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Date: 2019.08.12
Appellate Court 14:08:26 -05'00'
In re Marriage of Zamudio, 2019 IL App (3d) 160537
Appellate Court In re MARRIAGE OF LOUISE ZAMUDIO, f/k/a Louise Ochoa,
Caption Petitioner-Appellant, and FRANK OCHOA JR., Respondent-
Appellee.
District & No. Third District
Docket No. 3-16-0537
Filed February 20, 2019
Decision Under Appeal from the Circuit Court of Whiteside County, No. 14-D-94; the
Review Hon. John L. Hauptman, Judge, presiding.
Judgment Reversed; cause remanded.
Counsel on Louis F. Pignatelli and Elizabeth Uhrich, of Pignatelli & Associates,
Appeal P.C., and Allison B. Fagerman, of Law Office of Allison B. Fagerman,
P.C., both of Rock Falls, for appellant.
Paul A. Osborn and Amanda J. Beveroth, of Ward, Murray, Pace &
Johnson, P.C., of Sterling, for appellee.
Panel JUSTICE HOLDRIDGE delivered the judgment of the court, with
opinion.
Justice O’Brien concurred in the judgment and opinion.
Presiding Justice Schmidt dissented, with opinion.
OPINION
¶1 Petitioner Louise Zamudio, formerly known as Louise Ochoa, and respondent Frank Ochoa
Jr. were married in January 2000. The parties divorced in May 2016. At issue during the
dissolution proceedings was whether Frank’s 48 months of permissive military service credit,
which he earned prior to the marriage but purchased during the marriage with marital funds in
order to enhance his State Retirement Systems pension, was marital property that should be
considered when determining the marital portion of his pension. Ultimately, the trial court
determined the enhancement itself was not marital property, but it found that Frank must
reimburse Louise for her marital share of the funds used to purchase the enhancement. Frank
does not dispute that portion of the trial court’s ruling.
¶2 Louise appeals, asserting the trial court’s judgment is reversible error. Specifically, she
argues the permissive military service credit is marital property since the enhancement was
purchased with marital assets.
¶3 FACTS
¶4 The parties were married in January 2000. In May 2014, Louise filed a petition for
dissolution of marriage. In anticipation of the dissolution of their marriage, the parties mutually
resolved all but two issues. The unresolved issues concerned the disposition of Frank’s
pension, which began to accumulate prior to the marriage, and the amount and duration of
maintenance.
¶5 Frank engaged in active duty military service from 1974 to 1980, after which he entered
the military reserves, where he served until 2003. He began working for the Illinois State Police
in August 1989.
¶6 During the course of the parties’ marriage, Frank used marital assets to purchase 48 months
of permissive military service credit to enhance his pension. Specifically, in both 2004 and
2008, he purchased 24 months of permissive credit for a total cost of $9626.40. His eligibility
for the permissive service credit derived from his active duty military service completed
approximately 20 years prior to the marriage. Frank retired from the Illinois State Police on
August 1, 2011, with 320 months of service, which included 263.5 months of regular service
credit, 48 months of permissive service credit purchased during the parties’ marriage, 6 months
of unused/unpaid sick time, and 2.5 months of sick/vacation time he had also purchased. Frank
began receiving monthly annuity checks on or about August 1, 2011. He received 58 checks
during the marriage. The initial monthly annuity payment was $9088.86, of which $1363.33
represented the increase attributable to the purchased credits. Without the additional credits,
Frank’s monthly annuity would have been $7725.53.
¶7 The parties agreed that Louise was entitled to 50% of the marital portion of Frank’s
pension; however, they disagreed on how much of Frank’s pension was classified as marital.
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In that regard, both Frank and Louise submitted written arguments to the court. Frank asserted
that Louise was entitled to reimbursement for contribution to the purchase of the permissive
military service credit but she was not entitled to any interest in that portion of his pension. In
contrast, Louise argued that the pension account was marital property as was the enhancement
created by purchasing the 48 months of permissive service credit with marital assets.
¶8 In April 2016, the trial court entered a written order, finding in pertinent part “[t]hat
because Frank acquired th[e] military permissive service to increase the number of months of
service in order to enhance the benefit he would receive from his state pension during the term
of the marriage, those months were earned during the marriage and should be included in the
numerator of the fraction to determine the marital share of his pension.”
