IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT KNOXVILLE
August 17, 2011 Session
CASANDRA CORNWELL v. TROY CORNWELL
Appeal from the General Sessions Court for Blount County
No. S-12137 Robert L. Headrick, Judge
No. E2010-02654-COA-R3-CV-FILED-SEPTEMBER 27, 2011
This case involves the plaintiff’s motion seeking an order holding her former husband in
contempt for failing to make certain monthly payments of $1,071 from his military retirement
as required by the terms of a marital dissolution agreement incorporated into the parties’
divorce judgment. The wife’s former spouse stopped making the payments after the wife
remarried. The trial court denied the motion upon finding that the payments in question were
alimony subject to modification rather than a property distribution as the wife contends. The
court held that Mr. Cornwell “properly” stopped paying the “alimony” when his former wife
remarried. The wife has appealed. We reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand
for a hearing on the wife’s motion.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the General Sessions Court
Reversed; Case Remanded
C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL
S WINEY and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.
John W. Cleveland, Sr., Sweetwater, Tennessee, for the appellant, Casandra Cooper,
formerly Cornwell.
Martha Meares and Paul Dillard, Maryville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Troy Cornwell.
OPINION
I.
The material facts in this case are not in dispute. Casandra Cooper (“Wife”), formerly
Cornwell, and Troy Cornwell (“Husband”) were divorced on February 25, 2005. The divorce
judgment approved and incorporated a marital dissolution agreement (“the MDA”) executed
by the parties, which the trial court found to be a “fair and equitable distribution of the
parties’ marital assets and liabilities.” The court made no findings in its judgment of need
or other factors that would justify or otherwise indicate an award of alimony, nor did it make
any reference to “alimony” words such as spousal support, maintenance or alimony. The
MDA likewise makes no mention of need or factors that would justify or indicate an award
of alimony. In fact, the MDA makes absolutely no mention of alimony in any way. To the
contrary, the MDA states that its purpose is to “make a complete settlement of the parties’
respective property rights, child support and co-parenting, and provide for other rights and
obligations growing out of the marital relationship . . . .” The MDA does recite that
Husband’s gross annual income is $84,000; the section of the MDA in which Wife’s income
would have been set forth is noted to be “Not Applicable.” Paragraph 6 of the MDA is the
focal point of this appeal. It states,
Wife shall receive a monthly payment of One Thousand
Seventy-One Dollars ($1,071.00) from Husband’s military
retirement account, pension plan, IRA or 401(k) plan, free from
any claim, let or hindrance of Husband. Wife shall receive this
payment until the youngest child reaches the age of eighteen.
The MDA awarded one vehicle to Husband and made him responsible for the payments on
that vehicle; awarded the other vehicle to Wife and made her responsible for the payments;
and awarded the marital home to Wife and made her responsible for the mortgage. It also
awarded the parties their separate properties brought into the marriage. There was no
language in the MDA directly or indirectly indicating an award of alimony.
Wife remarried in January 2006. Husband continued to make the court-decreed
monthly payments until mid-2008 when, acting upon the advice of counsel, he stopped. Wife
filed a motion on March 18, 2009, asking that Husband be held in contempt and be ordered
to pay “the sum of $9,426[] which is the total of all missed payments and that he be required
to keep all future payments current.”
The court heard the testimony of the parties in a hearing held July 27, 2009. The
parties stipulated on the record the facts we have recited to this point. Wife testified that,
after the divorce, she received numerous pieces of mail addressed to Husband that indicated
they contained retirement benefit information from “T. Rowe Price.” She did not open the
mail. Husband testified that his only retirement benefit was his military retirement.
After hearing argument of counsel, the court announced from the bench that it would
be denying the motion “in light of . . . the Duncan vs. Duncan matter.” The court was
referring to the case of Wynona (Duncan) Dunn v. Robert Duncan, M2004-02216-COA-
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R3-CV, 2006 WL 1233046 (Tenn. Ct. App. M.S., filed May 8, 2006). Its order adopts
Husband’s proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and states that “[t]he payment
of money to [Wife] by [Husband] in the . . . [MDA] was Alimony in Futuro.” The court
further held that Husband “properly stopped paying alimony to [Wife] as a result of her
remarriage.”
II.
Wife timely filed a notice of appeal. The issue as stated in her brief is:
Whether the Trial Court erred in finding that [Husband’s]
installment payments of equitably divided marital property to
[Wife] are alimony in futuro.
III.
Although the trial court purported to adopt “findings of fact” recited by Husband, we
note that little if any dispute exists as to the facts. Rather, this case involves the correct
interpretation of the meaning and effect of the MDA which is reviewed as stated in Barnes
v. Barnes, 193 S.W.3d 495, 498 (Tenn. 2006):
A marital dissolution agreement is a contract and thus is
generally subject to the rules governing construction of
contracts. Johnson v. Johnson, 37 S.W.3d 892, 896 (Tenn.
2001); Honeycutt v. Honeycutt, 152 S.W.3d 556, 561 (Tenn. Ct.
App. 2003). Because “the interpretation of a contract is a matter
of law, our review is de novo on the record with no presumption
of correctness in the trial court's conclusions of law.”
