Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER.
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THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
GLORIA DUNMORE, )
) Supreme Court Nos. S-16433/16523
Appellant, ) (Consolidated)
)
v. ) Superior Court No. 3AN-15-08222 CI
)
RICHARD DUNMORE, ) OPINION
)
Appellee. ) No. 7246 – May 11, 2018
)
Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Third
Judicial District, Anchorage, Mark Rindner, Judge.
Appearances: Gloria Dunmore, pro se, Manning, South
Carolina, Appellant. Kenneth P. Jacobus, Kenneth P.
Jacobus, P.C., Anchorage, for Appellee.
Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Bolger,
and Carney, Justices.
MAASSEN, Justice.
I. INTRODUCTION
A husband and wife divorced after 40 years of marriage. The wife appeals
the superior court’s decision to equally divide their marital property, which consisted
primarily of retirement benefits and debt. The superior court declined to consider how
the couple’s Social Security benefits affected a fair distribution, believing that our case
law precluded it from doing so. But we hold that although federal law prohibited any
allocation of the parties’ Social Security benefits, the court could consider them as
evidence of the parties’ financial condition in crafting an equitable division of the marital
property.
The wife raises a number of other challenges to the property division, but
we conclude they lack merit. We vacate the order dividing the marital property and
remand for further consideration in light of the parties’ Social Security benefits.
II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Gloria and Richard Dunmore were married in 1975 and separated in July
2007.1 It was eight years later — in July 2015 — that Richard filed a complaint for
divorce. Trial on the division of their property took place in April 2016, when Gloria
was 61 years old and Richard was about to turn 64. Following trial the superior court
issued written findings of fact and conclusions of law, entered the divorce decree, and
issued orders dividing the parties’ pensions.
During the marriage Richard had spent three years working for the military,
16 years working for what his testimony describes as the “State of Alaska Housing
Authority,”2 and 13 years in the federal civil service. He retired in 2012. He received
Veterans Administration (VA) disability benefits of $133 per month, Social Security
disability benefits of $2,081 per month, and a Federal Employees Retirement System
(FERS) pension benefit of approximately $360 per month.
Gloria had worked for the State of Alaska for approximately 35 years
before retiring in 2009. She received a monthly benefit from the Public Employees
Retirement System (PERS) in the gross amount of $5,762. She testified that she would
1
Between 2000 and 2007 the parties lived in different parts of the house as
“roommates” but continued to share responsibility for household bills.
2
The record does not explain this employment any further. Neither party
asserts that at the time of retirement Richard was entitled to any benefits as a result of
this employment.
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become eligible for Social Security when she turned 62 the next year, though her benefits
would be higher if she waited until she was 66 to receive them. She could only estimate
how much she would eventually receive from Social Security; her eligibility was based
on a low-paying job she had held many years before. She had no plans to seek eligibility
based on her marriage to Richard.
During the parties’ separation, Richard had cashed out a Thrift Savings Plan
totaling $4,471 and accepted a voluntary separation incentive payout from the military
in the amount of $25,000. He did not share any of these funds, or the money from his
FERS pension, with Gloria. Nor did Gloria share her pension benefits with Richard. But
at trial Richard expressly disavowed any claim to the PERS benefits Gloria received
during the separation, even though they amounted to several hundred thousand dollars.
Gloria and Richard had two significant marital debts. One, to the IRS,
stemmed from their 2006 federal taxes. The superior court found that the outstanding
balance at the time of trial was $13,172.30. Gloria testified that she was unaware of this
debt and admitted that she had made no payments on it.
The other debt involved a “parent-student loan” in the amount of $32,000
taken out in 1999 for the benefit of the parties’ daughter. Richard testified he was
unaware of this debt. Neither party had made any payments on it, and it appeared to
have grown over the years to nearly $70,000.