¶9 Frank timely filed a motion to reconsider, arguing the trial court erred, as a matter of law,
in finding the 48 months of permissive service credit to be marital property. He asserted the
court’s judgment ignored the fact that the permissive service credit could not have been
purchased without his active duty military service, which was completed long before the
parties married. He further maintained that “the eligibility and the 48 months of military service
were not transformed into marital property when [he] exercised his right to purchase the
military time with marital funds during the marriage.” Rather, citing In re Marriage of Ramsey,
339 Ill. App. 3d 752 (2003), he argued that the timing of the purchase and the use of marital
funds merely created a right of reimbursement in the marital estate for its monetary
contributions.
¶ 10 Ultimately, the trial court agreed with Frank. In its August 2016 order, the court found it
had erred in its prior judgment by failing to apply Ramsey. The court acknowledged the
enhancement was purchased during the term of the marriage, but it noted that the enhancement
“was not ‘purely derivative’ of [Frank’s] right to receive his state pension because what was
purchased to enhance the pension *** was military time earned prior to the marriage.” The
court held “[t]hat in keeping with the holding in Ramsey, [Frank] should reimburse [Louise]
for her marital share of these funds which [it] f[ound] to be in the amount of $4,813.20.”
¶ 11 Louise appeals.
¶ 12 ANALYSIS
¶ 13 On appeal, Louise maintains that the trial court erred in finding the 48 months of permissive
service credit was not marital property.
¶ 14 Generally, we review a trial court’s factual determination regarding whether an asset is
marital property or not under the manifest weight of the evidence standard. In re Marriage of
Peters, 326 Ill. App. 3d 364, 366 (2001). Here, however, the facts are not in dispute nor is the
credibility of the witnesses at issue. See id. Instead, our only concern is to determine the legal
effect of undisputed facts. Id. Specifically, we must determine whether the permissive service
credits purchased with marital assets during the term of the parties’ marriage in order to
enhance Frank’s pension are marital property, even though the entitlement to the enhancement
is not entirely derivative of Frank’s right to receive his pension. Accordingly, our review is
de novo. Id.
¶ 15 Both parties seem to rely on Ramsey, 339 Ill. App. 3d 752. In that case, the parties were
married from 1969 to 1989, throughout which time the husband was employed as a
schoolteacher who participated in the Teachers’ Retirement System (TRS) of the State of
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Illinois pension plan. Id. at 753-54. Following the dissolution of their marriage, the trial court
reserved jurisdiction to divide the husband’s pension. Id. at 754. In 2000, 11 years after the
parties divorced, the husband took advantage of two early retirement incentives that were
available to teachers with at least 20 years of service by making two one-time payments to the
TRS of $7397.46 and $6390.60. Id. at 754-55. Following the husband’s retirement later that
year, the wife filed a motion seeking a qualified Illinois domestic relations order (QILDRO) to
divide the husband’s pension. Id. at 755. The Massac County circuit court found that the
husband’s nonmarital monetary contributions could not be severed from the rest of his pension,
and thus, it included the portion of the pension attributable to the early retirement incentives
purchased by the husband as part of the marital pension. Id. The husband appealed, asserting
that the wife should not be entitled to any portion of his pension attributable to the early
retirement incentives he purchased with nonmarital funds. Id. at 756.
¶ 16 On appeal, the Fifth District acknowledged that the husband’s entitlement to the enhanced
pension benefits flowed from both his right to receive pension benefits in the first place and
from the lump-sum contributions he made following the dissolution of the parties’ marriage.
Id. at 763-64. The court noted that the husband would not have been eligible for the
enhancements no matter how much money he paid into TRS but for his contributions to the
plan through teaching for 31 years—60% of which he worked during the marriage. Id. at 764.
In other words, the court found that the husband’s entitlement to the enhanced benefit was not
“purely derivative” of his right to receive his pension but, instead, resulted from both marital
and nonmarital elements. See id. at 764, 766. The court concluded that “the most rational and
equitable way to do justice to both parties is to require [the wife] to pay her proportionate share
of the contributions necessary for [the husband] to qualify for the enhancements.” Id. at 765.
In conclusion, the court found “that when an early retirement incentive enhances pension
benefits, to the extent that such enhancements are derivative of the right to receive the pension
as deferred compensation, the proportion of the enhancement that is marital property is exactly
the same as the proportion of the pension as a whole that is marital.” Id. at 766. The court
continued, “[i]n the unusual case where the entitlement to such enhancements is not purely
derivative, however, that portion of the enhancement not derived from the right to receive the
pension itself is the pensioner’s sole property.” Id.
