Opinion
Did the trial court abuse its discretion in a dissolution action when it refused to order the immediate payment of a nonemployee spouse’s interest in a retirement benefit, where the employee spouse was eligible to retire and receive the benefit but had chosen not to do so?
I.
Vera and Earl Gillmore separated in 1978 after a marriage of 14 years. The trial court issued an interlocutory decree dissolving their marriage on November 27, 1978, and entered a final judgment of dissolution on January 19, 1979. The decree awarded Vera physical custody of their minor child as well as $225 per month child support and $100 per month spousal support.
The community property was divided evenly, with the exception of Earl’s interest in a retirement plan managed by his employer, Pacific Telephone Company. The court found that Earl would become eligible to retire on April 11, 1979, at which time he would be entitled to a monthly benefit of $717.18. Vera’s interest in that benefit was found to be approximately $177.14 per month. The court specifically reserved jurisdiction over the retirement plan.
*422 Earl continued to work after he became eligible to retire in April 1979. He represented that he was a “healthy, active man” in his early 50’s, and he intended to work for some time to come. He was not required to retire until he reached the age of 70.
In July 1979, Vera requested an order directing Earl to pay to Vera her share of the pension benefits immediately, retroactive to the date he became eligible to collect them. Earl responded with a request to modify child and spousal support. The trial court denied both requests, retained jurisdiction over the retirement benefits, and held that it had discretion to delay distribution of the benefits until Earl actually retired.
II.
Under California law, retirement benefits earned by a spouse during a marriage are community property, subject to equal division upon the dissolution of that marriage.
(In re Marriage of Brown
(1976)
*423
Trial courts have considerable discretion to determine the value of community property and to formulate a practical way in which to divide property equally.
(In re Marriage of Connolly
(1979)
Under the cases and statutory law, Earl cannot time his retirement to deprive Vera of an equal share of the community’s interest in his pension. It is a “settled principle that one spouse cannot, by invoking a condition wholly within his control, defeat the community interest of the other spouse.”
(In re Marriage of Stenquist
(1978)
Earl’s retirement benefits are both vested and matured. (See ante, fn. 2.) He will not forfeit his benefits if he leaves his employment voluntarily, is terminated or retires. The only condition precedent to payment of the benefits is his retirement, a condition totally within his control. A unilateral choice to postpone retirement cannot be manipulated so as to impair a spouse’s interest in those retirement benefits.
In re Marriage of Stenquist, supra,
The result of the husband’s unilateral decision in Stenquist would have been to deprive the wife of any interest in his retirement benefits. In the present case, Vera is no less entitled to protection. The fact that the deprivation she faces is less than total is not decisive. Earl would deprive Vera of the immediate enjoyment of an asset earned by the community during the marriage. In so doing, he would subject Vera to the risk of losing the asset completely if Earl were to die while he was still employed. Although Earl has every right to choose to postpone the receipt of his pension and to run that risk, he should not be able to force Vera to do so as well. 4
The case of
In re Marriage of Luciano
(1980)
Similar results were reached in two earlier cases. In
In re Marriage of Martin, supra,
These cases, however, do not preclude the employee spouse from choosing among alternative retirement plans. The employee spouse retains the. right (1) to change or terminate employment; (2) to agree to a modification of the retirement benefits; or (3) to elect between alternative benefits.
(In re Marriage of Brown, supra,
The right of the employee spouse is nonetheless limited by the fact that the nonemployee spouse owns an interest in the retirement benefits. Thus,
Brown
notes that the employee spouse has a right to agree to “a
*426
reasonable,
nondetrimental
modification of the pension system”
(In re Marriage of Brown, supra,
Thus, although the husband in Stenquist had every right to choose a disability pension rather than retirement pay, his choice did not prevent the court from ordering him to pay to the wife an amount equivalent to what her interest would have been had he chosen retirement pay. Similarly, Earl retains the right to determine what retirement benefits he will receive. He can retire now or at some time in the future. He also retains the option of choosing between the alternative pension plans offered by his employer. However, if he opts for an alternative that deprives Vera of her full share of the retirement benefits, he must compensate her for the interest she loses as a result of his decision.
Compensation is possible here because the value of Vera’s interest is known to the court. Also, the only condition to the payment of the benefits, Earl’s retirement, is entirely within his control. However, “if the court concludes that because of uncertainties affecting the vesting or maturation of the pension that it should not attempt to divide the present value of pension rights, it can instead award each spouse an appropriate portion of each pension payment as it is paid.”
(In re Marriage of Brown, supra,
*427 Earl’s claim that he is being forced to retire misses the point. He is free to continue working. However, if he does so, he must reimburse Vera for the share of the community property that she loses as a result of that decision. His claim that the court lacks jurisdiction to order him to make payments to Vera because it lacks jurisdiction over his separate property also lacks merit. Earl alone will make the decision to use separate property to reimburse Vera, when and if he decides not to retire. His situation is not unlike that faced by a couple ordered to divide a house that they own as community property. If one of the spouses chooses to keep the house, he or she is free to use separate property to purchase the other’s interest. Here, Earl must divide his retirement benefits with Vera. If he does not wish to retire, he must pay her an amount equivalent to her interest. 7
Earl’s suggestion that Vera can be adequately compensated through spousal support is contrary to current law. “As we have affirmed many times, adjustments in the amount of alimony awarded will not mitigate the hardship caused the wife by the denial of her community interest in the pension payments. Alimony lies within the discretion of the trial court and may be modified with changing circumstances: ‘the spouse “should not be dependent on the discretion of the court ... to provide her with the equivalent of what should be hers as a matter of absolute right.”’
