Lillie VALDEZ, Petitioner, v. Olga RAMIREZ and Tomas Valdez, Jr., Respondents.
No. B-7272.
Supreme Court of Texas.
July 26, 1978.
Rehearing Denied Dec. 13, 1978.
748 S.W.2d 748
Mitchell, Stewart & Hemmi, Kirk Patterson, San Antonio, for respondents.
DANIEL, Justice.
The issue presented by this case is whether a husband‘s community interest in his surviving wife‘s civil service retirement benefits is inheritable upon his death by adult children of his former wife. We hold that it is not.
Lillie Valdez had worked as a United States Civil Service employee for 352 months prior to her retirement in 1971. For 340 months of her employment she was married to Tomas Valdez, Sr. Based on her 352 months of service she began receiving retirement benefits in 1971 under the Federal Civil Service Retirement Act.
Olga and Tomas, Jr., brought this suit to recover a portion of Lillie‘s retirement benefits based on Tomas, Sr.‘s, community interest in the benefits. After a non-jury
A settled marital property rule in Texas is that a spouse has a community property interest in that portion of the retirement benefits of the opposite spouse earned during their marriage. Taggart v. Taggart, 552 S.W.2d 422 (Tex.1977); Cearley v. Cearley, 544 S.W.2d 661 (Tex.1976); Busby v. Busby, 457 S.W.2d 551 (Tex.1970). In each of the above cases, the non-employed spouse was alive, and we dealt with the question only as it concerned fixed or contingent rights in a division of the community asset upon divorce. We found no conflict between our application of Texas’ community property law and federal laws which provided such benefits.
The question in this case is different and is one of first impression in this State. It calls for a decision of whether the interest of a spouse who died prior to any division or divorce should pass to his heirs under the
At the outset, it is recognized that under ordinary circumstances, where there is no contract or provision of law to the contrary,
Lillie Valdez‘s retirement benefits were provided for by her contract of employment as a civil service employee of the United States Government. United States v. Price, 288 F.2d 448, 450-51 (4th Cir. 1961). The terms and considerations of her employment and compensation are set out in Part III of the Civil Service Act,
The Civil Service Act specifies which persons are entitled to receive retirement benefits. Provisions are made only for payment to the employee, or, in the case of the employee‘s death, to the surviving spouse and the employee‘s children under 18 years of age (with age exceptions for incapacitated children and students).
While Lillie Valdez was employed by the federal government and earning future rights to a retirement annuity, those contingent rights were community property, but such inchoate rights are characterized by the Family Code as “special community” under the wife‘s sole management and control.
“During marriage, each spouse has sole management, control and disposition of
the community property that he or she would have owned if single, including but not limited to: “(1) personal earnings;
...
“(4) the increase and mutations of, and the revenue from, all property subject to his or her sole management, control and disposition.”
Thus, while being earned, the right to a future Civil Service retirement annuity was the special community of Lillie Valdez, subject to her sole management, control and disposition. As manager of this “special community” asset, she had the contract right to select a mode of payment. As indicated, she selected the joint and survivor option in accordance with
Accordingly, the judgments of the courts below are reversed and judgment is here rendered that plaintiffs take nothing from Lillie Valdez.
ON MOTION FOR REHEARING
In their motion for rehearing Respondents Ramirez and Valdez, Jr. make two attacks on our treatment of the Civil Service Retirement benefits in this case as a joint survivorship annuity payable solely to Petitioner Lillie Valdez after the death of her husband.
First, Respondents argue that no joint and survivorship annuity option or payment is provided for by
The first joint and survivorship provision was added to the Civil Service Retirement Act by P.L. 76-263, 53 Stat. 1200, effective January 1, 1940. In reporting on the proposed amendment (S. 281), the Senate Committee on Civil Service explained the relevant section 3 as adding “a provision to the existing law permitting an employee to select one of two joint-survivorship annuity plans ...”2 The House Civil Service
“(d) Any employee retiring under the provisions of section 1 of this Act may at the time of his retirement elect to receive in lieu of the life annuity described herein a reduced annuity payable to him during his life, and an annuity after his death payable to his beneficiary, duly designated in writing and filed with the Civil Service Commission at the time of his retirement, during the life of such beneficiary (a) equal to or (b) 50 per centum of such reduced annuity and upon the death of such surviving beneficiary all payments shall cease and no further annuity shall be due or payable. The amounts of the two annuities shall be such that their combined actuarial value on the date of retirement as determined by the Civil Service Commission shall be the same as the actuarial value of the single life increased annuity with forfeiture provided by this section: Provided, That no election in lieu of the life annuity provided herein shall become effective in case an employee dies within thirty days after the effective date of retirement, and in the event of such death within this period, such death shall be considered as a death in active service.”
Between 1940 and the time of Mrs. Valdez‘s retirement in 1971, Congress made several amendments to the above provision. Each time the legislative history shows that it was described as “a joint and survivorship annuity.” The first of these amendments was contained in Sec. 4(b) of P.L. 80-426, 62 Stat. 48, effective April 1, 1948.4 It limited the option of a married person‘s joint survivorship annuity to his spouse and to an amount equal to 50 percent of the reduced life annuity, with termination on the death or remarriage of the surviving spouse. A subsequent amendment in 1956 left the 1948 provision substantially the same except for dividing the annuity payment provision into two sections, Sec. 9(g) and Sec. 10 of P.L. 84-854, 70 Stat. 736, 752, effective October 1, 1956. The annuity provision in existence at Mrs. Valdez‘s retirement in 1971 and codified in
The reason for detailing this congressional history of the relevant provisions of the Act is to demonstrate that Congress has long permitted a retiring federal employee spouse (a) to elect to receive the higher maximum single life annuity (which terminates at death), or (b) to elect, in lieu thereof, to receive a reduced amount as a joint and survivorship annuity which amount is used as the basis for the annuity payable to the retired married employee as long as he or she survives, and also as the basis for the other spouse‘s portion of the joint annuity if that spouse should be the survivor. Finally, discussion of legislative history has shown that the provision in question has been consistently termed and treated by the Congress as a “joint and survivor annuity.”
Respondents’ second point urges that Mrs. Valdez could not elect to create a valid joint survivorship in this instance because community property cannot be the subject of a joint survivorship agreement under Texas law. Williams v. McKnight, 402 S.W.2d 505 (Tex.1966); Hilley v. Hilley, 161 Tex. 569, 342 S.W.2d 565 (1961). As indicated in our original opinion, we are dealing here with a type of joint and survivorship annuity which was created by federal law. The Civil Service Retirement Act has a clearly declared federal purpose of providing a definite amount of financial support and security for retired federal employees, their spouses, and certain children of retired employees. A joint survivorship annuity clearly authorized by federal law to serve a federal purpose may preempt conflicting state laws in the absence of its use to perpetuate a fraud by one spouse on the other. Free v. Bland, 369 U.S. 663, 82 S.Ct. 1089, 8 L.Ed.2d 180 (1962). In the instant case there has been no suggestion that Mrs. Valdez made the election authorized by the Civil Service Retirement Act for any purpose other than to provide for herself and her husband the broadest possible joint and survivorship benefits payable under the federal Act.
The motion for rehearing is overruled.
