In re the Marriage of BEVERLY and ROBERT J. PADGETT.
BEVERLY PADGETT, Respondent,
v.
DONNA LITTLE, as Personal Representative, etc., Appellant;
AUTOMOTIVE INDUSTRIES PENSION PLAN, Respondent.
Court of Appeals of California, First District, Division Two.
*836 Luce, Forward, Hamilton & Scripps, Charles A. Bird; Peggy L. Bennington, a Professional Corp., Peggy L. Bennington; Law Offices of Barbara A. Ginsberg and Barbara A. Ginsberg for Appellant.
Ryan A. Kent and Kenneth S. McFarlan for Respondent Beverly Padgett.
OPINION
KLINE, P. J.
INTRODUCTION
Donna Little, the widow of Robert Padgett and the personal representative of his estate, appeals the trial court's entry of a final qualified domestic relations order (QDRO) enforcing the interest of Robert's former spouse, Beverly Padgett, in Robert's pension plan, following the court's nunc pro tunc entry of an order dividing Robert's pension plan survivor's benefit as a community asset in their 1988 dissolution.[1]
Donna contends that surviving spouse benefits irrevocably vested in her at Robert's death. She further contends the antialienation provision of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (29 U.S.C. § 1001 et seq.[2]; ERISA) prevented the court from ordering the pension plan to pay part of the survivor's benefit to Beverly where Beverly took no steps to inform the pension plan of her community property claim until after Robert died, before his retirement and while married to Donna.
We shall conclude that, where the plan participant dies or retires before the former spouse secures an order awarding that spouse any interest in the pension plan, a domestic relations order entered before the plan participant's death that does not award the former spouse an interest in the participant's pension plan but simply "reserves jurisdiction" over the plan provides an inadequate basis for entry nunc pro tunc of either a QDRO or of an order determining the former spouse's interest in the pension plan that later may be qualified as a QDRO. We shall therefore reverse the trial court's order.
I. Background
Robert and Beverly were married on June 11, 1972. They had two children. They separated on August 15, 1985, and the court entered a judgment of *837 dissolution on March 14, 1988, nunc pro tunc to December 31, 1987. Beverly had counsel. While married to Beverly, Robert worked as a mechanic and was a participant in the Automotive Industries Pension Plan (the Plan). The judgment of dissolution did not adjudicate Beverly's interest in Robert's pension plan, but the court expressly retained jurisdiction to do so. The sole reference to Robert's pension is contained in paragraph 4 of the judgment of dissolution as follows: "Husband's Pension Plan: The court shall reserve jurisdiction over husband's pension plan."
Robert married Donna on March 3, 1995. They had one child. Robert continued to work in positions that added to his potential benefits from the Plan. Robert died on January 26, 2005, before he had retired and before receiving any benefits from the Plan. The Plan provides a survivor's benefit of half of the monthly pension benefit Robert would have received if he had retired immediately before his death. Donna became the personal representative of his estate.
During Robert's lifetime, Beverly took no steps to notify the Plan of her community property claim and did not seek to obtain an order giving her an interest in pension benefits or a QDRO in connection with the court's reservation of jurisdiction. At no time before Robert's death did Beverly or her attorney communicate with the Plan in writing or provide the Plan with a copy of the judgment of dissolution. Beverly stated she did not know that she had to do anything until Robert retired and benefits became payable.
In February 2005, after Robert's death, Beverly contacted the Plan and advised that she was making a claim for benefits payable under the Plan. The Plan informed her the domestic relations order contained in the judgment of dissolution was not a proper QDRO. The Plan notified both Beverly and Donna, alerting them to the possibility of a conflict between them relating to their possible claims to survivor benefits. The Plan took no position on the dispute. It withheld from payments to Donna its estimate of the sums payable to Beverly should her claim be determined to be valid, and offered to interplead the issue. On March 21, 2006, the Plan advised the parties that it intended to segregate $300.32 per month, representing an estimated amount that might be assigned by the court to Beverly were the court to determine that she had a QDRO.
On July 12, 2006, Beverly applied ex parte to the superior court for a QDRO. The court entered the order. The order was vacated pursuant to a stipulation of the parties, because Donna had not been noticed and had not *838 appeared in the action until she joined in the stipulation to vacate the order. In November 2006, the Plan was joined in the action. Beverly moved to divide the Plan survivor's benefit as an unadjudicated community asset and to have the requested QDRO made effective nunc pro tunc to a date before Robert's death. Donna opposed the motion.
