Factual Background-.
The marriage of David Morgan (David) and Karen Morgan (Karen) 1 was dissolved by a June 30, 1997 decree of the Circuit Court of Johnson County. At that time, David was serving in the United States Air *229 Force. As part of the distribution of marital property, the court apportioned a percentage of David’s future military retired pay to Karen. The court’s order stated, “[Petitioner’s military retirement is divided by setting off 50% of the marital portion of the petitioner’s military retirement to the respondent with the remaining portion of the military retirement being set off to the petitioner” (David was the petitioner in the dissolution, Karen the respondent). The court further ordered that marital personal property and debt be divided in accordance with the provisions of the parties’ Marital Settlement Agreement, which was incorporated into the judgment by reference. 2
Developments Since Dissolution:
In July 2005, David retired from the Air Force and began to draw his military retired pay. David was entitled to receive $2,358 per month in retired pay. Upon his retirement, the Veterans Administration determined that David was eligible for a non-taxable disability benefit of $406 per month due to a shoulder injury associated with his military service. This benefit could not be received in addition to retired pay, but could be taken in lieu of a portion of the retired pay that David could otherwise collect. As disability benefits are not subject to taxation, it is advantageous for eligible retirees to waive retired pay in favor of such benefits. Thus, David waived $406 of his retired pay, which reduced his retired pay from $2,358 to $1,952.
In October of 2005, Karen applied to the Defense Finance and Accounting Service (DFAS) for payment of her portion of David’s retired pay. DFAS rejected the request because the language of the circuit court’s judgment was not specific enough to allow DFAS to define the portion of the retired pay that was payable to Karen. The rejection letter stated that the applicant “must provide this agency a certified copy of an ... order that provides for payment as a fixed amount or payment as a percentage of the [retiree’s] actual disposable military retired/retainer pay.”
Correction of Judgment by Circuit Court:
In response to this rejection, Karen filed a motion to construe the 1997 judgment. After hearing evidence, the court issued a judgment nunc pro tunc that restated the original judgment’s distribution of the retired pay. The corrected distribution reads as follows:
The Respondent [Karen] is awarded a percentage of the Petitioner’s disposable military retirement pay, to be computed by multiplying 50% times a fraction, the numerator of which is 168 months of marriage during the Petitioner’s creditable military service, divided by the member’s total number of months of creditable military service. 3 (emphasis added)
It is this judgment to which Karen assigns error. She contests the addition of the word “disposable” to the description of retired pay amounts subject to division. Karen asserts that, since “disposable retired pay” does not include amounts waived to receive disability benefits or the disability benefits themselves, the judge validated David’s unilateral reduction of the amount Karen would receive pursuant to the dissolution order. This, Karen con *230 tends, constituted an impermissible, defac-to re-division of a martial asset.
Standard of Review-.
The standard of review in a court-tried civil case is set out in
Murphy v. Carron,
Discussion:
Members of the Armed Forces who serve for a specified period may receive retired pay upon their retirement.
Mansell v. Mansell,
“The Uniformed Services Former Spouses’ Protection Act (USFSPA) authorizes state courts to treat ‘disposable retired pay as marital property.” 10 U.S.C. § 1408(c)(1);
In re Marriage of Strassner,
In Missouri, the distribution of marital property constitutes a final order and is not subject to modification or alteration. § 452.330.5, RSMo 2000;
Wandfluh v. Wandfluh,
As the appellant Karen notes in her brief, the important issue here is the addition of the word “disposable” to the description of the retired pay subject to division by the dissolution judgment. It is her argument that the term should not have been added and that she should receive her percentage as if David had not waived any amount of retired pay. Essentially, what Karen seeks is a percentage of David’s total retired pay, as opposed to a percentage of his disposable retired pay. This request simply cannot be granted.
To gain perspective with regard to Karen’s argument, it is helpful to examine her rights relating to David’s retired pay at the time of the dissolution decree. The Marital Settlement Agreement prepared by Karen and David and incorporated into the dissolution court’s judgment describes the retired pay to be divided as “disposable military retired pay.” (Emphasis added.) At the outset, Karen bargained for a fraction of an asset with an undetermined value. Since David was still in active service at the time of the dissolution and the amount of retired pay is determined by the number of years served and rank achieved at retirement, it was impossible at the time of dissolution to determine the total retired pay for which David would be eligible. Since disposable retired pay is subject to reduction by waivers for disability benefits, along with several other deductions under section 1408(a)(4), the amount that Karen was to receive under the agreement was not even calculable at the time of the dissolution. That said, Karen’s agreement to accept a fraction of “disposable” retired pay assumed the risk of negative fluctuation in amounts payable under that description.
In order to avoid this result, Karen focuses on the language of the original dissolution judgment which omitted the word “disposable” from the division of retired pay. This becomes the basis of her argument that the court effectively re-divided a marital asset through the judgment nunc pro tunc. For this argument to hold any weight, it must be assumed that Karen at some point was entitled to a fraction of David’s total retired pay and that the order reduced the value of that fraction by applying it only to disposable retired pay. This is not the case. Regardless of the wording of the dissolution judgment, Mansell allows only disposable retired pay to be considered as martial property. Total retired pay amounts that do not fit into the category of disposable *232 retired pay cannot be divided in a dissolution judgment. This includes both disability benefits and amounts waived to receive disability benefits. Therefore, the omission of the word “disposable” from the original dissolution judgment is immaterial. The dissolution court could not have awarded Karen a fraction of David’s total retired pay. Since the term “disposable” was inherent in the retired pay division, Judge Cook did not re-divide a previously divided. marital asset with the judgment nunc pro tunc. Judge Cook’s addition of the term “disposable” merely recognized the status of the law regarding military retirement pay.
Karen seeks an order from this court declaring that her disbursement from David’s retirement pay is unaffected by David’s section 1408(a) deductions. In 1990, however, the eastern district reversed a trial court’s decision to do just what Karen requests.
See Moon,
Finally, Karen argues that David should not have been allowed to unilaterally change the amounts payable to her under the dissolution judgment by selecting disability benefits over retirement pay. She cites cases from several other states that have taken various measures to protect the interests of a former spouse where the retiree’s actions reduced disposable retired pay to which a former spouse had a claim.
See, e.g., In re Marriage of Krempin,
Missouri does offer a mechanism that can be used to protect the former spouse of a military retiree from changes in disposable retired pay caused by section 1408(a)(4) deductions.
See Strassner,
In conclusion, the dissolution judgment provided that Karen would receive a certain percentage of David’s military retired pay. Under federal law, the judgment could divide only disposable retired pay. Karen was and is entitled to a portion of David’s disposable retired pay, which is exactly what the corrected judgment provides. In order for Judge Cook to have compensated for the reduction in amounts distributed to Karen as a result of the changes to David’s disposable retired pay, it would have been necessary to unlawfully modify the original division of marital property.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
All concur.
Notes
. The first names of the parties will be used throughout this opinion. No disrespect is intended.
. The Marital Settlement Agreement states in relevant part, "The parties agree that [Karen] shall receive 50% of [David’s] marital portion of his disposable military retired pay.” (emphasis added).
. Karen's award expressed as a formula:
Disposable Retired Pay x [(168 months of marriage / total months of military service) idk ]
. In this quote,
Strassner
was specifically referring to the procedure employed by the trial court in
Clauson v. Clauson,