¶ 17 We find Ramsey instructive, although not dispositive of the issue at hand. A key difference
between Ramsey and the instant case is that, unlike the annuitant in Ramsey, Frank began
receiving his annuity payments during the marriage. It is undisputed that Frank received 56
annuity payments during the marriage. This is not an insignificant factor. The Ramsey court
was addressing the common problem of how to divide a pension benefit with an unknown
future value. In other words, the question in Ramsey was one of valuation, not entitlement. The
issue was how much of the pension check was subject to formulaic division, not whether a
particular enhancement provision constituted marital or nonmarital property. To the extent that
Ramsey addressed the concept of entitlement to enhancement pension benefits, it did so as
dicta. However, Ramsey remains instructive regarding the proper resolution of this matter.
¶ 18 The fact that Frank had already been receiving an enhanced annuity benefit for 56 months
during the marriage is significant for another reason. As the Ramsey court observed, “[i]f the
pension enhancements are a separate and distinct benefit that came into existence after the
dissolution, they are not a part of the pension to be divided.” Id. at 757 (citing Hannan v.
Hannan, 99-0842 p. 10 (La. App. 1 Cir. 5/12/00); 761 So. 2d 700, 707 (finding enhancements
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to a pension to be an asset acquired after the marriage ended and therefore not subject to
division along with the rest of the pension)). However, if the enhancement came into existence
during the marriage, as in the instant matter, there is no simple solution. Instead, Ramsey
suggests the court must look to whether the enhancement is derivative of the right to receive a
pension in the first place or if the enhancement is nonderivative in the sense that the enhanced
portion is directly and solely attributable to nonmarital contributions and not subject to
division. See id. at 763. Regarding the derivative nature of a pension enhancement provision,
the Ramsey court cogently observed that “the right to receive an early retirement incentive
package necessarily depends upon the right to receive the pension.” Id. Also, “[t]he right to
pension enhancements can have no existence independent of the right to receive a pension.”
Id. In other words, to the extent that a pension benefit is a marital asset, any enhancement in
value obtained during the marriage is also a marital asset subject to apportionment on an
equitable basis.
¶ 19 In this case, Frank maintains that his eligibility for the 48-month permissive service credit
stemmed entirely from his years of active duty military service, which was completed 20 years
prior to the parties’ marriage. However, Frank ignores the fact that his entitlement to the
enhanced benefit is derivative of his entitlement to the pension in the first place. While it is
undoubtedly true that, absent his military service, Frank would not have been entitled to
purchase the permissive military service credit, it is equally true that that right to enhance the
overall pension benefit accrued to his benefit as a result of his participation in the pension
program, which provided the enhancement to members meeting the enhancement criteria.
¶ 20 In other words, Frank’s entitlement to the enhanced value of each pension payment flows
both from his participation in the plan itself and the fact that the pension statute allows him to
enhance the present value of his annuity by an amount calculated based upon his prior military
service. Viewed another way, Frank’s entitlement to an enhanced annuity accrued while he
participated in the pension plan, and thus, a portion of that credit accrued during his marriage
to Louise. The fact that the enhancement was calculated based on a number equal to the number
of months Frank served in the armed forces did not mean that Frank acquired the asset at the
time of his military service. Frank’s military service had no relationship to his pension benefit
until he exercised the option of purchasing the 48 months of additional credits, which was done
during the marriage and with the use of marital funds.
¶ 21 The major problem with the dissent is that it views Frank’s four years of military service
as nonmarital property that cannot be equitably divided by the trial court. The fundamental
error in this analysis is in viewing the military service as “property.” As we have previously
noted, Frank’s years of military service were not property but simply conditions precedent,
which the Illinois Pension Code allowed Frank to use to enhance the current value of his
pension. It was the current value of the annuity payments, acquired during the marriage, that
constituted marital property subject to equitable division by the trial court.
¶ 22 In sum, we find that the trial court erred in determining that the 48-month permissive
service credit was nonmarital property. Thus, we reverse the trial court on that question and
remand for an equitable distribution of the marital value of the respondent’s pension annuity.
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¶ 23 CONCLUSION
¶ 24 For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the circuit court of Whiteside County is reversed
and the matter is remanded for an equitable apportionment of the respondent’s pension.
¶ 25 Reversed; cause remanded.
¶ 26 PRESIDING JUSTICE SCHMIDT, dissenting:
¶ 27 As far as I can tell, this is the first decision in the free world ordering a trial court to consider
a 4-year period that occurred 20 years prior to the marriage, as though the parties were married
during those 4 years, in order to calculate the marital portion of a pension.
