Andrew ENGSTROM, Appellant, v. Becky Jo ENGSTROM, Appellee.
No. S-14752
Supreme Court of Alaska
May 15, 2015
Blaine H. Hollis, Juneau, for Appellee.
Before: FABE, Chief Justice, STOWERS, MAASSEN, and BOLGER, Justices.
OPINION
MAASSEN, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
In this divorce case, the husband appeals from a superior court decision dividing the marital property. He raises two issues with regard to his wife‘s retirement health insurance benefits: he argues first that the superior court erred in determining the marital portion of those benefits, and second that the superior court erred in the rate it selected for valuing those benefits. We hold that the superior court‘s resolution of these issues was consistent with our prior cases and therefore affirm it.
The husband also challenges the superior court‘s award to the wife of a larger share of the marital property, which the court justified on grounds that (1) the wife would have primary care of the couple‘s child, and (2) the husband was receiving two income-producing businesses created during the marriage. We hold that it was an abuse of discretion to rely on these two justifications for an unequal division and remand for the superior court‘s further consideration of the equitable division.
Finally, we affirm the superior court‘s valuation of the husband‘s 2010 income tax liability, because its finding is supported by the estimates given at trial and it was not required to revise the finding based on the husband‘s later submission of his actual return.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
A. Facts
Andrew (Andy) and Becky Engstrom were married in 1998. Becky had been teaching in the public schools since 1997 and continued to do so during the marriage. In 1998 Andy started a window-cleaning business, Capital City Windows, and he worked primarily as a window washer. He started an online business in 2002 called Volitar Industries, which he used to sell his music, self-produced kits for window-cleaning businesses, and instructional videos. In 2003 the couple had a child. They separated in the fall of 2010.
B. Proceedings
The superior court held a trial on issues of property division and child custody and then issued a written decision. The court awarded sole legal and primary physical custody of the couple‘s child to Becky; custody is not at issue in this appeal, which concerns only the identification, valuation, and division of the marital property.
One significant property issue involved Becky‘s health insurance benefits from the Teachers’ Retirement System (TRS), in which she enrolled when she started teaching in 1997. It was during her marriage to Andy that Becky completed the eight-year vesting period, making her eligible for a health insurance subsidy upon her retirement. At trial, through the testimony of expert witnesses, the parties disputed how to identify the marital portion of these benefits. Andy contended that the benefits were marital to the extent they vested during the marriage,1 whereas Becky contended that the marital portion should be based on her years of marriagе as a fraction of her total years of employment.2 The parties also disputed the value of the subsidy; Andy urged adoption of a composite rate that assumed Becky was likely to remarry, whereas Becky argued that her individual circumstances justified applying a lower, individual rate. The superior court adopted Becky‘s arguments on these two issues.
Andy moved for reconsideration on several issues, submitting a revised expert report on the valuation of Becky‘s TRS benefits and evidence of his 2010 income tax liability showing that it was substantially greater than the estimates he had given at trial. The superior court declined to consider the new evidence and ultimately denied reconsideration. Andy filed this appeal, contending that the superior court erred in deciding (1) the marital portion of Becky‘s retirement health insurance benefits, (2) the rate used to determine the value of the TRS subsidy for those benefits, (3) the factors used to justify an unequal division of the marital property, and (4) his income tax liability.
III. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
There are three basic steps in the equitable division of marital assets: (1) deciding what specific property is available for distribution, (2) finding the value of the property, and (3) dividing the property equitably.3 All three steps are relevant to this case. In the first step, [t]he characterization of property as separate or marital may involve both legal and factual questions;4 we review the superior court‘s legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings for clear error.5 Clear error exists when wе are left with a definite and firm conviction that the superior court has made a mistake.6 In the second step, the valuation of assets is a factual determination that we review for clear error.7 We review the trial court‘s third step, the equitable allocation of property, for an abuse of discretion.8 An abuse of discretion occurs if the court considers improper factors, fails to consider relevant statutory factors, or assigns disproportionate weight to some factors while ignoring others.9
A superior court has broad discretion to provide for the equitable division of property between the pаrties in a divorce, and we will reverse only if the division [was] clearly unjust.10 We review the denial of a motion for reconsideration for abuse of discretion.11 Finally, [w]e review questions of law de novo, adopting the rule of law that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy.12
IV. DISCUSSION
A. The Superior Court Did Not Err In Identifying And Valuing The Marital Portion Of Becky‘s Retirement Health Insurance Benefits.
