SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
APPELLATE DIVISION
A-5782-97T3
KAREN K. RISOLDI,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
ANGELO J. RISOLDI,
Defendant-Respondent.
Submitted: March 10, 1999 - Decided: May 3, 1999
Before Judges King, Newman and Fall.
On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
Chancery Division, Family Part, Mercer County.
Stark & Stark, attorneys for appellant (Maria P.
Imbalzano, of counsel and on the brief).
Angelo J. Risoldi, respondent pro se.
The opinion of the court was delivered by
FALL, J.S.C. (temporarily assigned)
In this post-judgment matrimonial pension evaluation and
distribution dispute, we examine the appropriate method for
evaluating the non-pensioner wife's equitable distribution,
deferred-distribution, interest in her husband's Public Employees
Retirement System (PERS) pension where the parties agreed to a
partial distribution through the present-value offset of a portion
of her interest in exchange for the husband's interest in the
marital domicile, and a deferred distribution of the remainder of
the wife's interest in his pension until the husband's retirement
date, through entry of a qualified domestic relations order (QDRO).
This hybrid, or, split equitable distribution of the non-pensioner spouse's interest in her husband's pension by factoring-out a portion thereof to allow a present-value offset, with a
deferred distribution of her remaining interest, presents pension
distribution and valuation issues of first impression.
We rule that the value derived from a present actuarial value
analysis of a pensioner spouse's interest in a defined-benefit
pension plan cannot be utilized to value the non-pensioner spouse's
future equitable distribution interest in that pension when the
distribution of that interest is deferred, through use of a
qualified domestic relations order (QDRO), to the date of the
pensioner's retirement.
Mr. Risoldi's interest in the home has
been agreed to be $28,500. In exchange for
his interest in the home, Mrs. Risoldi is
going to give up part of her share of his
pension. And we have agreed that Mrs. Risoldi
will be entitled to 22 percent of the amount
that accumulated during the marriage of Mr.
Risoldi['s] pension, and that will be done
through a qualified domestic relations order.
It's been agreed that the form of the
order will be drafted by [P]ension
[E]valuators and then the parties will split
the cost of the QDRO.
The parties were unable to resolve the form of the final judgment
of divorce, and after cross-applications to the court, the final
judgment was prepared by the court and executed on April 1, 1998.
It contains the following provision concerning equitable
distribution of the pension:
1. Marital Home - The defendant's interest in
the marital home located at 238 Lynwood
Avenue, Trenton, New Jersey, shall be
transferred to the plaintiff by Deed signed by
the defendant within 30 days after the court
signs the Final Judgment of Divorce. The
parties shall share the cost of transferring
title. The plaintiff shall be responsible for
all real estate taxes, utilities upkeep, and
maintenance of said home. The defendant's
interest in the marital home is worth $28,500.
In exchange for his interest in the marital
home the defendant shall receive a credit
against the plaintiff's interest in the
defendant's pension plan. The plaintiff shall
be entitled to 22" of the defendant's pension
through the State of New Jersey, that
accumulated during the marriage. That
determination shall be done through a
Qualified Domestic Relations Order. The form
of the order will be drafted by Pension
[Appraisers, Inc.] and the parties will split
the cost of the QDRO.
During the pendency of the divorce case, defendant retained
Pension Appraisers, Inc. to evaluate his pension. Prior to the
November 19, 1997 ESP conference, Pension Appraisers, Inc. issued
a report dated October 14, 1997. It calculated the present value
of defendant's defined-benefit pension plan as of August 2, 1996,
four days before the divorce complaint was filed, and determined
the present actuarial value of defendant's plan earned during the
marriage as of August 2, 1996 was $100,341.98. Among the
assumptions used to arrive at the present actuarial value were that
defendant terminated his participation in PERS as of August 2,
1996; the marriage ended on that date for equitable distribution
purposes; defendant's final average gross salary was $52,460.21;
defendant will retire at age sixty; and various assumed interest
rates, mortality tables, cost-of-living adjustments and other
factors "used by the Pension Benefit Guaranty to determine the
present value of annuities for single-employer plans."
