Division of
Military Retirement Pay - Dual Coverture
© 2018
Brian Mork, Ph.D. [Rev 3.02]
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Update: The 2017 National
Defense Authorization Act changed the definition of "Disposable
Retirement Pay". This mimics the calculations discussed here -
one coverture fraction for time or points, and a second coverture
fraction for rank/longevity or salary. However, as of January 2018,
phone calls with DFAS
paralegals confirm the only type of divison they accept for
post-NDAA2017 cases is the Hypothetical Method. DFAS is implementing law intent by ignoring the law's letter:
The Hypothetical Method percentage they calculate must be applied to the
old definition of DRP. Otherwise, the discount is double-applied:
once by the ratio of hypothetical salaries and once inside the
definition of DRP. When the marriage
starts after the military career,
or with multiple spouses, the Area Method is still the only way to
equitably calculate the marital asset. Additionally, the dual
covertures in the Area Method can accomodate both the intent and letter
of the new law. For more
information, see the web page tutorial on the
USFSPA amendment in the 2017 NDAA law. .
Introduction
Divorce is a
path many people have to live with, and under these situations, it is
beneficial to pursue equity. In order to equitably divide the
marriage asset of military
retirement pay due to divorce, one must understand different issues
than other types of
retirement. Issues discussed on this page apply to both Active
Duty and Reserve
military retirements. If you are intested in Reserve military specific issues,
please see another web page about dividing
military reserve retirement pay. If your concerns are more
specific, see other
web pages describing Promotion
Enhancement
or Area Method
calculations.
When dealing with normal civilian retirements, a coverture
fraction method
typically calculates what portion of a retirement was earned
during the marriage, and then that portion is divided. Historically,
this
manifests as a "coverture fraction" that you are probably familiar
with. Extending the coverture concept to a Dual Coverture fraction is
required to equitably deal with
military retirements. There have been nascent attempts by attorneys and
courts to implement this concept, but without complete documentaion,
attempts have been rife with litigation and confusion.
This page introduces the
Dual Coverture formulaic method which accommodates situations where
there is no military duty before
marriage, and there is one spouse with divorce prior to
retirement. Downloadable resources demonstrate Dual Coverture
utility and offer formulaic
representation. Additional research has yielded a superior method
called the Area Method
method which has wider scope of applicability than all previously
published methods, while matching the results of well-known formulaic
methods such as those published by DFAS.
Retirement Division Methods
Civilian retirements use calendar
months as proration
in the first coverture fractions because individuals work contiguous
days. For military
with a Reserve
retirement,
duty points
have been used in the place of calendar time in the coverture fraction
because
any period of calendar time may include many duty days varying down to
none at
all.
A January 2011 New Jersey Appellate Court
ruling (see detailed
discussion) confirms the
inability of
time-only or point-only coverture fractions
to equitably divide a military retirement asset. A military retirement
is different than civilian retirements because it
is looked up in a 2-dimensional pay table,
using 1) time of service, and
2) rank.
Reference 10 USC 12739, and 10 USC 1406 or 1407. The two factors of
time and rank are independent, and cannot be captured in one
fraction; a proper coverture fraction is the result of two mathematical
fractions multiplied together: the time or Duty Fraction, and the Rank
Fraction. A blog
entry
from the lead defense attorney in the NJ case questions whether the
single
time
fraction is viable any more. Several contract firms that generate
military division orders for attorneys have picked up on the same court
case and discuss it on their web pages.
If only one ratio is used, the
non-military spouse would benefit from all military promotions outside
the marriage, and this is contrary to equity.
Unlike time-based promotions where the two issues can be comingled into
one coverture ratio, military promotions are always unique,
special, or outstanding based on stratification of eligible promotees,
limited quotas, deployment records, testing results, advanced school
degrees, competitive formal performance reports, and professional
military education. An entire web page and white paper is dedicated to
the topic of dividing
military promotion enhancements equitably in a divorce.
Due to a Federal interest
to have uniformity among the state's rulings and protect Federal
interests, there is a sanctioned method of doing these calculations
espoused by the Department of Defense, Senate, Congress, and Federal
Defense Finance and
Accounting (DFAS) office to ensure equitable division when additional
military duty or promotions are done after a divorce. DFAS calls this
method their Hypothetical Method, outlined step by step in Para 2, Page
9 of
the January 4, 2010 version of the USFSPA Attorney Instructions
Dividing Military Retired Pay.
In a Department of Defense report to Congress and the DFAS document,
the precise method of calculable precision is given to separate the
portion of indivisible non-marital enhancement due to promotions. The
DFAS guide has several examples, so be sure to
consider the examples suited to your particular situation. All
calculation methods and examples are not interchangeable, and some will
be wrong for your situation. Although DFAS cites the Hypothetical
Method for Active Duty military members who receive a promotion after
divorce, they fail to cite the same method again as applied
to Reserve military members, leading some attorneys to incorrectly
assume Reserve officers are never promoted after divorce.