Andy argues that the superior court made two errors with regard to Becky‘s retirement health insurance benefits: it applied the wrong fraction for determining the portion of the benefits that were earned during the marriage, and it used the wrong rate for estimating the benefits’ value. We conclude that the superior court did not err.
1. The superior court used the correct coverture fraction to calculate the marital portion of Becky‘s retirement health insurance benefits.
In Hansen v. Hansen, 119 P.3d 1005, 1014-16 (Alaska 2005), we addressed how courts should determine whether one spouse‘s retirement health insurance benefits are marital or nonmarital property and, if both, how to determine the marital portion. We explained that unlike pre-retirement health insurance benefits, which are compensation for contemporaneously performed work, post-retirement benefits are earned throughout the employee‘s work-life and may well be the product of work performed before, during, and after a marriage.13 To the extent the benefits are earned during marriage, they are marital property.14 Determining the benefits’ marital portion requires calculation of the coverture fraction.15 This fraction is calculated by dividing the number of years worked during the period of coverture by the total number of years worked.16 Our focus in Hansen was on the coverture fraction‘s numerator—the number of years worked during the marriage. As for the fraction‘s denominator—the total number of years worked—in Hansen we noted the difficulty of determining this number when it remains uncertain how long the еarning spouse will continue to work after divorce.17
It is the denominator that is at issue in this case. Andy argues it should be the eight years during which Becky‘s benefits vested, and that the coverture fraction is thus as high as 95 percent.18 Becky argues that the proper denominator is the same as that used in Hansen: the total number of years worked,19 a number that includes her employment to date and projected into the future.20
To decide this contested issue, the superior court compared our decision in Hansen with our later decision in Sparks v. Sparks, in which we affirmed a finding that retirement benefits were not marital.21 In Sparks, the wife‘s lifetime health insurance benefits with the Public Employee Retirement System had fully vested before marriage.22 At trial she presеnted expert testimony that the monthly premium contributions she continued to make during marriage went entirely to that month‘s coverage, and that nothing she did during marriage added value to the amount of the subsidy the State would eventually pay for her continued health insurance benefits after retirement.23 We affirmed the superior court‘s conclusion in Sparks that the retirement benefits were separate property because its factual finding that all of the value of [the wife‘s] post-retirement health benefits were earned before marriage is supported by the record and not clearly erroneous.24
Andy argues that the case should be governed instead by Sparks, which he contends stands for the proposition that [r]etiree health benefits under [TRS] are valued based on the first 8 years of service, the vesting period, regardless of when the benefit is funded. In other words, an eight-year vesting period that falls entirely within a ten-year marriage would mean that the value of retirement benefits is entirely marital, even if the earning spouse works for another 20 years after divorce and the employer continues to contribute to the fund from which the benefits will be paid.
We conclude, however, that the earning spouse continues to pay for even fully-vested retirement benefits while she cоntinues to work, both through her employer‘s contributions and through her acceptance of a lower salary than she might otherwise receive. As explained by Brett Turner, a recognized authority on the equitable division of marital property, [e]mployers simply do not make gratuitous transfers to their employees without expecting anything in return.26 We agree with Turner‘s further observations that [i]f the employer did not make contributions to his employee‘s pension plan, it would have to pay its employees a higher salary in order to retain them, and [t]he employer‘s direct contributions are therefore just as much a product of the maritаl partnership as the employee‘s direct contributions....27 In other words, even though an employee could stop teaching after eight years and be entitled to full medical benefits upon retirement, the employee continues to pay for those benefits as long as she continues to work. We overrule Sparks to the extent it is inconsistent with this conclusion.
2. The superior court correctly applied the individual rate rather than the composite rate to calculate the value of Becky‘s retirement medical benefits.