¶ 28 The issue before us is whether the trial court properly ruled that four years of military
service completed by Frank years before his marriage to Louise should not be included in the
numerator to determine Louise’s marital percentage of Frank’s pension. I am sure by now,
having read the majority’s opinion, you understand that Frank purchased this with the use of
marital funds. The trial court found that it was not marital property and ordered Frank to
reimburse Louise for one-half of the purchase price of the four-year military pension credit.
This is a simple case. Frank enhanced a nonmarital asset with marital assets, and therefore, he
must repay, and I believe has repaid, Louise for her share of those funds. The trial court got it
exactly right. Frank’s 48 months of military credit are no more marital property than are the
11 years of credit he earned for his Illinois State Police service prior to the marriage.
¶ 29 The majority finds the fact that Frank began receiving his annuity payments during the
marriage is “[a] key difference between Ramsey and the instant case” and “is not an
insignificant factor.” Supra ¶ 17. I submit the fact that Frank began receiving his annuity
payments during the marriage is totally irrelevant to the issue of whether his premarital military
service credits, albeit purchased during the marriage, are marital property. Let us not lose sight
of the fact that Louise does gain a benefit from the four years of military credit as Frank’s
pension is larger than it would have been without that credit. That is, as in Ramsey, pursuant
to the trial court’s ruling, Louise is getting her marital portion of the enhanced pension.
¶ 30 The majority notes, while trying to both distinguish and incorporate Ramsey, “if the
enhancement came into existence during the marriage, as in the instant matter, there is no
simple solution.” (Emphasis in original.) Supra ¶ 18. Yes, there is! The trial court got it right.
So, the majority then goes on to proclaim that “Ramsey suggests the court must look to whether
the enhancement is derivative of the right to receive a pension in the first place or if the
enhancement is nonderivative.” (Emphases in original.) Supra ¶ 18. First of all, under the
majority’s analysis, every enhancement to a pension is derivative of the existence of the
pension. One cannot enhance an asset that does not exist. The majority correctly observes, “to
the extent that a pension benefit is a marital asset, any enhancement in value obtained during
the marriage is also a marital asset subject to apportionment on an equitable basis.” Supra ¶ 18.
Louise received her share of the enhancement in value. Yet the majority simply ignores this.
The majority wants to include the four years of military service as marital property in addition
to giving her the marital portion of the enhanced value of the pension. That is, the majority
gives Louise the same benefit she would have received had she and Frank been married while
he served in the military. This also gives Louise a larger slice of the entire unenhanced pension
by, in essence, judicially adding four years to the marriage.
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¶ 31 The majority states, “However, Frank ignores the fact that his entitlement to the enhanced
benefit is derivative of his entitlement to the pension in the first place.” (Emphasis in original.)
Supra ¶ 19. “While it is undoubtedly true that, absent his military service, Frank would not
have been entitled to purchase the permissive military service credit, it is equally true that that
right to enhance the overall pension benefit accrued to his benefit as a result of his participation
in the pension program, which provided the enhancement to members meeting the
enhancement criteria.” Supra ¶ 19. Yes, if Frank did not have a pension, it could not be
enhanced. Got that. Louise received her marital portion of the enhanced pension. That is a far
cry from the majority’s novel and unsupported proposition that Frank’s four years of military
credit is marital property. It seems clear from the record that Frank could not have retired when
he did absent his 11 years of Illinois State Police service prior to the marriage. Those years
likewise enhanced his pension. Every year he served with the Illinois State Police enhanced
his pension. Why not go for the gold and make those marital property, too?
¶ 32 Again, to conclude, Frank enhanced a nonmarital asset with marital funds. That does not
make those 48 months of service marital property. See 750 ILCS 5/503(a)(2) (West 2016)
(“[P]roperty acquired in exchange for property acquired before the marriage” is considered
nonmarital property); id. § 503(c)(1)(A) (where nonmarital property is commingled with
marital property, it retains its nonmarital status so long as it retains its identity); In re Marriage
of Henke, 313 Ill. App. 3d 159, 168 (2000) (noting that the legislature amended section 503(c)
of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act in 1983 in order to reject the
presumption at the time that commingled property was always transmuted to marital property).
Nonetheless, Louise did receive a benefit from the enhancement because she is receiving her
marital portion of the total, enhanced pension. That is an equitable apportionment of Frank’s
pension. Calling those 48 months that Frank served in the armed forces 20 years before the
marriage marital property and increasing the marital portion of the entire pension is without
precedent. That is, the 48 months of military service should not be included in the numerator
of the equation determining the marital portion of the pension. Neither the law, equity, nor
common sense supports the majority’s decision.
¶ 33 I would affirm the trial court.
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