Sometime after November 19, 1997 Pension Appraisers, Inc.
prepared a proposed form of a QDRO. This proposed QDRO defines
plaintiff's remaining share of defendant's pension as $330.95 per
month, which is twenty-two percent of defendant's assumed monthly
pension allowance contained in the present actuarial evaluation of
defendant's PERS pension, contained in the October 14, 1997 report.
Because of the dispute over the language of the final judgment,
this QDRO was not executed.
After entry of the final judgment on April 1, 1998, plaintiff
wrote to Pension Appraisers, Inc., requesting it amend the proposed
form of QDRO to conform to the court-prepared final judgment.
Plaintiff's letter was not specific regarding exactly what changes
were proposed. On April 16, 1998 defendant wrote to Pension
Appraisers, Inc., instructing them not to amend the form of QDRO as
requested by plaintiff because he believed the QDRO conformed to
the final judgment of divorce and case law. Defendant also sent a
letter to plaintiff on April 16, 1998 explaining that he directed
Pension Appraisers, Inc. not to prepare a new QDRO.
Defendant, acting pro se, filed a notice of motion for
reconsideration to amend the final judgment of divorce on the issue
of life insurance, returnable May 15, 1998. Plaintiff then filed
a cross-motion requesting defendant's motion for reconsideration be
denied and requesting the form of the QDRO be resolved.
On May 1, 1998 plaintiff submitted a proposed form of QDRO
drafted by Pension Appraisers, Inc. which defined plaintiff's
interest in defendant's pension through a formula which multiplies
her twenty-two percent interest by a coverture fraction (the
numerator being the number of years during coverture that defendant
was in the PERS system; the denominator being the total number of
years defendant was enrolled in PERS as of the date of retirement),
and then multiplies that result by the amount of defendant's
monthly pension allowance, determined at the time of his
retirement.See footnote 1 Defendant objected to plaintiff's proposed QDRO.
On May 15, 1998 the motion judge heard oral arguments.
Plaintiff was represented by her attorney and defendant argued pro
se. Defendant explained he has a fixed pension from the State of
New Jersey with the benefit calculation based on the average of the
preceding three years' salary or on any three fiscal years of his
membership in the plan providing the largest possible benefit.
Defendant asserted plaintiff is not entitled to share in increases
in the pension that occur due to his increases in salary post-divorce. Defendant argued plaintiff's share of the pension should
be calculated based on his average salary for the three years prior
to August 6, 1996, the date the divorce complaint was filed.
Plaintiff argued the pension figure should not be calculated at the
current present-value rate because payment of her share is deferred
until the date defendant retires. Plaintiff claimed the pension
figure should take into consideration cost-of-living increases,
inflation and interest.
The motion judge reserved his decision until May 18, 1998 when
he placed his opinion on the record. The judge stated he would
enter the QDRO proposed by defendant and prepared by Pension
Appraisers, Inc. The judge relied on Hayden v. Hayden,
284 N.J.
Super. 418 (App. Div. 1995), in ruling that defendant's position
was correct. The judge said the Hayden decision limited the
holding in Moore v. Moore,
114 N.J. 147 (1989), the case plaintiff
relied on. He ruled plaintiff's share of pension benefits is
limited to $330.95 per month, which is twenty-two percent of the
actuarial-determined monthly pension benefit of defendant,
contained in the October 14, 1997 report of Pension Evaluators,
Inc. The judge also stated, "[o]f course, once those benefits
commence, [plaintiff] will be able to share in a cost of living
increase if there are any such increases." The judge did not
explain how any cost-of-living increases were to be calculated. On
May 18, 1998 the judge signed the QDRO proposed by defendant and
entered an order memorializing his rulings on the motions. Neither
the QDRO entered by the judge nor the order reflect that cost-of-living increases were to be included in plaintiff's share of the
pension.