The second benefits-related issue on appeal is whether the superior court used the correct rate for calculating the value of Becky‘s retirement medical benefits. There are several options, including the individual rate and the composite rate.28 The individual rate, which Becky advances, is the amount the employee would pay if she were required to pay her own premiums to insure only herself.29 The composite rate, advanced by Andy, is the average premium cost of all employees; as such it takes into account the differences in the entire pool, including the fact that some employee-participants have covered spouses and dependents or are likely to acquire them in the future.30 The composite rаte is accordingly about 50 percent higher than the individual rate.31 The superior court chose the individual rate, finding that it best reflected the reality of Becky‘s situation—primarily the relatively low likelihood that she would remarry.
Andy argues that Ethelbah is distinguishable because Becky is younger, healthier, and therefore more likely to remarry than the wife in that case, making the composite rate more appropriate.35 Andy‘s expert testified that it would be appropriate tо use the composite rate for a woman with a greater than 50 percent probability of remarriage and that Becky was in that category. Becky‘s expert did not dispute the 50 percent figure but focused his testimony on the probability that Becky would be remarried in any given year after retirement. He presented a 1995 study from the National Center for Health Statistics accounting for rates of marriage and divorce, which he adapted into a table. According to the table, there was no future year in which Becky was more likely than not to be remarried; the highest likelihood of remarriage in any given year was 28.8 percent.
Andy reliеs on his own expert‘s testimony that Becky had a greater than 50 percent chance of remarrying; but as the superior court pointed out in its order, Andy‘s expert could cite no studies and no specific figures in support of her estimate. The superior court found the estimate of Becky‘s expert, on the other hand, to be specific and credible. Andy contends that Becky‘s expert improperly expanded on his conclusions on the last day of trial, giving Andy‘s expert no chance to respond. Andy presented an amended expert report in his motion for reconsideration, attaching a government study which, according to Andy, shows that 58 percent of white women remarry within five years of divorce. Even if the superior court had been required to consider the late-submitted evidence, however, it would not have undercut its conclusion. The study is based on women ages 15 to 44, a range that does not include Becky. There is no clear error in the superior court‘s acceptance of the estimate of Becky‘s expert regarding her likelihood of remarriage. And the court did not err in its legal conclusion that [t]he individual rate, therefore, would seem to come closer to Becky‘s likely situation.
B. Reliance On Andy‘s Receipt Of Income-Producing Businesses And The Costs Of Child Cаre To Justify An Unequal Property Division Was An Abuse Of Discretion.
Although an equal division of property is presumed to be the most equitable, the trial court has broad discretion to deviate from absolute equality.36 An abuse of discretion occurs if the court considers improper factors, fails to consider relevant statutory factors, or assigns disproportionate weight to some factors while ignoring others.37 Here, the superior court awarded 58.4 percent of the marital property to Becky and 41.6 percent to Andy. It found that Becky‘s education, job skills, and employment may cut slightly toward a division that favored Andy, whose work history was less consistent; that most other relevant factors were essentially a wash; but that two factors favored an unequal distribution in Becky‘s favor. The first of these was that the property allocated to Andrew will be income-producing property (Volitar and Capital City Windows). The second was that Becky is likely to have care and custody of [the couple‘s child] for some time to come, . . . will be receiving the marital home in this order, and will need to maintain a home for [the child]. Andy argues that the court gave disproportionate weight to these two factors, and that the unequal division that resulted did not fairly allocate the economic effects of the divorce as required by
1. It was an abuse of discretion to use the income-producing capacity of Volitar Industries and Capital City Windows to justify an unequal division of marital property where the parties’ situations were not otherwise equal.
The superior court correctly observed that
The superior court‘s consideration of the businesses’ income-producing capacity in the valuation stage does not preclude later consideration of the same factor when the court is deciding how the property should be equitably divided. As noted above,
However, we find merit in Andy‘s argument that the superior court gave the businesses’ income-producing capacity disproportionate weight when it used that factor as one of two that justified an unequal division in Becky‘s favor. On this issue, too, we agree with a relevant observation from Turner‘s treatise: If all other factors are equal, a spouse who receives property with a greater income capacity should receive a smaller share of the total estate.40 Here, although Andy received the income-producing marital property, all other factors were not equal. As a teacher, Becky earned approximately $61,000 a year plus benefits; but setting aside the businеsses, Andy had no regular income. Awarding Andy the income-producing property was necessary in order to roughly equalize the financial effects of the divorce.41 We conclude that the income-producing capacity of property under
2. It was an abuse of discretion to consider child-raising costs in the property division without first finding that child support was inadequate to meet the child‘s needs.
