Lead Opinion
Plaintiff, Christina M. Heike, appeals from a judgment of divorce entered by the trial court on May 22, 1990. Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in failing to properly calculate the value of the pension of defendant, Robert C. Heike, in failing to return to plaintiff money given to the parties by plaintiffs mother during the marriage, and in failing to award plaintiff attorney fees. We affirm.
Plaintiff and defendant were married on August 10, 1984. The parties agreed to allow plaintiffs mother to live with them in their home, and, in consideration of this, plaintiffs mother sold her home and gave the net proceeds of approximately $22,500 to the parties. Defendant deposited the money in his bank account, to which plaintiff had access. Plaintiff and defendant then purchased a home from defendant’s mother on land contract, paying a $10,000 down payment with funds taken from the same bank account in which defendant had deposited the money from plaintiffs mother. When the marital home was sold shortly before the judgment of divorce was entered, the parties netted a profit of approximately $24,000, of which plaintiff received $12,000.
The trial court determined that plaintiff could not recoup the amount that her mother had given to her and defendant. The trial court also determined the value of defendant’s pension on the basis of a retirement age of sixty-two for purposes
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Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in valuing defendant’s pension using the hypothetical retirement age of sixty-two instead of the earliest possible retirement age of fifty-six under the pension plan. We disagree.
In a divorce case, our review is de novo. Sparks v Sparks,
In Kilbride v Kilbride,
In this case, defendant contended in the trial court that he would work until age sixty-five so as
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We further reject plaintiff’s contention that the trial court erred in failing to return to plaintiff the money given to the parties by plaintiff’s mother during the marriage. The trial court found that the money from plaintiff’s mother was a gift to both parties equally and that the parties used $10,000 of the money as a down payment on the marital home purchased from defendant’s mother for less than market value. The parties enjoyed a profit of approximately $24,000 when the home was sold, which the parties divided equally. There has been no showing that these findings are clearly erroneous. In light of these circumstances, the trial court’s holding was equitable.
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We also reject plaintiff’s contention that the
Affirmed.
Notes
In Booth, we adopted the reasoning of Rogner v Rogner,
We also agree with the following comment regarding the criticism that has been leveled at the method of valuing pensions set forth in Kilbride:
The criticism may be well deserved in light of the fact that circuit courts are not encumbered by mandatory methods of asset valuation when distributing other kinds of property. There appears to be no good reason for imposing such a mandate with regard to pensions. Valuation arguments are best left to the parties themselves and their attorneys who can argue that one scheme is better suited than another under the unique circumstances of a particular case or the pension plan at issue. [Faupel, 1990 Annual Survey of Michigan Law, Family Law, 36 Wayne L R 611, 656.]
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring). I concur in the opinion, but write separately to acknowledge that I have modified my view since my approval of Kilbride v Kilbride,
I am now persuaded that any inflexible rule for calculating the present value of a pension may, in a given case, be unrealistic and result in an unfair and inequitable distribution of this marital asset. The facts in this case provide a case in point. I remain convinced that the "earliest date” calculations mandated in Kilbride provide a clear direction and a practical rule of thumb that may be appropriate in most cases. However, because of the