On appeal, plaintiff presents the following arguments for
consideration:
POINT I
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN BASING ITS DECISION
ON THE HAYDEN CASE WHICH IS A PENSION CASE AND
IGNORING THE MOORE CASE WHICH DISCUSSES FUTURE
INTERESTS.
POINT II
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN ENTERING THE
DEFENDANT'S PROPOSED DOMESTIC RELATIONS ORDER
WHICH LIMITS PLAINTIFF'S INTEREST IN
DEFENDANT'S PENSION TO ITS PRESENT VALUE ON
THE DATE OF THE COMPLAINT.
POINT III
THE LOWER COURT IN ENTERING THE DOMESTIC
RELATIONS ORDER LIMITING PLAINTIFF'S INTEREST
IN DEFENDANT'S PENSION TO A MONTHLY AMOUNT
CALCULATED BY USING DATE OF COMPLAINT VALUES
IS NOT ONLY AT ODDS WITH ITS OWN INTENTION
THAT PLAINTIFF RECEIVE HER SHARE WITH INTEREST
BUT WITH THE PRINCIPLES OF FAIRNESS AND
EQUITY.
Since these arguments involve overlapping issues of pension
evaluation and distribution, we consider them together.
the average annual compensation for which
contributions are made for the three years of
creditable service in New Jersey immediately
preceding the member's retirement or death, or
it shall mean the average annual compensation
for New Jersey service for which contributions
are made during any three fiscal years of his
or her membership providing the largest
possible benefit to the member or the member's
beneficiary.
[N.J.S.A. 43:15A-6h.]
The computation of the total monthly retirement allowance is
derived through application of two variable factors to the
statutory formula: (1) years of creditable service; and (2) the
greater of the average annual compensation for the three years of
creditable service immediately prior to retirement or the average
annual compensation during any three years of creditable service,
whichever provides the largest possible benefit. N.J.S.A. 43:15A-48b.
At the time of retirement, the member shall receive benefits
in a retirement allowance payable throughout life. However, the
member may, on retirement, elect to receive the present actuarial
value equivalent of the retirement allowance in a lesser retirement
allowance payable throughout life, under one of four options
contained in N.J.S.A. 43:15A-50. Under those options, by
converting the retirement allowance at retirement to a present
actuarial value, this section permits the member to have the
balance, or a designated portion, of the actuarial value paid to a
designated beneficiary in the event the member dies prior to
receiving the full actuarial value through receipt of the monthly
pension benefit. As defendant has not yet "retired," there is no
way of determining whether he will seek any of those options. The
present actuarial value determined by Pension Evaluators, Inc.
assumed a retirement allowance computed in accordance with the
formula contained in N.J.S.A. 43:15A-48b and computed the present
value of the pension to reflect anticipated events, without regard
to any other options available under N.J.S.A. 43:15A-50. See
29 U.S.C.A.
§1002(27).
As a defined-benefit plan, defendant's retirement allowance
will be calculated at the time of his retirement based on the
formula contained in N.J.S.A. 43:15A-48b, unless, on retirement, he
elects one of the options contained in N.J.S.A. 43:15A-50. In
either event, the amount of the retirement allowance is not
dependent on the contributions defendant makes towards the plan.
However, a percentage of defendant's base salary is deducted each
year and placed into the PERS annuity savings fund. As noted,
effective July 1, 1996 the contribution rate was five-percent of
gross earnings. In 1996 the State deducted $2,363.04 from
defendant's base salary as his contribution to this mandatory
retirement plan.