(In re Marriage of Brown, supra,
Earl asserts that Vera should be required to demonstrate a financial need to justify the immediate distribution of the retirement benefits. However, financial status is not relevant when dividing *428 community property. The courts are statutorily required to divide community property equally. (Civ. Code, § 4800.) A court may consider the equities of the parties’ financial situations in determining spousal support, but only after the community property has been equitably divided. The retirement benefit must first be divided equally. Earl may then renew his motion for a modification of spousal support in light of this new distribution of the community property. 8
In the past, this court has encouraged trial courts, if feasible, to award all pension rights to an employee spouse, compensating the non-employee spouse with other community property of equal value.
(In re Marriage of Skaden
(1977)
Frequently, parties are able to arrive at a reasonable settlement of these issues.
(In re Marriage of Skaden, supra,
19 Cal.3d at pp. 688-689.) For example, the nonemployee spouse may choose to wait, preferring to receive the retirement benefits when the employee spouse actually retires. The nonemployee may thereby ensure some protection for the future and may be able to share in the increased value of the pension plan. (See
In re Marriage of Adams, supra,
*429
There are various ways in which Earl could compensate Vera. He could “buy out” her share of the retirement benefits, paying her the present value of her share of the pension plan. (See Projector,
supra,
50 L.A. Bar Bull. 229; Hardie,
Pay Now or Later: Alternatives in the Disposition of Retirement Benefits on Divorce
(1978) 53 State Bar J. 106.) Or, he could begin to pay her a share of the retirement payments on a monthly basis. (E.g.,
In re Marriage of Martin, supra,
III.
That portion of the trial court’s order denying Vera’s request for the immediate distribution of her share of Earl’s retirement benefits is reversed. The cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with the views expressed in this opinion.
Tobriner, J., Mosk, J., Richardson, J., Newman, J., Barry-Deal, J., * and Kongsgaard, J.,* concurred.
Notes
Brown, supra,
A “vested” benefit cannot be forfeited if employment ends. Rather, it “survives the discharge or voluntary termination of the employee.”
(In re Marriage of Brown, supra,
Section 4800 provides in pertinent part that except in certain narrow circumstances (see § 4800, subds. (b) and (c)), “the court shall ... divide the community property and the quasi-community property of the parties ... equally.” (Civ. Code, § 4800, subd. (a).)
Earl claims that the trial court’s decision resulted in an equal division of the retirement benefits since he and Vera will receive their shares of the benefits at the same time—the time that he chooses to retire. However, he overlooks the fact that both the timing of receipt and the control of an asset are important aspects of its value. “Postponement, especially late in life, is often the equivalent of complete defeat. Not only are the employee spouse’s chances of dying on the job increasing with each passing year (in which case the pension rights would vanish under most plans), the present value of money is much more valuable as a person enters the last years of his life.” (Note,
In re Marriage of Stenquist: Tracing the Community Interest in Pension Rights Altered by Spousal Election
(1979) 67 Cal.L.Rev. 856, 879, fn. 76.) A benefit which may be received at some unknown time in the future is of less value than one received immediately.
(In re Marriage of Tammen
(1976)
See also
In re Marriage of Adams
(1976)
To the extent that it conflicts with this court’s present holding, dictum in
In re Marriage of Freiberg
(1976)
TriaI courts can limit the employee spouse’s freedom to choose to the extent necessary to protect the interests of the nonemployee spouse. For instance,
In re Marriage of Lionberger
(1979)
One commentator argues that when an employee who is eligible to retire chooses to continue working, part of his or her salary is actually attributable to community effort. “[F]rom an economist’s perspective, the employee spouse’s compensation for continued employment is not the full amount of his paycheck. Rather, his compensation is only that amount above the pension benefits that he will not receive while he continues working. For example, in the matured pension situation, if the employee can receive retirement pay in the amount of X dollars without working, then his actual compensation for services rendered is not the amount of his paycheck, Y dollars, but Y minus X dollars. This is nothing more than a reapplication of the ‘benefits foregone’ formula of
Stenquist
[
Since this court does not find any taking of separate property, it is not necessary to discuss Earl’s constitutional claim.
“Of course, the [respondent] spouse may seek a prospective modification of his or her support payments in light of any new partition of an asset not previously adjudicated.”
(Henn
v.
Henn
(1980)
The nonemployee spouse, of course, cannot have it both ways. The decision to ask for distribution of the retirement benefits before the employee spouse actually retires “constitutes an irrevocable election to give up increased payments in the future which might accrue due to increased age, longer service and a higher salary.”
(In re Marriage of Luciano,
supra,
Assigned by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
