Lead Opinion
hAppellant Gregory Pelts appeals the decree of the Lonoke County Circuit Court in his divorce from appellee Shelly Pelts. Gregory argues that the circuit court erred by awarding Shelly a marital portion of whichever military retirement benefit he ends up receiving instead of simply awarding the equivalent of a marital share of the reserve retirement in which he already had a vested interest at the time of his divorce. Gregory also asserts error in the circuit court’s decision to require him to select a survivor benefit when he retires. Our court of appeals affirmed the decision of the circuit court.
I. Facts
Gregory and Shelly Pelts married in 1990 and divorced in 2014. Gregory has spent his career in the military, including substantial time in both reserve and active-duty roles. At the time of the divorce, he had already accumulated enough service years to be vested in the reserve retirement program, which will begin paying out when he turns 60 years old. If he serves four more years on active duty beyond the time of the divorce, he will become eligible for the active-duty retirement program, which will begin paying immediately from that point. Gregory will be 49 years old at that time. In addition to any differences in benefit levels, obtaining active-duty retirement would result in over a decade of additional retirement payments.
In the divorce decree, the circuit court granted Shelly a marital portion of Gregory’s military retirement. The decree applies to his current expectation of reserve retirement, but also grants the same share of any active-duty retirement he will receive if he ultimately completes the requisite years to move up his retirement date. It also orders Gregory to pay for a surviv- or-benefit option for Shelly from whatever retirement payments he ends up receiving.
II. Analysis
We review divorce cases de novo; we review the division of property in a divorce for clear error. See Skokos v. Skokos,
A. Vested Interests
The expectation of retirement payments is an interest unlike traditional categories of property. Nevertheless, we have held that courts may divide such interests in divorce decrees if they are vested. See, e.g., Day v. Day,
Applying this analysis to military retirement programs, we have concluded that “[i]f a divorcing spouse has achieved an entitlement to military,.retirement pay, that entitlement is an asset which may be divided between the parties to the divorce.” Christopher v. Christopher,
The question presented in this case is whether any property interest Gregory has in active duty retirement payments was vested and therefore subject to division at the time of the divorce. Answering this question depends on whether the reserve retirement statutory scheme—in which the parties agree Gregory has a vested interest—is distinct from the active 14duty retirement scheme. If the schemes are distinct, and Gregory was vested only in the reserve program at the time of the divorce, then the circuit court erred as a matter of law in dividing the unvested interest in active-duty retirement pay. If the schemes are unified, then it was within the circuit court’s discretion to treat any future active-duty payments as an enhancement of an already vested interest akin to Askins.
Shelly contends that the two programs are merely different facets of a unified military retirement interest, noting that reserve retirement counts active-duty years. See 10 U.S.C. § 12732 (including active-duty years served in the calculation of reserve retirement). She construes our cases to stand for the proposition that any vested interest toehold in any of the varieties of military retirement benefits is sufficient to divide other potential payments authorized in Title 10 of the United States Code.
Gregory instead argues that the reserve and active-duty retirement benefits are legally distinct programs. He points to federal law limiting eligibility for reserve retirement pay to those who are “not entitled, under any other provision of law, to retired pay from an armed force.” 10 U.S.C. § 12731(a)(4). More broadly, Gregory argues, the programs are separate statutory schemes established in different serial statutes under Title 10. The eligibility requirements and structure of the reserve program are set out in' 10 U.S.C. §§ 12731 to 12741; the same information about active-duty or “regular” retirement is in 10 U.S.C. §§ 1401 to 1414.
We are persuaded by both the statutory arguments and our case law on vesting that Gregory’s vested property interest in the reserve retirement system at the time of his divorce is distinct from his potential future interest in active-duty payments. The parties do not |ficontest that if Gregory opted to leave the military immediately, he would receive no share of the active-duty retirement payments that might otherwise begin a decade before his anticipated reserve retirement. An interest that is contingent on continued employment is too speculative to be vested and subject to division. See Day,
B. Survivor Benefit
Gregory also argues that the circuit court erred in ordering him to maintain survivor-benefit-plan coverage. Gregory has yet to opt in to a survivor-benefit plan, but he can do so either while still on active duty or when he begins receiving reserve retirement payments at age 60. Shelly contends that the court’s decision was within its discretion and that the costs will, in any case, be borne by both parties in proportion with the division of the retirement payments.
Even if Shelly’s argument that the costs of the survivor benefit will be paid by both parties’ share of the retirement is correct, this ignores the inequality in the actual benefit of the survivor benefit. Any potential payout of the survivor benefit will accrue only to Shelly. Even if the costs are borne equally, the mandate that Gregory cofinance a unilateral benefit Ris an unequal division of property presumptively in need of justification under our divorce laws. See Ark. Code Ann. § 9-12-315 (Repl. 2015). We hold that the circuit court clearly erred in effecting an unequal division of property by ordering Gregory to maintain a survivor benefit plan without providing sufficient justification for why he must shoulder a share of the costs.