Plaintiff argues the motion judge erred in basing his decision
on the pension-evaluation case of Hayden v. Hayden,
284 N.J. Super. 418 (App. Div. 1995), and ignoring the future-interests
distribution case of Moore v. Moore,
114 N.J. 147 (1989).
Plaintiff asserts Hayden involved a pension case where the spouse
was presently receiving her payout in monthly installments with
interest. In contrast, here, plaintiff states she must wait until
the year 2010 to begin receiving her share of the pension in
monthly installments and that the motion judge failed to award
interest. Plaintiff argues Hayden was a present-valuation case and
is inapplicable because this matter is a deferred-payout case.
Plaintiff asserts the method used in Moore v. Moore should be
applied here. Defendant maintains the motion judge properly relied
on Hayden and that plaintiff is not entitled to any post-divorce
increases in defendant's retirement benefits.
In her reply brief plaintiff argues defendant's assertion that
plaintiff accepted defendant's $330.95 per-month proposal is
inadmissible under N.J.R.E. 408 because it was part of the parties'
settlement negotiations. Plaintiff also argues in her reply brief
that defendant's conversations with Ted Long of Pension Appraisers,
Inc. are inadmissible hearsay. Because the issues raised on this
appeal can be determined without consideration of plaintiff's prior
acceptance of the $330.95 per month proposal or defendant's
conversations with Mr. Long, we need not address those arguments.
In Moore, 114 N.J. at 151, the Court held the right to receive
future post-retirement cost-of-living increases payable to
pensioners under the New Jersey Police and Firemen's Retirement
system (PFRS) qualifies as marital property subject to equitable
distribution. However, the extent of inclusion of such post-retirement cost-of-living increases is limited to those
attributable to the portion of the pension that was earned during
the marriage. Ibid.
In Moore, the parties were married in 1961 and the complaint
for divorce was filed in August 1979. The parties had two children
and acquired significant assets. At issue was the valuation of the
husband's PFRS pension and the method of distribution of the wife's
share. The valuation expert made assumptions regarding interest
rates and mortality and then calculated the discounted current
value of that portion of the pension accruing from contributions
made during the marriage. The specific issue in Moore was whether
the value of the pension should include future salary increases and
post-retirement cost-of-living increases.
The Court recognized that the right to receive benefits
accruing to a spouse subsequent to a divorce are subject to
equitable distribution if they are related to the joint efforts of
the parties. Id. at 154 (citing, Whitfield v. Whitfield,
222 N.J.
Super. 36, 47 (App. Div. 1987); Amato v. Amato,
180 N.J. Super. 210, 219 (App. Div. 1981); Kikkert v. Kikkert,
177 N.J. Super. 471,
475 (App. Div.), aff'd o.b.,
88 N.J. 4 (1981); Weir v. Weir,
173 N.J. Super. 130, 133-34 (App. Div. 1980); McGrew v. McGrew,
151 N.J. Super. 515, 518 (App. Div. 1977); Scherzer v. Scherzer,
136 N.J. Super. 397, 401-02 (App. Div. 1975), certif. denied,
69 N.J. 391 (1976); Blitt v. Blitt,
139 N.J. Super. 213, 217-18 (Ch. Div.
1979)).
The Court noted post-retirement cost-of-living increases are
paid by the government and are unrelated to the employee's future
personal efforts and are attributable to past contributions and
service. Moore, 114 N.J. at 157. This reasoning is based on the
fact there would be no post-retirement cost-of-living increases
without the past contributions and service. Ibid. Clearly, the
portion of the contributions and services to the plan made during
the marriage relate to the joint efforts of the marital partners.
Accordingly, that segment of cost-of-living increases attributable
to those contributions and services made during the marriage from
the joint efforts of both parties are subject to equitable
distribution. Ibid.
The fact that these benefits become due and owing subsequent
to the divorce does not immunize them from equitable distribution.
Id. at 158. The Court explained:
The uncertainties and contingencies
inherent in such future benefits are issues
that go to how and when such benefits are to
be equitably distributed, not to whether they
should be distributed. Regardless of the
speculative nature of future post-retirement
cost-of-living benefits they are not immune
from equitable distribution.