For the other of the two reasons for unequal division of marital property in Becky‘s favor, the superior court observed that Becky was likely to have primary physical custody [of the parties’ child] for the foreseeable future and that she will be receiving the marital home . . . and will need to maintain [it] for [the child]. We conclude that reliance on this justification was also an abuse of discretion.
We addressed this issue most recently in Rodvik v. Rodvik, in which the former husband had a history of domestic violence, some of it directed against the children.43 The superior court determined that the property division, while weighted slightly in [the wife‘s] favor, is equitable given the fact that [the wife] will be caring for the parties’ children in the future and the children will likely need counseling for years to come.44 We held this was error. We cited Turner‘s treatise for the proposition that the needs of the children should generally not be a factor in determining the amount of marital property assigned to each spouse.45 We noted Turner‘s supporting citation of our own decision in Brandal v. Shangin, in which we held that [f]or a trial court to award one spouse a greater share of the marital property simply to ease his or her burden of child support constitutes reversible error.46 And we favorably quoted Turner‘s suggestion that property division should be used to meet the needs of the children only in the presence of a specific reason why this goal cannot be met with an award of child support alone.47 Applying these principles in Rodvik, we concluded that before the superior court could make an unequal division of the marital property to help account for the children‘s counseling needs, it must first determine whether the child support is adequate to meet [those] needs, and we remanded the case for additional findings on the subject.48
In this case, the superior court did not make findings about whether child support was inadequate to meet the child‘s needs. In the absence of such findings, an unequal property division that rested in part on Becky‘s child-care responsibilities was error. We remand for the superior court to reconsider the equitable division of the marital property.
C. The Superior Court Did Not Clearly Err In Valuing Andy‘s 2010 Tax Liability.
Andy argues that the superior court erred in its valuation of his 2010 tax liability when it relied on his trial estimates instead of his actual return, which he did not prepare until after trial and did not present to the court until he filed his motion for reconsideratiоn.49 The superior court reasoned that it was [Andy‘s] choice to delay filing his taxes. Even if he wished to delay filing his taxes, he could have calculated his liability without actually filing a return, and presented that evidence at trial. The information needed to calculate his tax liability was entirely within his control.
V. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE the superior court‘s equitable division of the marital property and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. In all other respects we AFFIRM the decision of the superior court.
WINFREE, Justice, dissenting in part.
I respectfully disagree with the court‘s new framework for identifying the marital portion of a retirement benefit that is completely earned in a finite period of service time and that has a value not dependent on (1) any future financial contributions from the employee, or (2) the employee‘s continued employment. I would follow, not reverse, our very recent decision in Sparks v. Sparks.51
The retirement benefit in this case was a contractual right Becky Engstrom earned by working for a required number of years.52 The court‘s quotation from Brett Turner that employers don‘t make gratuitous transfers to employees without expecting anything in return must be read in context and does not support the court‘s position. The quotation is taken from a section where Turner explains that retirement benefits are property rights based in contract.53 Distinguishing retirement benefits from professional degrees and inheritances and articulating why retirement benefits are property, Turner emphasizes that: (1) [r]etirement benefits are contractual rights; (2) once benefits have been earned the employee has a legally enforceable right to receive them in the future; and (3) employers frequently use lucrative retirement packages in lieu of additional salary to attract and retain desirable employees.54
Turner then explains why it does not matter whether a retirement benefit arises from employee contributions, employer contributions, or both, stating that the notion that employee contributions are necessary to create property does not make sense because the employer contributions were made as part of the employment contract.55 Within this context Turner states: Employers simply do not make gratuitous transfers to their employees without expecting anything in return.56 But in this section Turner is notably silent on when an emрloyee‘s retirement benefits are acquired or funded, leaving that issue to other sections.57
Here the contract was simple: work a certain number of years and earn a defined retirement health benefit. Becky worked