III. Conclusion
For the reasons set out above, we hold that the circuit court erred in treating Gregory’s nonvested active-duty retirement interest as divisible property and in ordering him to maintain a survivor-benefit plan out of his retirement income for Shelly’s sole benefit without providing sufficient justification for why Gregory must participate in the cost of the benefit. We reverse and remand for the circuit court to enter a decree consistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded; Court of Appeals opinion vacated.
Notes
. The dissent argues that Gregory’s interest in reserve retirement cannot be vested in some distinct way from his potential for active-duty or regular retirement because he "will not receive any portion of his supposedly ‘vested’ reserve retirement benefits” if he ultimately continues his military service until active-duty retirement vests. As Gregory argued, however, the circuit court is empowered to award the monetary equivalent of a marital portion of the vested reserve retirement as of the date of the divorce even if Gregory ultimately receives active-duty retirement.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in part and dissenting in part.
I disagree with the majority’s decision to reverse the circuit court’s division of appellant Gregory Pelts’s military retirement pay pursuant to the parties’ divorce. Thus, I must dissent from that portion of the opinion.
During the divorce proceeding, appellee Shelly Pelts’s entitlement to a marital portion of Gregory’s military retirement was the primary issue in dispute. Shelly testified that she was entitled to one-half of the marital portion of Gregory’s military retirement benefits based on the fact that he had served in the military throughout their entire twenty-] 7three-year marriage. Gregory’s November 6, 2013 “Army National Guard Annual Statement” was introduced into evidence showing that he had entered the military in 1985 and that he had accumulated twenty-six years of creditable service and 6,367 points. The statement further provided that if he were to retire as of that date, he would receive $3,734.51 per month in benefits upon turning
Gregory testified that even though he was presently vested in reserve-retirement benefits, he intended to pursue active-duty benefits, which he would receive immediately after retiring. According to Gregory, Shelly was entitled to only one-half of his reserve retirement, which he agreed he would never actually receive if he instead retired with twenty years of active duty. He admitted that the reserve time he had accumulated during |shis marriage would be included in the military’s calculations when determining his eligibility for active-duty benefits, although he indicated that it was not a one-to-one exchange. He also admitted that he was not an expert and that he was basing his testimony only off of his own personal beliefs and experiences.
Following the hearings and the submission of posttrial briefs by the parties, the circuit court ordered that “[t]he Plaintiff shall receive one-half of the marital portion of Defendant’s military retirement, without reduction for disability compensation, and regardless of the form the benefits take, including but not limited to, whether the Defendant draws an active duty or reserve retirement, as the Court finds this is an asset of the marriage which cannot be divested.” The court further stated:
That in accordance with Askins v. Askins,288 Ark. 338 ,704 S.W.2d 632 (1986), and the facts herein, the Court finds that Plaintiff is entitled to the benefit of any enhancement to the retirement which may occur between the date of divorce and the Defendant’s retirement. Therefore, should the Defendant draw his retirement benefits earlier than age sixty so shall the Plaintiff. The Plaintiff shall draw retirement benefits from the Defendant’s military retirement whenever Defendant draws[.]
We review divorce cases de novo on appeal. Moore v. Moore,
Based on the evidence presented by the parties, I simply cannot say that the circuit court clearly erred in finding that Gregory’s military retirement pay was a marital asset ^subject to equal division. While Gregory testified that reserve retirement and active-duty retirement are
We have previously held that if a divorcing spouse has achieved an entitlement to military retirement pay, that entitlement is a marital asset that may be divided between the spouses. Christopher v. Christopher,
Here, Gregory had achieved a vested entitlement to military retirement pay at the time of the parties’ divorce. The precise amount of his retirement benefits and when he will begin to receive them are yet to. be determined. However, to the extent that he receives increased benefits subsequent to the divorce, or he becomes entitled to receive his benefits sooner, this is merely a post-divorce enhancement to which the spouse is entitled pursuant to Askins v. Askins,
In addition to Gregory’s failure to provide evidence below to support his position that there are two entirely separate military retirement plans at issue, he has also failed to lipcite any convincing authority on appeal. To the contrary, Title 10 of the United States Code, which sets forth general military law, contains a provision that provides for the computation of “retired pay,” and it includes both years of active service and reserve service in that computation. 10 U.S.C. § 1405 (2001). Similarly, 10 U.S.C. § 12732, which specifically discusses non-regular, or reserve service, includes active duty in the calculation of “retired pay” under that section.
Furthermore, cases from other jurisdictions discussing the issue of military retirement in the context of a divorce treat active-duty service and reserve service as two components of one military retirement system. In Bojarski v. Bojarski,
I agree, however, with the majority’s decision to reverse and remand on the issue of the survivor-benefit election. Shelly contends that the cost of the survivor-benefit plan will be shared by both parties because it is deducted from the retirement pay prior to the division of benefits to each party. See 10 U.S.C. § 1408(a)(4)(D) (2009). However, this is in conflict with the circuit court’s ruling that Gregory is responsible for electing and paying for the survivor benefit. Furthermore, as Gregory asserts, the circuit court did not rule that Shelly was required to make a survivor-benefit election for him on her retirement plan, thereby leading to an unequal division of property without any explanation by the court. I therefore concur with this portion of the majority opinion.
|12Kemp, C.J., and Wynne, J., join.