[Id. at 158-59.]
The Court noted that in equitable distribution cases not involving
pensions New Jersey courts have included future unaccrued benefits
in present-value calculations. Id. at 159. (Citing, Dugan v.
Dugan,
92 N.J. 423, 433 (1983); Stern v. Stern,
66 N.J. 340, 346
(1975)).
The Court recognized there are two ways trial courts have
equitably distributed pensions _ the "deferred-distribution" method
and the present-value "immediate offset or payment" method. Moore,
114 N.J. at 159. The major drawback of the present-value method is
the difficulty inherent in fixing a present value for future
benefits. Id. at 160. The Court then discussed a third
alternative:
We recognize that this method [present
value distribution method], while preferred,
is not the only way in which an equitable
share of a future contingent benefit could
ever be awarded. Indeed, in addition to the
deferred distribution method, in situations in
which the future contingent benefit is not
very likely to accrue, a form of partial
deferred distribution could be employed.
The `partial deferred distribution'
approach would entail a current valuation
award of the appropriate share of the non-contingent portion of the pension and a
deferred distribution of the share of the
contingent benefits if and when they are paid
to the employee spouse. The `partial deferred
distribution award' is supported by some
precedent. (citations omitted). This method
of distribution would allow the non-employee
spouse immediate enjoyment of part of his or
her equitable distribution award and yet
effectively protect his or her right to share
future contingent benefits.
[Id. at 161.]
The Court cautioned that because this method prolongs entanglement
of the parties, the "partial deferred distribution" method should
be used only where the future benefit is extremely contingent or
the parties have agreed to employ such an alternative. Id. at 161-62.
After discussing the detriments and benefits of these various
distribution methods, the Court concluded:
Accordingly, we encourage use of the
`immediate payment' approach. We recognize,
however, that in some instances the `deferred
distribution' or `partial deferred
distribution' approach will be appropriate.
Courts must decide which to use based on
sometimes competing considerations: the
elimination of strife between the parties, the
ease with which the present value of the
pension may be ascertained, and the ability of
the employee spouse to pay the non-employee
spouse the current cash value of the pension.
[Id. at 162.]
In Moore, finding the risk that the husband would not receive post-retirement cost-of-living increases was slight, the Court found it
appropriate to include them in the present-value calculation. Id.
at 165-66. Because any post-retirement cost-of-living increases
attributable to that portion of the pension earned after the
marriage are not subject to equitable distribution, the Court
stated:
To determine the post-retirement cost-of-living increases subject to equitable
distribution we apply what some courts refer
to as the `coverture fraction.' [citations
omitted]. The numerator of this fraction is
the total period of time that the employee-spouse participated in the plan during his
marriage. The denominator is the total period
of time that the employee spouse participated
in the plan. [citation omitted]. The
fraction is then applied to post-retirement
cost-of-living increases to determine the
percentage of those increases that are
attributable to the employee spouse's
participation in the pension.
[Id. at 166.]
Here, the Pension Evaluators, Inc. report did include future
post-retirement cost-of-living increases in its present-value
calculation of defendant's pension and the coverture fraction was
applied. Accordingly, the evaluation of defendant's pension
followed the Moore analysis.
However, the present-value offset distribution method is only
appropriate when there are sufficient other marital assets against
which to offset the non-pensioner's equitable distribution interest
in the pension, or sufficient income available to facilitate a
reasonable buy-out of the non-pensioner spouse's interest.
Whitfield v. Whitfield, 222 N.J. Super. at 50. Where there are
insufficient assets or income to do so, the deferred-distribution
method must be employed. The partial-deferred-distribution method
is inapplicable because the future PERS benefit is virtually
assured.