In its written findings and conclusions, the superior court stated that it had
considered all relevant factors and determined “that an equal distribution of property
[wa]s appropriate.” It therefore divided the parties’ pensions equally, and it issued
orders that equally divided Gloria’s PERS and Richard’s FERS benefits attributable to
the period between the date of their marriage in September 1975 and the date of their
separation in July 2007. The court also equally divided the liability for the marital debt,
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though it observed that the parent-student loan should be their child’s responsibility “in
the first instance.”
The court observed that its division of the marital property did not take into
account the parties’ Social Security benefits and that this result was unfair. Gloria’s
“relatively large retirement” was shared equally with Richard, Richard’s “small civil
service retirement” was shared equally with Gloria, and Richard’s concurrent receipt of
Social Security and VA benefits — which the court by law could not divide — meant
that Richard was receiving significantly more each month than Gloria despite the 50/50
split, at least until Gloria began receiving Social Security benefits. But the court believed
this result was mandated by our case law, and in a later order it encouraged Gloria to
appeal the issue and seek a change in the law.
Gloria appeals, raising the Social Security issue and several others related
to the division of the marital estate.3
III. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
“A trial court’s ‘equitable division of marital assets involves three steps:
(1) determining what property is available for distribution, (2) finding the value of the
property, and (3) dividing the property equitably.’ ”4 “We review the first and second
steps, which involve factual findings ‘as to the parties’ intent, actions, and contributions
3
Gloria filed a subsequent appeal challenging the denial of her request for
a stay of enforcement of the Qualified Domestic Relations Order governing her PERS
benefits; the two appeals were consolidated. Gloria does not expand on this argument
in her briefs, however, and we do not consider it. See Brady v. State, 965 P.2d 1, 20
(Alaska 1998) (“Despite our solicitude for pro se litigants, we must conclude that he has
waived the claim by failing to brief it adequately.”).
4
Wagner v. Wagner, 386 P.3d 1249, 1251 (Alaska 2017) (quoting Limeres
v. Limeres, 320 P.3d 291, 296 (Alaska 2014)).
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to the marital estate’ and the ‘valuation of property,’ for clear error.”5 We find clear
error “if, upon review of the entire record, we are left with a firm and definite conviction
that a mistake has been made.”6 “We review the third step, ‘the equitable allocation of
property,’ for abuse of discretion.”7 “A property division is an abuse of discretion if it
is clearly unjust; it will also be set aside if it is based on a clearly erroneous factual
finding or mistake of law.”8 “[W]hether the trial court applied the correct legal rule in
exercising its discretion is a question of law that we review de novo using our
independent judgment.”9
IV. DISCUSSION
A. The Parties’ Social Security Benefits May Be Considered In The
Division Of Their Marital Property As Evidence Of Their Financial
Condition.
As the superior court summarized its property division, Gloria had “a
relatively large retirement which was equally divided” (her PERS pension); Richard had
“a small civil service retirement which was equally divided” (his FERS pension); and
Richard also received “[S]ocial [S]ecurity and VA disability payments which by law the
court cannot divide.” Because the court believed it could not even consider the existence
of the parties’ Social Security benefits, the effect of its property division was that —
despite the 50/50 split — Richard received a considerably greater monthly income than
5
Id. (quoting Limeres, 320 P.3d at 296).
6
Fortson v. Fortson, 131 P.3d 451, 456 (Alaska 2006) (citing Schmitz v.
Schmitz, 88 P.3d 1116, 1121 (Alaska 2004)).
7
Wagner, 386 P.3d at 1251 (quoting Limeres, 320 P.3d at 296).
8
Id. (citing Jones v. Jones, 942 P.2d 1133, 1136 (Alaska 1997)).
9
Richter v. Richter, 330 P.3d 934, 937 (Alaska 2014) (alteration in original)
(quoting Stanhope v. Stanhope, 306 P.3d 1282, 1286 (Alaska 2013)).