On April 24, 2007, the superior court adopted its tentative ruling, granting Beverly's motion, declaring that Beverly was not required to obtain a QDRO before Robert's death and that she was not required to notify the Plan of her community property claim to Plan benefits before his death. The court directed further adjudication of Beverly's exact community interest according to a formula it set forth in the order based upon the length of her marriage to Robertallocating to her a portion of the survivor's benefitsand ordered Beverly's attorney to prepare a proposed QDRO, nunc pro tunc as of March 14, 1988, consistent with its ruling and in compliance with ERISA, and to serve it on the Plan. The Plan was ordered to advise Beverly by May 4, 2007, whether it accepted the proposed QDRO and, if not, why not.[3] The court retained jurisdiction to implement the ruling and the judgment filed March 14, 1988.
Donna appealed from the April 24, 2007 order. On August 8, 2007, we dismissed the appeal as from a nonappealable order. (In re Marriage of Padgett (Aug. 8, 2007, A117991) [nonpub. opn.].)
On December 14, 2007, the superior court entered the QDRO pursuant to Family Code, division 6, part 1, chapter 6 (Employee Pension Benefit Plan as Party). The QDRO provisions were consistent with the court's previous order dividing the survivor benefits as an unadjudicated community asset, effective nunc pro tunc as of March 14, 1988, assigning from Donna to Beverly "the right . . . to receive Surviving Spouse Benefits payable under the Plan in an amount equal to half of the community's interest in the Surviving Spouse Benefits payable under the Plan." It further identified the annuity starting date of payments to the alternate payee (Beverly) as February 1, 2005. The court retained jurisdiction, if necessary, to amend the QDRO and the judgment of dissolution to establish its qualifications as a QDRO, and to implement Beverly's right to receive surviving spouse benefits under the plan.
Donna timely appealed the court's entry of the QDRO.
*839 II. Standards of Review and Overview of ERISA's QDRO Provision
(1) The interpretation of ERISA, including whether ERISA preempts state law, is a question of law which we review de novo. (Carmona v. Carmona (9th Cir. 2008)
Two recent Ninth Circuit decisions, Carmona, supra,
(2) "ERISA contains an anti-alienation provision and a preemption provision that restrict the ability of state courts and plan participants to transfer and alter interests in ERISA-governed retirement benefits. See 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(1) (`Each pension plan shall provide that benefits provided under the plan may not be assigned or alienated.'); 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a) (establishing that ERISA `supercede[s] any and all State laws insofar as they may . . . relate to any employee benefit plan . . . .'). Despite this broad preemption and anti-alienation scheme, Congress has recognized that states, in some circumstances, should be able to enforce their own domestic relations laws with respect to ERISA pensions. As a result, state domestic relations orders (`DROs') that comply with statutory requirements are exempt from both the anti-alienation and preemption provisions of ERISA. 29 U.S.C. § 1144(b)(7); 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3); Hamilton,
*840 "More recently, Congress further refined the statutory framework with the Retirement Equity Act of 1984 (`REA'), Pub.L. No. 98-397, 98 Stat. 1426, which particularly sought to protect the rights of surviving spouses." (Carmona, supra,
(3) "The [REA] Pub.L. 98-397, 98 Stat. 1426, amended ERISA in two important ways with respect to surviving spouses. REA first sought to `ensure a stream of income' to surviving spouses by requiring pension plans to provide automatic surviving spouse benefits. Boggs,
"REA also introduced the QDRO exception [§ 1056(d)] which `elevates a plan participant's legal obligations, commonly to a former spouse or children of a previous marriage, over the participant's express wishes to provide for other individuals as designated beneficiaries.' [Citation.] The QDRO is a subset of `domestic relations orders' that recognizes the right of an alternate payee to `receive all or a portion of the benefits payable with respect to a participant under the plan.' 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(B)(i)(I)." (Hamilton, supra,
(4)"Although state courts, via DROs, may create enforceable interests in the proceeds of an ERISA plan, there are limitations on the ability of state courts to create enforceable property interests in alternate payees. See Trs. of the Dirs. Guild of Am.-Producer Pension Benefits Plans v. Tise,
(5)"Second, the DRO itself must create an enforceable interest that is permitted under ERISA's statutory scheme. See Hamilton,
(6)"The two limitations work together. The first limitation concerns the form of the state court order: the state DRO may create an alternate payee's enforceable interest, but the alternate payee may not enforce that interest *842 unless and until he or she has complied with the QDRO specificity provisions. See Tise,
III. Hopkins, Tise, Carmona
At the time the trial court entered its order in this case, there appeared to be two lines of authority on the question of whether a former spouse with an interest in the participant spouse's pension is required to obtainor at least to seeka QDRO before the plan participant's retirement or preretirement death, where the plan participant is married to another at that benefit-triggering event.[5]
