a spouse’s] anticipated social security retirement benefits in determining a just division of the parties’ marital property.”
[¶ 16] Such consideration also does not violate § 407(a)’s prohibition against subjecting “the moneys paid or payable or rights existing under this subchapter ... to execution, levy, attachment, garnishment, or other legal process, or to the operation of any bankruptcy or insolvency law.” Id. (emphasis added). Since Hisquierdo was decided, the Supreme Court had occasion to revisit § 407(a), and it adopted a restrictive view of the meaning of “other legal process” as used in that section:
“[Ojther legal process” should be understood to be process much like the processes of execution, levy, attachment, and garnishment, and at a minimum, would seem to require utilization of some judicial or quasi-judicial mechanism, though not necessarily an elaborate one, by which control over property passes from one person to another in order to discharge or secure discharge of an allegedly existing or anticipated liability.
Washington State Dep’t of Soc. & Health Servs. v. Guardianship Estate of Keffeler,
[¶ 17] The approach we approved in
Pongonis
makes common sense. The
*1002
court’s role in property division is to accomplish a just division that takes into account “all relevant factors.”
4
Just as few married couples engaged in a serious assessment of their retirement resources would ignore the availability of Social Security benefits, courts should not be required to ignore reality and fashion a distributive award of the parties’ retirement and other marital assets divorced from the actual “economic circumstances of each spouse at the time the division of property is to become effective.” 19-A M.R.S. § 953(1)(C);
see also In re Marriage of Boyer,
[¶ 18] Accordingly, the annual amount of anticipated Social Security benefit payments a spouse is expected to receive may be a “relevant factor” under section 953(1).
5
Although “relevance” necessarily turns on a multiplicity of factors, two stand out: First, whether it is reasonable to expect that one or both spouses will qualify for and receive Social Security retirement benefit payments in the reasonably foreseeable future; and second, whether the anticipated benefit payments are a substantial financial consideration when viewed in relation to the retirement assets and other sources of income that will be available to each spouse following the divorce. If both questions are answered in the affirmative, it is likely that the anticipated benefit payments are relevant to the court’s analysis.
See Mahoney,
[¶ 19] Here, Carol and David have earned sufficient quarters to qualify for Social Security benefits, both are in them late-fifties and approaching retirement, and it is likely that they will soon rely on their expected Social Security benefits, in addition to their retirement savings, for their separate support. Their anticipated monthly Social Security benefits, therefore, are reasonably certain to affect their respective economic circumstances in an appreciable manner soon after their divorce. The court may, in the exercise of sound discretion, consider evidence of the parties’ anticipated monthly Social Security benefit payments when deciding how to equitably divide their marital estate.
The entry is:
Judgment vacated. Remanded to the District Court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
with whom CALKINS, J„ joins, concurring in part and dissenting in part.
[¶ 20] I agree with the Court’s decision insofar as it holds that a trial court may *1003 not assign a dollar value to anticipated Social Security benefits or distribute marital property now to offset one spouse’s future Social Security benefits. I respectfully dissent from that portion of the Court’s opinion that authorizes trial courts to do the latter anyway.
[¶ 21] The United States Supreme Court, in deciding that using other assets to balance or offset one spouse’s expected Railroad Retirement benefits was tantamount to anticipating and dividing those benefits in violation of federal law, wrote:
If, for example, a nonemployee spouse receives offsetting property, and then the employee spouse dies before collecting any benefits, the employee’s heirs or beneficiaries suffer to the extent that the offset exceeds the lump-sum death benefits the Act provides. Similarly, if the employee leaves the industry before retirement, and so fails to meet the “current connection with the railroad industry” requirement for certain supplemental benefits, the employee never will fully regain the amount of the offset. A third possibility, of course, is that Congress might alter the terms of the Act.... By barring lump-sum community property settlements based on mere expectations, the prohibition against anticipation prevents such an obvious frustration of congressional purpose. It also preserves congressional freedom to amend the Act, and so serves much the same function as the frequently stated understanding that programs of this nature convey no future rights and so may be changed without taking property in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
Hisquierdo v. Hisquierdo,
[¶ 22] In my view, the only approach that complies with the federal prohibition against anticipating Social Security benefits is to not do it. Any consideration of Social Security benefits that has an impact on the equitable distribution of marital property amounts to an impermissible offset; any such consideration that has no effect on an equitable distribution is of no consequence.
See In re Crook,
[¶ 23] Leaving Social Security benefits out of the equation appears to be the only way to avoid the harm that federal law seeks to prevent, namely, adjusting property rights on the basis of an expectation of future Social Security benefits. 6 Encouraging the trial courts to consider future Social Security benefits when dividing marital property, without disclosing the impact of that consideration is, in my view, inappropriate.
Notes
. Carol introduced an accountant’s present value estimate of both parties' anticipated Social Security benefits and her Maine State Retirement System benefits. The accountant referred to the parties’ Social Security statements, with projected monthly benefits commencing at age sixty-six, and assumed future employment until retirement. In estimating the present value of Carol's Maine State Retirement System benefits, the accountant projected her monthly benefits commencing at age sixty.
.
See In re Marriage of Kelly,
. Notably, the Railroad Retirement Act's anti-assignment provision considered in Hisquier-do was more restrictive than the anti-assignment language of § 407(a):
"Notwithstanding any other law of the United States, or of any State, territory, or the District of Columbia, no annuity or supplemental annuity shall be assignable or be subject to any tax or to garnishment, attachment, or other legal process under any circumstances whatsoever, nor shall the payment thereof be anticipated
Hisquierdo,
. Title 19-A M.R.S. § 953(1) (2005) directs that a court "shall divide the marital property in proportions the court considers just after considering all relevant factors.”
. The
Pongonis
decision contains a citation to former 19 M.R.S.A. § 722-A (1981 & Supp. 1991) with a parenthetical note that " '[t]he value of the property set apart to each spouse’ is a relevant factor for the court's consideration in division of marital property.”
. I note that another option avoids the issue altogether. Instead of having spousal support end when David turns sixty-six, the court could have it continue into retirement. Social Security benefits can be considered as a source of income for the purpose of awarding spousal support, without contravening
His-quierdo. See
42 U.S.C.A. § 659(a) (West 2003) (“Notwithstanding any other provision of law, ... moneys due from, or payable by, the United States ... to any individual ... shall be subject ... to withholding ... to enforce the legal obligation of the individual to provide child support or alimony.”).
See also Lanier v. Lanier,