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Gloria, at least until she began receiving Social Security herself. Gloria argues that it
was error not to consider the effect of Social Security benefits in the property division.10
It was undisputed that at the time of trial Richard was already receiving
Social Security disability benefits, which would convert to retirement benefits when he
reached full retirement age, and that Gloria anticipated receiving Social Security benefits
a few years later. The superior court expressly stated that it would have liked to factor
these benefits into its property distribution but believed it was constrained from
considering even “the existence of such benefits” because of our decision in Cox v.
Cox.11
The superior court was correct that it could not lawfully divide the Social
Security benefits of either party.12 And courts may not evade the federal prohibition by
offsetting the Social Security benefits with a larger award of marital property to the other
10
Gloria asserts that the superior court considered her anticipated Social
Security benefits but not Richard’s, noting the court’s finding that she would “receive
Social Security in the amount of $2,470” if “she retire[d] at age 66.” Gloria appears to
misunderstand the court’s order; it did not include either party’s Social Security benefits,
received or anticipated, in its allocation of marital property.
11
882 P.2d 909 (Alaska 1994).
12
Hopper v. Hopper, 171 P.3d 124, 133 (Alaska 2007) (“We have recognized
that ‘[t]he doctrine of federal preemption prevents state courts from dividing [S]ocial
[S]ecurity benefits.’ ” (alterations in original) (quoting Mann v. Mann, 778 P.2d 590, 591
(Alaska 1989))).
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spouse.13 But it is a separate question whether the court may consider Social Security
benefits as one of the factors relevant to a fair allocation of the marital estate.
To answer this question we first address our opinion in Cox. In Cox we
affirmed a superior court’s decision not to consider a divorcing couple’s future Social
Security benefits when dividing their marital property.14 We noted that “[t]he employee
has no contractual right to [Social Security] benefits” and that “[t]he sum of the Social
Security taxes paid from an employee’s earnings are not a measure of any potential
Social Security benefits that the employee might receive upon retirement.”15 While
acknowledging that some states “have held that Social Security benefits are but one
factor to be considered in the disposition of the marital property, and that there is no
federal prohibition excluding their consideration in the divorce context,” we rejected this
approach as unwise “[g]iven the speculative nature of future Social Security benefits.”16
We recognize that Cox can be read as holding that Social Security benefits
will always be too speculative to be considered because of their gratuitous and non-
contractual nature. We reject that implication, however; that a retiree will receive some
amount in Social Security benefits is at least as predictable as the retiree’s receipt of
other pension and retiree medical benefits that our courts are routinely called upon to
13
See, e.g., Howell v. Howell, 137 S. Ct. 1400, 1405-06 (2017) (reversing
state trial court’s decision to offset husband’s VA disability benefits, which under federal
law are not divisible marital property, by awarding wife a pro-rata increase in husband’s
other retirement benefits); Hisquierdo v. Hisquierdo, 439 U.S. 572, 588-90 (1979)
(finding that state court could not offset husband’s Railroad Retirement Act benefits,
analogous to Social Security benefits, by awarding wife a pro rata increase in marital
property).
14
Cox, 882 P.2d at 920.
15
Id.
16
Id.
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prospectively divide.17 But the Social Security benefits at issue in Cox were speculative
in amount because the parties’ entitlement to them was still years in the future.18 We do
not read Cox as precluding the consideration of Social Security benefits when they can
be valued more readily and accurately — as here, where a party is already receiving
them.
We turn to the question of how a trial court goes about considering Social
Security benefits in this context while still respecting the bounds of federal preemption.
A minority of jurisdictions hold that Social Security benefits may not be considered at
all in marital property divisions; these courts “generally have concluded that no
principled line can be drawn between considering the existence or absence of anticipated
Social Security benefits as factors in effecting an equitable division of marital property
and making a prohibited offset of the value of such benefits against the value of other
assets.”19 A majority of jurisdictions, however, allow Social Security benefits to be
17
See, e.g., Hansen v. Hansen, 119 P.3d 1005, 1016 (Alaska 2005)
(acknowledging “inherent difficulties in attempting to calculate the value of” future
retiree health benefits but requiring trial court to value the benefits on remand for
purposes of “fashioning an equitable division”); Mann, 778 P.2d at 591-92 (discussing
types of retirement benefits that constitute marital assets and are subject to equitable
division).