A. Hopkins. One line of cases holds that without a preexisting QDRO, the surviving spouse benefits vest entirely in the subsequent spouse on the date the participant retires so that a state DRO (domestic relations order) is not an enforceable QDRO where it has not been obtained before retirement of the plan participant. (Hopkins v. AT & T Global Information Solutions Co. (4th Cir. 1997)
B. Tise. In contrast to the Hopkins-Rivers line of cases, the reasoning of the Ninth Circuit in Trustees of Directors Guild of America v. Tise, supra,
Tise reasoned that because the QDRO provision is an exception not only to ERISA's rule against assignment of plan benefits but also to ERISA's broad preemption provisions (§ 1144(b)(7)), state family law can "create enforceable interests in the proceeds of an ERISA plan, so long as those interests are articulated in accord with the QDRO provision's requirements" (Tise, supra,
Tise noted, but expressly did not address, the question "whether, as Hopkins[, supra,
*844 Following Tise's line of reasoning, the Tenth Circuit in Patton v. Denver Post Corp. (10th Cir. 2003)
The Hawaii Supreme Court in Torres v. Torres (2002)
In Files v. ExxonMobile Pension Plan (3d Cir. 2005)
C. Hamilton and Carmona. In Hamilton, supra,
In a case involving a dispute between the eighth and ninth wives of the plan participant, the Ninth Circuit in Carmona, supra,
Carmona relied upon Hopkins's analysis of section 1055 and the "[v]arious changes to ERISA created by the REA indicat[ing] that the participant's retirement or the start of the annuity establishes a vesting point for the surviving spouse benefits." (Carmona, supra, 544 F.3d at pp. 1000, 1002-1003, citing Hopkins, supra, 105 F.3d at pp. 156-157.) At the same time, Carmona reaffirmed its holding in Tise, supra,
*847 Carmona identified uniformity of interpretation and simplicity of application of pension plans "one of the principal goals underlying ERISA" served by a vesting rule. (Carmona, supra,
Carmona was at pains to note that "this opinion does not disturb our prior holding in Tise. Fundamentally, Tise answers a very different question from the one presented here. In Tise, we determined when a DRO, which creates an enforceable interest in an alternate payee, can be `qualified' for QPSA benefits. Tise established that a state court domestic relations order may be qualified even after a participant's death, `[b]ecause a QDRO only renders enforceable an already-existing interest.' [Tise, supra,]
The Ninth Circuit also concluded that the state court had impermissibly created a constructive trust on pension annuity proceeds, finding such action preempted by ERISA. (Carmona, supra, 544 F.3d at pp. 1006-1007.) "[A] state court cannot achieve through a constructive trust on the proceeds of a pension plan what this court maintains it cannot achieve through a QDRO. Any alternative rule would allow for an end-run around ERISA's rules and *848 Congress's policy objective of providing for certain beneficiaries, thereby greatly weakening, if not entirely abrogating, ERISA's broad preemption provision." (Id. at p. 1006.) Consequently, the court concluded that the eighth wife's interest in surviving spouse benefits vested at the plan participant's retirement and that federal law preempted the state court orders directing the plans to change the beneficiaries and creating a constructive trust. (Id. at pp. 1007-1008.)
IV. Application
In ruling that former spouse Beverly could obtain a QDRO after Robert's death 19 years after the dissolution, the court below relied upon Tise, supra,
(7) Donna argues, based upon Hopkins, supra,
Those federal circuits considering the question of "vesting" of survivor spouse benefits in the plan participant's spouse at the time benefits become payable (on the plan participant's retirement or preretirement death[10]) have concluded either that the former spouse must have perfected a QDRO at the *849 time the benefits become payable (Hopkins, supra,
Federal circuits that have allowed postmortem qualification of a DRO as a QDRO have taken pains to point out that the plan participant had not remarried and there was no spouse at the time benefits became payable. Consequently there was no issue of "vesting" of pension plan benefits in an existing spouse. (See Files, supra, 428 F.3d at pp. 484, 488; Hogan v. Raytheon, Co. (8th Cir. 2002)
In Tise, supra,
The cases are inconsistent in their views of whether notice to the plan of an alternate payee's claim is required to be received before the benefit-triggering event. (Compare, e.g., Carmona, supra,
Although the trial court in this case concluded that "the Fund apparently knew that there was an ex-spouse who might be making a claim, as evidenced by its letter to Donna dated March 9, 2005," all indications in the record are that this letter relates to Beverly's contacting the Plan in February 2005 after Robert's death in January 2005, and providing them with a copy of the judgment of dissolution. There is no evidence in the record that any notice was provided to the Plan at any time before Robert's death that Beverly might have a claim. Beverly herself declared that her counsel had not sought a QDRO perfecting her interest, that she did not know she needed to take further legal action to protect her community property interest in the pension plan, and that she had intended to take further action after Robert retired.