Here, the parties attempted to use a combination of both
distribution methods. Since plaintiff desired full ownership of
the jointly-owned marital domicile, defendant's present-value
interest in the home was quantified as $28,500. In order to pay
defendant for his interest in the home to effectuate the title
transfer, it was necessary to translate plaintiff's interest in
defendant's PERS pension into present-value dollars. The October
14, 1997 Pension Appraisers, Inc. report converts the value of
defendant's pension into present-value dollars as of the date of
filing of the divorce complaint, and then applies a coverture
fraction to factor-out that portion of the value attributable to
his PERS service prior to the marriage.
The adjusted present-dollar value of defendant's pension as of
the date the divorce complaint was filed was $100,341.98. The
parties recognized plaintiff was entitled to 50" of that value, or,
approximately $50,170.99. It was against this amount that
defendant's $28,500 interest in the marital domicile was offset.
We calculate that left plaintiff with a present-value interest in
defendant's pension of approximately $21,670.99, which equates to
approximately twenty-two percent of defendant's present-dollar
actuarial value of the coverture portion of the pension. The issue
was how to distribute that remaining twenty-two percent interest to
plaintiff. As there were no remaining assets against which to
offset its present value and insufficient income to effectuate a
reasonable buy-out, the parties elected to effect that distribution
through a QDRO.
The motion judge accepted defendant's position that plaintiff
be distributed twenty-two percent of the accrued-value monthly
pension benefit of defendant based upon the assumptions contained
in the present-actuarial-evaluation analysis in the October 14,
1997 Pension Appraisers, Inc. report. This was error, since it
resulted in an improper mixture of two separate and distinct
evaluation and distribution methods by valuing the pension in
present-day dollars and then delaying distribution to a date more
than ten years into the future. Converting the pension interest to
present-value dollars is done for the express purpose of present-value distribution, not a deferred distribution of present-value
dollars. We specifically disapproved of this approach in
Whitfield, stating:
We take this opportunity to note one
variation on the offset distribution method
which we specifically disapprove: to assign a
present value to the pension at the time of
the divorce; calculate the spouse's share
based on that present value, and defer
distribution until the pension is received.
Such an approach is indefensible. The only
reason for discounting to present value is to
justify the payment in present dollars of a
sum of money which is not due, if at all,
until some time in the future. Obviously, if
distribution is deferred until that future
date, discounting is unnecessary. The actual
sum of the pension received is then to be
shared, not some past value to which the
spouse had not had access in the interim. As
it would be unjust to require the pensioner to
pay a full share of a future entitlement at
the time of the divorce without discount, so
it would be unthinkable to require the
pensioner's spouse to defer receipt of an
equitable share of the pension until a future
date but reduce that entitlement to its value
as of the time of the divorce. Simply put,
future benefits should not be paid in present
dollars without a discount and present
benefits should not be discounted to the value
of past dollars.
[Whitfield, 222 N.J. Super. at 51-52.]
This reasoning is in accord with that of other jurisdictions.
In In re Marriage of Kelm,
912 P.2d 545, 549 (Colo. 1996), a
defined-benefit pension valuation and distribution case, the
husband argued that application of the "time rule" formulaSee footnote 2
improperly permitted the wife to share in his enhanced pension
benefits attributable to his post-dissolution efforts and in
benefits calculated on the basis of his post-dissolution earnings.
In rejecting the husband's argument, the Colorado Supreme Court
stated, in relevant part:
Husband's attempt to freeze the value of
the pension at the time of dissolution and at
the same time reap the rewards of deferred
distribution is patently unfair to the wife,
who must wait to receive her share. Similarly,
husband's proposed present day valuation of
his pension based upon his continued
employment until the thirty-year mark is
irrelevant if the deferred distribution method
is used.
[Id. at 550.]
We are in accord with this reasoning. See also Bishop v. Bishop,
440 S.E.2d 591, 596 (N.C.App. 1994), and Pulliam v. Pulliam,
796 P.2d 623, 626 (Okl. 1990), reaching similar results.
Defendant contends that under Hayden, it would be inequitable
for plaintiff to receive twenty-two percent of his retirement
benefit because that allowance will be calculated based upon his
last three years' salary, improperly allowing plaintiff to share in
his future salary increases. Defendant's reliance on Hayden is
misplaced.