Honeycutt, 152 S.W.3d at 561 (citations omitted).
Our goal in interpreting the MDA
is to ascertain and give effect to the parties' intentions. Ahern
v. Ahern, 15 S.W.3d 73, 81 (Tenn. 2000). Our search for the
parties' intentions must focus on the MDA itself. Each
provision of an MDA should be construed in light of the entire
MDA, and the language in these provisions should be given its
natural and ordinary meaning. We should construe MDAs fairly
and reasonably, and we should avoid rewriting these agreements
under the guise of “construing” them. Duvier v. Duvier, No.
-3-
01A01–9311–CH–00506, 1995 WL 422465, at *3 (Tenn. Ct.
App. July 19, 1995) (No Tenn. R.App. P. 11 application filed).
Elliott v. Elliott, 149 S.W.3d 77, 84 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2004).
IV.
We are constrained for several reasons to conclude that the payments in question were
a distribution of marital property, not subject to modification. See Johnson v. Johnson, 37
S.W.3d 892, 897 (Tenn. 2001)(apportionment of marital property is not subject to
modification). First, we are persuaded that if the parties had intended the payments to be
alimony, they would have called them something of that nature or at least made some
mention of some term indicative of spousal support. The MDA in this case recites an intent
to settle “respective property rights” but makes no mention of spousal support. Statutory
language at Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-5-121(m) (2010) that allows a court to affirm, ratify or
incorporate in its judgment “an agreement of the parties as to support and maintenance”
suggests to us that an agreement which makes no mention of need, maintenance, or spousal
support, cannot have been ratified or incorporated as an alimony award. Surely, an
agreement to provide some form of spousal support would make some mention of some term
that is at least synonymous with or indicative of alimony. Husband wants us to infer that
even though the parties referred in their MDA to “property rights” and proceeded to list the
military pension among the properties being divided, and even though the divorce judgment
recites that the MDA makes a “fair and equitable distribution of the parties’ marital assets
and liabilities” with no mention of spousal support, both the divorcing court and the parties
were really making provision for alimony. The facts simply do not compel such a decision.
Our second reason for holding that the ordered payment is a division of property is,
as Wife points out, that Tenn. Code Ann. § 36-4-121(b)(1)(B)(2010) defines “marital
property” to include “the value of vested and unvested pension, vested and unvested stock
option rights, retirement and other fringe benefit rights relating to employment that accrued
during the period of the marriage.” This is exactly the type of “property” that is the subject
of this appeal. The payment is to be made “from Husband’s military retirement account,
pension plan, IRA or 401(k) plan . . . .” Husband attempts to make much of the fact that his
military time was longer than the length of the marriage, and that he is now obligated to pay
Wife the full measure, rather than part, of his military retirement. Neither Husband nor this
Court is in a position to question the wisdom of the distribution agreed to by the parties. We
do not rewrite contracts simply to avoid harsh or unwise provisions. Ralph v. Pipkin, 183
S.W.3d 362, 367 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005).
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The payments at issue in this case were periodic distributions of marital property
rather than alimony. Husband testified at the hearing on the motion for contempt that the
only retirement account he has is the military retirement account. Husband attempts to
distinguish the Johnson case by arguing that because Wife receives 100% of the money in
the account until such time as the youngest child reaches the age of majority, “[t]here is no
division of military retirement benefits in the present matter.” (Emphasis added.) He further
states, “If there had been a division of the marital portion, it would have been for a fractional
amount of the benefit just like the wife in Johnson who received ‘half.’ ” (Emphasis added).
Husband’s argument that the resolution of this contention depends upon percentages does not
persuade us. The fact of the matter is that Husband has not bargained away 100% of this
asset. He will start receiving whatever the pension pays when his youngest child reaches
majority. The length of Husband’s life and other factors will eventually determine what
percentage of the sum total of the retirement benefits goes to Husband.
For the reasons we have stated, we hold that the trial court erred in treating the
payment of “$1,071[] from Husband’s military retirement account” as alimony. It was a
distribution of marital property that, under the holding of Johnson, was not subject to
modification. The trial court’s reliance on Dunn v. Duncan, 2006 WL 1233046 (Tenn. Ct.
App. May 8, 2006) is misplaced. In Dunn the marital dissolution agreement clearly
provided spousal support to Mrs. Duncan. The parties called the award “Alimony in Solido.”
Id. at *1. The issue in that case was whether certain contingencies in the marital dissolution
agreement about Mr. Duncan’s continued employment and abilities versus disabilities meant
that the parties had mislabeled as alimony in solido what was actually alimony in futuro,
subject to modification. We held that the contingencies kept the spousal support award from
being alimony in solido and affirmed the trial court’s termination of the alimony in futuro
payment upon Mrs. Duncan’s marriage to Mr. Dunn. Id. at *4. Under the facts of the instant
appeal, Dunn has no precedential value.
V.
The judgment of the trial court is reversed. Costs on appeal are taxed to the appellee,
Troy Cornwell. This case is remanded, pursuant to applicable law, for a hearing on Wife’s
motion consistent with this opinion.
_______________________________
CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., JUDGE
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