Nevertheless, the plan did segregate funds and did not pay to Donna any funds that arguably were due Beverly under the amended DRO. Moreover, as in Torres, supra,
There is no doubt that the original DRO in this case did not meet the specificity requirements of ERISA to allow it to be qualified as a QDRO. The only reference at all to Robert's pension benefits in the DRO was the provision that: "The court shall reserve jurisdiction over husband's pension plan." (Italics added.) This language gives no indication that the parties intended to divide the pension benefits, or how, or that they or the court intended to create an interest in the Plan in Beverly. In none of the cases we have reviewed was the mere reservation of jurisdiction sufficient to support amending the order nunc pro tunc to award surviving spouse benefits. In each case allowing postmortem qualification of a DRO as a QDRO, the court found either that the original DRO substantially met QDRO requirements or, *851 at a minimum, that the spouse seeking to amend the DRO nunc pro tunc to meet QDRO specification requirements had been awarded some interest in the retirement plan in the original DRO. (See Files, supra, 428 F.3d at pp. 479-480 [property settlement agreement incorporated into judgment of divorce entered before participant's death constituted a QDRO where it awarded former spouse one-half of the pension]; Patton, supra,
After Robert's death, the trial court here granted Beverly's motion to divide the plan survivor's benefit as an unadjudicated community asset and to have the requested QDRO made effective nunc pro tunc to a date before Robert's death.
(8) The Ninth Circuit has interpreted the provisions of ERISA allowing state court DRO's to reassign surviving spouse benefits (§ 1056(d)(3)(F)) "as permitting a transfer of surviving spouse benefits established under section 1055 only if the QDRO expressly assigns surviving spouse rights to a former spouse. [Citation.]" (Carmona, supra,
(9) "A nunc pro tunc order or judgment is one entered as of a time prior to the actual entry, so that it is treated as effective at the earlier date. This retroactive entry is an exercise of inherent power of the court, the object being to do justice to a litigant whose rights are threatened by a delay that is not the litigant's fault. [Citations.]" (7 Witkin, Cal. Procedure, supra, Judgment, § 60, p. 595.) There are limits on a court's power to enter orders nunc pro tunc. (Id., § 61, p. 596.)
*852 In Hamilton v. Laine (1997)
(10) "The scope of orders and judgments nunc pro tunc in California has consistently been described by our Supreme Court in the following terms: `A court can always correct a clerical, as distinguished from a judicial error which appears on the face of a decree by a nunc pro tunc order. [Citations.] It cannot, however, change an order which has become final even though made in error, if in fact the order made was that intended to be made.... "The function of a nunc pro tunc order is merely to correct the record of the judgment and not to alter the judgment actually renderednot to make an order now for then, but to enter now for then an order previously made. The question presented to the court on a hearing of a motion for a nunc pro tunc order is: What order was in fact made at the time by the trial judge?"' (Estate of Eckstrom (1960)
Here, the most that can be said with respect to the provision of the DRO reserving jurisdiction over the plan participant's pension is that the parties likely did not agree to disposition of pension assets and the court intended to address the issue at a later day. We can only speculate that, because California is a community property state, the court could have intended to *853 confirm to Beverly an interest in the pension at some point, and that such interest might include surviving spouse benefits. Such speculation is inadequate based on the complete absence of any support in the record as to the court's or the parties' intentions beyond the reservation of jurisdiction itself.