In Hayden, the husband was age forty-three and enrolled in the
State Police Retirement System (N.J.S.A. 53:5A-1 to -47) and had
accrued 17.74 years of service in his retirement plan. Hayden, 284
N.J. Super. at 421. He was expected to retire at age fifty-five,
at which time he would be entitled to a pension amounting to two
percent of his salary in his last year of employment, multiplied by
the number of years of service. By retiring at age fifty-five,
with over thirty years of service, defendant would qualify for a
pension of approximately seventy percent of final compensation.
Ibid. The wife's valuation expert determined the present actuarial
value of the husband's pension at $188,290, including an estimated
salary increase until retirement of 3.2 percent based on inflation
and made no reduction for tax consequences or calculations for the
husband's lack of Social Security benefits.See footnote 3 Ibid.
The husband's pension valuation expert determined the present
actuarial value at $106,162.81, approximately $82,000 less, because
his evaluation did not include future salary increases, and he also
reduced the current pension valuation by $26,160.38, representing
Social Security benefits the husband would have received had he
been enrolled in Social Security. Id. at 421-22.
In Hayden, we decided the issue unaddressed in Moore of
whether post-judgment, pre-retirement, salary increases should be
included when performing a present actuarial valuation of a defined
benefit pension plan. Moore dealt with future post-retirement
cost-of-living pension benefit increases, where the Court ruled
they were subject to equitable distribution. 114 N.J. at 151. In
Hayden, we determined post-judgment, pre-retirement salary
increases should not be included, stating, in relevant part:
Alternatively, an industry or governmental
unit may ostensibly grant a cost-of-living
increase, irrespective of the merit of the
employees' collective efforts. We are told
that historically such increases have been
given to the State Police and some other
public employees. Yet to insure even these
benefits, the bargaining agent of the public
employees trades off other benefits such as
increased raises based upon years of service,
merit increases or the like. With each year's
contract, a new balance is struck. Thus, the
employee's post-divorce efforts, although on a
collective basis, have occasioned even a
regular cost-of-living increase. We,
therefore, reject the inclusion of anticipated
post-divorce, pre-retirement cost-of-living
increases in valuing defendant's pension.
[Hayden, 284 N.J. Super. at 424.]
The pension evaluations completed in Hayden were for purposes
of determining the present actuarial value of the husband's pension
for purposes of immediate asset offset and current payment in
present-value dollars.
Here, while the present actuarial value of defendant's pension
was needed for an offset, in present-value dollars, of a portion of
plaintiff's interest in his PERS pension in return for ownership of
the marital domicile, distribution of the remaining twenty-two
percent interest of plaintiff in that portion of the pension
accruing during coverture was deferred until defendant's retirement
in the year 2010. Hayden is a present-value distribution case.
This case is a deferred-distribution case. As we noted in
Whitfield, "future benefits should not be paid in present dollars
without a discount and present benefits should not be discounted to
the value of past dollars." 222 N.J. Super. at 52.
The deferred distribution of plaintiff's remaining interest in
defendant's PERS pension, discounted to present-value dollars, is
inequitable and inappropriate. Such a distribution ignores the
fact plaintiff receives no interest or other enhanced value of her
present-value interest, while defendant's interest in his pension
continues to accelerate in value.
We are satisfied that application of the coverture fraction to
the statutory formula through a QDRO in the form proposed by
plaintiff is a fair and equitable manner of distributing to
plaintiff her remaining twenty-two percent interest in defendant's
PERS pension. As we recently noted in Reinbold v. Reinbold,
311 N.J. Super. 460 (App. Div. 1998), in a deferred distribution of the
non-employee spouse's interest, the longer the pensioner works, the
larger the denominator of the coverture fraction,
thus reducing the non-employee spouse's
percentage share and assuring the employee
spouse the benefits of his or her post-divorce
labors. In general, `the non-employee spouse
will receive a decreasing percentage of an
increasing benefit.' William M. Troyan,
Pension Evaluation and Equitable Distribution,
10 Fam.L.Rep. 3001, 3007 (1983).
[Id. at 467 (emphasis supplied).]