18
The opinion does not state the parties’ ages, but it does observe that the
husband was “eight years older than [the wife] and [was] scheduled to retire in seven
years.” Cox, 822 P.2d at 919.
19
In re Marriage of Herald & Steadman, 322 P.3d 546, 556 (Or. 2014); see
In re Marriage of Crook, 813 N.E.2d 198, 205 (Ill. 2004). The Oregon Supreme Court
cited our opinion in Cox in support of this flat prohibition. Marriage of Herald &
Steadman, 322 P.3d at 556.
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considered as one of many factors necessary to ensuring a “just division that takes into
account all ‘relevant factors.’ ”20
We conclude that the latter approach is more consistent with the theory of
equitable division on which Alaska’s law of property division is based.21 Among the
Merrill factors a court must consider, as stated in the governing statute, is “the financial
condition of the parties.”22 As a general matter, “[t]he size of each spouse’s nonmarital
estate is clearly relevant to division of property,” as “[a] spouse with more nonmarital
property is in better financial condition” than the other.23 And few couples are likely to
plan financially for their retirement without taking Social Security into account; courts
should not be expected to equitably divide the parties’ marital property without
considering the factors that the parties themselves deem important to the exercise.24
20
Depot v. Depot, 893 A.2d 995, 1002 (Me. 2006) (quoting Me. Stat. tit. 19-A
§ 953(1) 2005)); see also In re Marriage of Boyer, 538 N.W.2d 293, 296 (Iowa 1995);
Biondo v. Biondo, 809 N.W.2d 397, 403 (Mich. 2011); Neville v. Neville, 791 N.E.2d
434, 437 (Ohio 2003); Marriage of Herald &Steadman, 322 P.3d at 557; In re Marriage
of Zahm, 978 P.2d 498, 502-03 (Wash. 1999).
21
See Burts v. Burts, 266 P.3d 337, 342 (Alaska 2011) (“Alaska uses a
statutory scheme of equitable division codified in AS 25.24.160(a)(4).”).
22
AS 25.24.160(a)(4)(D); Merrill v. Merrill, 368 P.2d 546, 547 n.4 (Alaska
1962).
23
2 BRETT R.TURNER,EQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION OF PROPERTY § 8:18, at 875
(3d ed. 2005). Turner warns, however, against either “award[ing] one spouse most of
the marital assets only because the other owns substantial nonmarital property” or
“divid[ing] the marital property so that each spouse’s total marital and nonmarital
property is equal”; “[b]oth of these option[s] are uncomfortably close to a division of
nonmarital property.” Id. at 876.
24
See Marriage of Herald & Steadman, 322 P.3d at 557.
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The Oregon Supreme Court addressed this issue in In re Marriage of
Herald & Steadman.25 The parties’ employment history made it likely that the husband
would receive Social Security benefits, whereas the wife would not.26 The trial court
concluded that it would be unjust for the husband to receive half the value of the wife’s
public retirement pension as well as his own Social Security benefits in full.27 The
Oregon Court of Appeals affirmed this conclusion, as did the Oregon Supreme Court,28
which explained:
[I]n light of the prohibition against assignment or transfer of
Social Security benefits . . . three considerations merit
particular emphasis. The first is whether it is probable that
one or both spouses will receive Social Security retirement
benefits in the foreseeable future. The second is whether the
anticipated benefits are a substantial financial consideration
when viewed in relation to the retirement assets and other
financial resources that likely will be available to each spouse
after the dissolution of their marriage. And, third and last, we
reiterate that Social Security benefits are not marital assets,
and their anticipated existence or absence therefore should be
considered — if at all — only in achieving an overall just and
proper division of the parties’ property.[29]
This approach is in line with the way we view other retirement assets that
by federal law cannot be divided. For example, “state courts have no power to equitably
25
Id. at 556-57.