(11) We are mindful of the broad authority of courts to enter judgment nunc pro tunc in dissolution proceedings. (See Fam. Code, § 2346 [authorizing a court to enter judgment nunc pro tunc in cases in which "the court determines that a judgment of dissolution of the marriage should be granted, but by mistake, negligence, or inadvertence, the judgment has not been signed, filed, and entered...."]; Patton, supra, 326 F.3d at pp. 1152-1154; Samaroo, supra, 193 F.3d at pp. 193-194 (dis. opn. of Mansmann, J.).) The Patton court agreed with the Samaroo dissent that "[t]he holding in Samaroo [that a state court's power to enter or modify a QDRO with respect to a participant's interest in a pension plan ends with the participant's death] `work[s] an unwarranted interference with the states' ability to administer their domestic relations law and to effectuate equitable divisions of marital assets.' [Citation.]" (Patton, at p. 1153, citing Samaroo, at p. 192 (dis. opn. of Mansmann, J.).) Quoting from an article from the periodical of the American Bar Association's Family Law Section, written by Gary Shulman, author of the Qualified Domestic Relations Order Handbook, the Patton court stated: "`Nunc pro tunc QDROs are desperately needed in the domestic relations arena. There must be a way to secure a former spouse's property rights to a pension that could suddenly disappear as a result of a technicality or a family law attorney's inexperience in drafting QDROs.' Gary Schulman, QDROs The Ticking Time Bomb, 23 FAMILY ADVOCATE 26, 29 (2001)." (Patton, at pp. 1153-1154.) Patton concluded, "In sum, this is precisely the type of situation, particularly in the domestic relations arena, for which the nunc pro tunc doctrine is appropriate. Courts in domestic relations contexts must have the power to effect equitable settlements by responding to newly acquired information or to changes in circumstances. If necessary changes once effected by the state court are not then recognized by plan administrators or by federal courts adjudicating disputes, state courts are effectively stripped of their ability to equitably distribute marital assets in a divorce." (Id. at p. 1154, fn. omitted.)
In his dissent in Samaroo, supra, 193 F.3d at pages 191-195, Judge Mansmann argued that important policy interests were furthered by giving effect to the state court's decree: "There is good reason to allow state courts some leeway in entering or modifying domestic relations orders even after a participant's death, or retirement, or other status-altering event. The state courts are charged with administering the important, and often complex and volatile, area of domestic relations law. The evident purpose of the ERISA's recognition of QDROs is to avoid undue interference with state courts' fulfillment of that charge. Imposing a cut-off date by which a state court's *854 orders must be in prescribed forma cut-off that does not appear anywhere in the text of ERISAwould unnecessarily impede those courts' efforts to provide for a just disposition of marital assets." (Id. at pp. 193-194, fns. omitted (dis. opn. of Mansmann, J.).)
However, as we have observed, those decisions allowing nunc pro tunc amendments of the DRO to meet QDRO specificity requirements after the death or retirement of the plan participant, did so in circumstances where the original state court DRO at a minimum created in the former spouse some interest in the pension plan. In Patton, supra,
Even the dissent in Samaroo, supra,
(12) Entry of a nunc pro tunc order following the retirement or preretirement death of the plan participant to facilitate qualification of a DRO as a QDRO where the DRO was obtained before the benefit-triggering event is proper in circumstances where the record indicates that the parties or the court intended the state court DRO to create an interest in surviving spouse *855 benefits in the former spouse. However, where the DRO obtained before the benefit-triggering event does not create the right that the former spouse seeks to enforce as a QDRO against the plan, a nunc pro tunc order entered after the benefit-triggering event cannot create the right. Such order goes beyond the confines of the nunc pro tunc power of the court.
(13) Allowing the state court to modify the DRO to create the interest in the surviving spouse pension benefits after the benefit-triggering event, in the absence of substantial evidence that the parties or the court intended to create such interest in the original DRO, has the potential to undermine the entire QDRO scheme. The conceptual framework articulated by the Ninth Circuit in Tise and recognized by that court in Hamilton and Carmona, allowing in some circumstances for a QDRO to be obtained after the benefit-triggering event, contemplates that the "QDRO only renders enforceable an already-existing interest...." (Tise, supra,
(14) The order issued nunc pro tunc by the court below did far more than clarify, fix technical defects, or correct the original DRO to express the court's intent or that of the parties' at the time of the decree. Nor did it simply allow Beverly to perfect a deficient DRO to meet ERISA's technical requirements for a QDRO. Rather, the nunc pro tunc order created the interest in the Plan by awarding Beverly an interest in the pension plan and qualified such DRO as a QDRO. We are convinced the trial court in this case exceeded its power to issue a DRO or QDRO nunc pro tunc, where the original DRO evinced no intent to award Beverly an interest in Robert's pension benefits and, a fortiori, no intent to award her any interest in QPSA surviving spouse benefits.