Here, the parties agreed on a partial-deferred distribution
method. Defendant forfeited his $28,500 interest in the marital
home in exchange for a credit against plaintiff's interest in his
deferred pension benefits. Instead of the pension benefits being
divided at fifty percent, the parties agreed plaintiff would
receive twenty-two percent of defendant's pension benefits which
accrued during coverture up until the date the divorce complaint
was filed.
Defendant explains his pension plan is a "defined benefit"
plan which is not based on contributions placed into the plan.
Defendant states his pension payout benefit will be calculated
based on the average of his final three years salary with the
State. We note that while his pension will likely be calculated on
his last three years' salary, N.J.S.A. 43:15A-6h defines "final
compensation" as the three highest-salaried years. Defendant
expects to retire in the year 2010. He argues the court in Marx v.
Marx,
265 N.J. Super. 418 (Ch. Div. 1993), recognized the fact that
a defined benefit pension plan is not calculated by the
accumulation of an employer's contributions into the plan and that
the court only used a coverture fraction because the parties in
that case did not provide an alternative method to calculate the
employee spouse's deferred annual retirement benefit as of the date
the complaint was filed. Defendant asserts the plaintiff in Marx
will receive more than her appropriate share of her former
husband's pension because she will receive post-divorce increases
of his pension value as a result of post-divorce salary increases.
In contrast, defendant argues in this matter his pension expert,
Pension Appraisers, Inc., has provided an appropriate method for
computing his deferred monthly retirement benefit as of the date
the complaint was filed. We disagree. The present actuarial
evaluation of defendant's PERS pension was completed to allow the
parties to factor-out a portion of plaintiff's interest in
defendant's pension equal to $28,500 to determine the appropriate
percentage value of plaintiff's remaining interest.
Application of the coverture fraction, applied at the time the
benefits convert to pay status at retirement, will assure defendant
maintains the fruits of his post-divorce labor. When the
denominator of the coverture fraction increases with the increasing
number of years defendant is enrolled in the PERS plan, a lower
coverture fraction is used to compute plaintiff's twenty-two
percent interest. Reinbold, 311 N.J. Super. at 466-67.
This holding is not contrary to other case law ruling that
post-divorce, pre-retirement increases in salary as a result of the
efforts of one spouse are not subject to equitable distribution.
Moore, 114 N.J. at 158; Ryan v. Ryan,
261 N.J. Super. 689 (Ch. Div.
1992). In a QDRO, the post-divorce, pre-retirement earnings are
not distributed; rather, they simply form the basis for one of the
factors used to perform the statutory calculation yielding the
pension allowance. Application of the coverture factor prevents
distribution to plaintiff of defendant's post-divorce, pre-retirement earnings. Reinbold, 311 N.J. Super. at 467. As noted
by the motion judge, under Moore, 114 N.J. at 151, post-retirement
cost-of-living increases attributable to the portion of the pension
earned during coverture are distributable and should be so
reflected in the QDRO.
Footnote: 1The only figure quantified in this formula at the time of divorce is the number of years defendant was enrolled in PERS during coverture. In a deferred-distribution QDRO, the total years enrolled in PERS and the pension allowance can only be determined at the time of retirement. Footnote: 2The "time-rule" formula incorporates a "coverture fraction," which comprises a numerator, the length of time of creditable service in the pension system during the marriage, over the denominator, the length of total creditable pension service. The coverture fraction is then divided, usually in half, to reflect the division of the pension benefits attributable to the marriage. Footnote: 3PFRS members are not participants in the Social Security system.