26
Id. at 549.
27
Id.
28
Id.
29
Id. at 557-58 (footnotes omitted).
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divide VA disability benefits,”30 and we have therefore held that courts cannot treat VA
disability benefits as marital property subject to division, “either in form or [in]
substance” — for example, by simply “shift[ing] an [equivalent] amount of property . . .
from the military spouse’s side of the ledger to the other spouse’s side.”31 But we have
nevertheless concluded “that federal law does not preclude our courts from considering,
when equitably allocating property upon divorce, the economic consequences of” a
party’s decision to receive nondivisible disability pay rather than a divisible VA
pension.32 The statutory admonition that courts consider the parties’ “financial
condition”33 when deciding issues such as spousal maintenance and the division of
marital property allows consideration of even nondivisible assets. Thus in Guerrero v.
Guerrero, while reiterating our admonition against shifting property to the non-military
spouse’s side of the ledger in order to directly offset nondivisible disability pay, we
noted that the parties’ “financial conditions, including [the husband’s] receipt of his
military disability retirement benefits, must be considered when equitably dividing the
marital estate and when deciding whether to require alimony.”34
We follow the same course here. We hold that the superior court has
discretion to weigh the parties’ current and reasonably anticipated35 Social Security
30
Guerrero v. Guerrero, 362 P.3d 432, 441 (Alaska 2015) (citing Clauson
v. Clauson, 831 P.2d 1257, 1264 (Alaska 1992)).
31
Clauson, 831 P.2d at 1264.
32
Id.
33
AS 25.24.160(a)(2)(D), (a)(4)(D).
34
Guerrero, 362 P.3d at 445 (citing AS 25.24.160(a)(2)(D), (a)(4)(D)).
35
See Bradbury v. Bradbury, 893 A.2d 607, 609 (Me. 2006) (holding that trial
(continued...)
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benefits when considering their respective financial positions and deciding how to fairly
allocate the economic effect of divorce.
B. Challenges To The Property Division Based On The Merrill Factors
Were Not Litigated At Trial And Are Waived.
Gloria raises several other challenges to the superior court’s decision to
divide the marital property equally. The starting presumption is that an equal division
is the most equitable.36 But the court must also “consider the Merrill v. Merrill factors
now codified in AS 25.24.160(a)(4)”; these may justify something other than a 50/50
split.37 In this case the court stated that it had considered the relevant Merrill factors
“and conclude[d] that an equal distribution of property [was] appropriate.”
Though not citing Merrill, Gloria alleges that the court failed to give
appropriate weight to a number of circumstances that may be relevant to a Merrill
analysis. She asserts that Richard’s age and health are such that he could still work if he
chose to, whereas her age, the time she has spent out of the work force, and her physical
condition keep her from working.38 She claims that Richard was voluntarily
underemployed during their marriage; that he cashed in savings bonds she had
purchased, resulting in a tax penalty that she had to pay; that he took out a personal loan
35
(...continued)
court did not abuse its discretion in determining that husband’s anticipated Social
Security benefits were too speculative to be considered, given that husband was ten years
from retirement and “[b]oth parties’ experts expressed the difficulty of calculating the
value of his benefits ten years from now”).
36
Hooper v. Hooper, 188 P.3d 681, 685 (Alaska 2008) (quoting Burcell v.
Burcell, 713 P.2d 802, 805 (Alaska 1986)).
37
Id. at 686 (citing Merrill v. Merrill, 368 P.2d 546, 547 n.4 (Alaska 1962)).
38
See AS 25.24.160(a)(4)(B) and (C) (identifying “the age and health” and
“the earning capacity of the parties” as relevant factors).
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during the marriage that she had to repay; that he withdrew funds from their marital bank
account and sold household items without her knowledge; that he “did not participate in
any family activities”; and that he spent much of their marriage abusing drugs and
alcohol rather than contributing to the family’s well-being and financial security.39
Gloria also argues that Richard further harmed the marital estate after separation by
retiring early, resulting in a smaller pension than he would otherwise have been entitled
to.