*856 DISPOSITION
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude the trial court had no authority to grant Beverly's request for entry of the DRO awarding her surviving spouse benefits nunc pro tunc and we reverse that order; we reinstate the DRO originally entered by the court; and we reverse the judgment determining the DRO to be a QDRO. Each party is to bear her own costs.
Haerle, J., and Richman, J., concurred.
NOTES
Notes
[1] In the interests of clarity, we refer to all parties by their first names.
[2] All statutory references are to title 29 of the United States Code, unless otherwise indicated.
[3] The record does not contain any document by the Plan stating that it determined the proposed QDRO either did or did not satisfy QDRO specificity requirements. No party argues that it did not and the court found the order was intended to satisfy federal law requirements concerning QDRO's, including ERISA and the Internal Revenue Code.
[4] "Section 1055(a)(1) states that `in the case of a vested participant who does not die before the annuity starting date, the accrued benefit payable to such participant shall be provided in the form of a qualified joint and survivor annuity' (emphasis added). This provision, known as the `QJSA' provision, does not apply here because [the plan participant] died prior to the annuity starting date." (Hamilton, supra,
[5] We use the phrase "benefit-triggering event" to refer to the participant's retirement or preretirement death. We use the phrase "annuity start date" to refer variously to the participant's "retirement date" where benefit payments would begin on that date (§ 1055(a)) or to the date upon which spousal survival benefits would be payable in the case of the participant's preretirement death (§ 1055(e)(1)). (See Carmona, supra,
[6] As the Ninth Circuit in Carmona later summarized its reasoning in Tise: "We came to this conclusion by analyzing the complex ERISA framework and meticulously considering the provisions of the statute that contemplate a situation in which a valid QDRO does not issue until after benefits become payable. We concluded that ERISA `specifically provides for situations in which no valid QDRO issues until after benefits become payable. Once the pension plan is on notice that a domestic relations order has issued that may be a QDRO, the plan may take a reasonable period to determine whether the order is a QDRO....' [Tise, supra, 234 F.3d at p.] 421. Furthermore, ERISA provides for further state court proceedings after the initial DRO is issued to clarify and fix any technical defects in the original DRO. Id. at 422 (citing 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)). Therefore, we have held that so long as a valid DRO creates an alternate payee's legally enforceable property interest in QPSA benefits, a QDRO can be obtained even after the plan participant's death. Id. at 423." (Carmona, supra,
[7] Tise concluded that because the alternate payee had placed the plan on notice of her interest in the plan participant's pension plan proceeds before his death, the fact that he died before the QDRO issued was immaterial. (Tise, supra,
[8] The order did not require any action by the plans, did not assign death benefits to the children, did not specify when payments were to begin, or the amount, calculation or form of the payments. Nor did the order deal with the issue of the surviving spouse annuity. (Hamilton, supra, 433 F.3d at pp. 1097-1098.) Recognizing that "[w]ithout a doubt, the details required in a QDRO present a drafting morass for the lawyer," the Ninth Circuit commented that the "`failure to include a survivorship provision in the QDRO often goes undetected until the participant dies or retires, that is, when the survivor benefits irrevocably vest in the current spouse and it is too late to do anything about it.'" (Id. at p. 1096, citation omitted, italics added.) Observing that it had rejected an "unduly narrow reading of [statutory] requirements" for a QDRO, the court still demanded "substantial compliance with these requirements.... [Citation.]" (Id. at p. 1097, citing Tise, supra,
[9] Carmona identified the following statutory features as persuasive: The importance of the annuity start date established by ERISA's statutory scheme for QJSA benefits. QJSA benefits are automatically provided to employees in all ERISA-governed plans and only a formal written waiver by the participant and the current spouse within the election period"`the 180 day period ending on the annuity starting date'" (§ 1055(c)(2), (7)) allows the participant to opt out of the QJSA. (Carmona, supra,
[10] We see no distinction between qualified joint and survivor annuity benefits and qualified preretirement survivor annuity benefits for purposes of the QDRO qualification requirements. Nor have the parties argued that there are material distinctions between these two types of surviving spouse benefits for purposes of qualifying the DRO as a QDRO.
[11] Donna does claim notice was required by the cases, but does not explain how the lack of notice affected or compromised the Plan's actuarial certainty in this specific case.