But none of these issues was raised in more than a cursory way at trial,
which focused almost exclusively on the parties’ pensions and marital debt.40 Nor did
Gloria make similar arguments in her written objections to the superior court’s findings
of fact and conclusions of law. We conclude that Gloria waived any challenge to the
property division to the extent the challenge is based on the court’s weighing of the
Merrill factors.41
C. The Superior Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion By Not Crediting
Either Party For Contributions To The Marital Estate During Their
Separation.
The superior court declined to credit either party for contributions made to
the marital estate or payments that benefited the other party during their eight-year
39
See AS 25.24.160(a)(4)(E) (identifying “the conduct of the parties,
including whether there has been unreasonable depletion of marital assets,” as a relevant
factor).
40
Gloria did assert while questioning Richard that he abused drugs and that
he failed to participate in raising their children, but she made no property-division
argument specifically related to those allegations.
41
Mullins v. Oates, 179 P.3d 930, 941 n.31 (Alaska 2008) ( “[A] party may
not raise an issue for the first time on appeal.” (quoting Brandon v. Corr. Corp. of Am.,
28 P.3d 269, 280 (Alaska 2001))).
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separation, finding that the equities did not entitle either party to reimbursement. Gloria
argues that the court should have given her credit for some of her contributions: these
allegedly included payments toward the IRS debt; payments for “two vehicles and other
debts obtained by both parties,” including “approximately $50,000 in credit card debt”;
and payments for Richard’s health insurance premiums in the monthly amount of $129.
But we see no abuse of discretion.
First, Gloria testified at trial that she did not pay any money toward the IRS
debt, in fact claiming to be unaware of it; the superior court did not err by accepting her
testimony in the absence of any evidence contradicting it. As for the credit card debt,
Gloria admits in her brief that it “was not presented to the [trial] court”; she does not
demonstrate that she raised the alleged vehicle payments either. These factual issues are
waived.42
We turn to Gloria’s argument that she should have been given credit for the
amounts she paid during separation for Richard’s medical insurance. The record
supports the superior court’s decision that an equitable distribution did not require her
to be credited for these payments. Gloria retired from the State in 2009, two years after
the parties separated. The PERS benefits she received during separation totaled
approximately $472,000; she did not share these funds with Richard. The amounts
Richard received during the same period, and failed to share with Gloria, amounted to
much less: $25,000 in voluntary separation incentive pay, $4,471 from cashing out his
Thrift Savings Plan, and about $17,000 from his FERS pension. Although Gloria’s
payments toward Richard’s health insurance totaled over $10,000 — assuming she paid
$129 every month from May 2009 until the April 2016 trial — Richard made payments
toward the IRS debt that totaled approximately $6,000. On balance, Gloria netted
42
Id.
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significantly more in potentially marital assets during the separation period than Richard
did, but Richard “disavowed any claim” to his share. The superior court’s decision to
consider the books balanced thus benefited Gloria; the reimbursements she seeks would
not have made the distribution more fair. We see no abuse of discretion.43
In what appears to be a related argument, Gloria contends that the superior
court erred by “[e]nding the marriage in 2007,” thus denying Gloria “her share of marital
property received by [Richard] in 2013,” presumably the Thrift Savings Plan and the
military separation incentive payout. Superior courts exercise their discretion in
choosing the date the marriage functionally ended.44 The court in this case used July
2007 as the date the parties’ separated, then, as noted above, exercised its discretion to
offset their respective post-separation payments and contributions between that date and
trial. In Gloria’s answer she asserted that the parties “actually separated” much earlier,
in 1997; however, the evidence showed that they continued to share a residence and
finances, and they filed joint tax returns at least through 2005. Gloria asserted in her
answer that she “moved out of the home in July 2007 and rented a condominium.” The
court did not abuse its discretion by accepting Gloria’s own factual assertions on the
subject of the parties’ date of separation.45
43
Cf. Dodson v. Dodson, 955 P.2d 902, 912 (Alaska 1998) (discussing extent
of trial court’s broad discretion in determining whether to give spouse credit for post-
separation payments to maintain the marital home).
44
See Hanlon v. Hanlon, 871 P.2d 229, 232 (Alaska 1994) (applying abuse
of discretion standard to “trial court’s selection of the cutoff date for segregating marital
and non-marital property”).
45
Gloria also appears to argue that the court unfairly determined the marital
portion of her PERS benefits through the date of divorce in 2016 but calculated the
marital portion of Richard’s FERS benefits only through the date of separation. She is
(continued...)
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Gloria also argues that the court erred by failing to consider as part of
Richard’s income his Permanent Fund Dividend (PFD) checks and an unidentified $577
in monthly income noted on his financial declaration. But she does not explain what
effect these alleged errors could have had on the superior court’s decision. Again, we
are not persuaded that the superior court abused its discretion by failing to address these
specific items; it may, of course, address them on remand to the extent they are relevant
to the parties’ respective financial conditions.
D. Any Error In The Superior Court’s Treatment Of The Parties’ IRS
Debt Was Necessarily Harmless.
Gloria argues that the superior court was mistaken as to the amount of the
IRS debt and that it abused its discretion in holding the parties equally responsible for
it. The court found that the debt’s “outstanding balance is currently $13,172.30,” an
amount supported by an IRS payment notice dated July 15, 2015, and admitted as an
exhibit at trial. Gloria argued at trial that the number was outdated, and after trial she
submitted a May 2016 payment notice from the IRS that gave the balance as $3,508.64.
But any error in the court’s statement of the amount is harmless, as it had no effect on
the court’s decision that the debt, whatever its amount, should be shared equally.46
45
(...continued)
mistaken. The court used the date of separation in 2007 as the end-date of the accrual
period for both pensions.
46
As for the shared liability, Gloria does not explain why this would be an
abuse of discretion, and the issue is therefore waived. Brady v. State, 965 P.2d 1, 20
(Alaska 1998) (“Despite our solicitude for pro se litigants, we must conclude that he has
waived the claim by failing to brief it adequately.”). Gloria may have intended to waive
the issue; in her reply brief she states that “[n]o ruling is required.”
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E. The Superior Court’s Statement About Responsibility For A Parent-
Student Loan Was Dictum.
Gloria next argues that the superior court erred by stating that the parties’
daughter bears “responsibility in the first instance” for repaying “a parent-student loan”
that Gloria and Richard cosigned for her benefit in 1999. At the time of trial neither
parent had paid anything toward this debt, which in the meantime had more than doubled
in amount. By reference to a page from a student loan handbook, Gloria asserts that the
parents are responsible for the loan and asks that the court “delete all reference to our
child from the court documents.”
The court’s challenged statement — “[t]he loan should be [the daughter’s]
responsibility in the first instance” — is subject to several interpretations. The court
could have been stating what it understood to be the terms of the loan document itself;
if so, its observation could not create liability for the daughter or expand the rights of the
lender, as neither was a party to the divorce proceeding.47 The court could have simply
been voicing its practical expectation that the daughter, now an adult, would take primary
responsibility for the loan that helped her through college. Under either interpretation,
the court’s statement about the daughter’s responsibility was dictum with no effect on
the court’s bottom line: that “[s]hould the parents be required to pay anything towards
this debt, they shall be equally responsible.” (Emphasis added.)
V. CONCLUSION
We VACATE the property division order and REMAND to allow the
superior court to consider the parties’ Social Security benefits in determining a fair
allocation of the marital estate.
47
See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF JUDGMENTS § 76 cmt. a (AM. LAW. INST.
1982) (“A judgment is of no legal concern to a person who is neither a party to it nor
otherwise bound by it under the rules of res judicata.”).
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