In
order to
clarify the calculations involved, I have made available a detailed
white paper memorandum titled Attorney
Instructions - Dividing Reserve
and Active Duty Military Retirement. This paper also includes
discussion about a
new Federal January 2008 law that
applies to dividing
Reserve Military Early Retirement.
The paper includes a derivation
of the formulas, example
legal order text, and calculation examples. If you are taking
military retirement issues
to court, I recommend you print out
a copy, have it reviewed by a CPA and then pay the CPA to show up as an
expert witness. The "Hypothetical Method" the NJ Court refers to on pg
19 of its opinion, and the Dual Coverture method the NJ Court refers to
on pg 22 are mathematically identical if you stipulate that COLA
increases are about the same as military pay raises. Although the two
methods yield the same result, you should read why the Dual
Coverture method is better.
The Dual Coverture method uses two fractions multiplied together. One
fraction is a time ratio (duty during marriage/total duty), and the
other is a rank ratio (basepay of rank at divorce/basepay of rank at
retirement). Be
careful to use the same year's pay
charts when looking up the numerator and denominator for the rank
ratio--doesn't matter which year chart you use because
you're calculating just
a ratio, not the isolated values. Multiplying the time ratio and the
rank ratios together
gives the proper overall dual-coverture fraction to use in the court
order sent to DFAS.
Federal Opinion and DFAS Guidance
The Federal government has interest in allocating Federal
retirement,
and has given specific guidance. As a result of the DoD report to
Congress, DFAS created the Hypothetical Method and explained it in
their Instructions to Attorneys document. Remember, the DFAS assertions
have been vetted through Dept
Defense, Senate Armed Services Committee, House Armed Services
Committee, and undergone countless hours of public scrutiny and debate.
DFAS wrote the following text:
"We apply retired pay COLAs to the hypothetical retired pay
amount up to the member’s actual retirement date to find a “present
value” of the hypothetical retired pay as of the member’s actual
retirement date. This adjustment does not result in the former spouse
benefiting from the member’s additional service time or promotions
after the hypothetical retirement date. It simply provides the former
spouse with the amount he or she would have received had the member
actually become eligible to receive retired pay on the hypothetical
retirement date.
Notice the last two sentences
mitigate the concern
that it's biased against the
military member.
It's clear that both spouses receive time-value of money while waiting
for the payments to be delivered. Remember the Hypothetical
Method and Dual Coverture methods create the same coverture fraction
and are applied to retirement payments in the same way, so when you
talk about one, you talk about the other. DFAS
wrote the updated manual quoted above in response to direction in the
DoD Report to Congress Concerning Federal Former Spouse Protection
Laws, page 71-72, dated September 5, 2001:
"Congress should amend the USFSPA [laws] to provide that
all awards of military retired pay be based on the member’s rank and
years of service at the time of divorce. This provision should be
exclusively prospective. For example, if a future divorce occurs when
the member is an O-4 (i.e., Major/Lieutenant Commander) with 14 years
of creditable service, the award of military retired pay must be based
on that rank and time served. That the member retires as an O-6 (i.e,
Colonel/Captain) with 24 years of service is irrelevant to the award of
military retired pay as property.
"The pay increase attributable to the promotions and additional
time served should be viewed as the member’s separate property.
[emphasis mine] However, as a matter of equity, the former spouse
should benefit from
increases in the pay table applicable to the O-4 grade. Thus, as the
pay for an O-4 with 14 years of service is increased due to increases
in the pay table, so too is the value of the allocation to the former
spouse. The objective in this regard should be to provide the former
spouse, on a present value basis, with approximately the same amount of
retired pay that he or she would have actually received had payments
begun on divorce. DFAS should include a formula in its recommendations
that could be used by parties who divorce while the member is still on
active duty.
I
would again emphasize that the only way to do what is written in the
quote above with a formula in a court order is the Hypothetical Method
or a Dual Coverture method, and the
Dual Coverture Method is much simpler and better for both
parties.
According to the last sentence
recommendation quoted above from the Congressional report, DFAS did
include a formula, and
this formula gives results identical to the dual fraction method
requested by the defendant in the New Jersey Appellate Court case, and
supported by the
Department of Defense, vetted through the Senate Armed Services
Committee, House Committee on Armed Services, and Defense Finance and
Accounting Services.
Damages
The resultant damages of using a single coverture when a dual coverture
is the equitable answer are significant; rank promotions hover
around 17% increase in base pay with some higher or lower (and
retirement is proportional to base pay). Because the mistake comes from
the military member to the
non-military member, that creates a double,
or 38%, error in equity. This is huge -- much larger than 15%
rule
of thumb on income changes to change support payments, or the 5%
threshold where medical insurance would be ordered for a child.
Multiply this error by the number of military in the nation and the
number
of divorces and the duration of a person's retirement time, and you'll
see that this is a $Billion dollar issue misunderstood by the court
system.
Numerical Comparison of Division Methods
Here is the text you can use to do the Hypothetical Method.
This method is tangled because the wording must be slightly different
depending on whether the military member is active duty or reserve
(months or points), or was commissioned before or after 1980 (final pay
or average of high 36 months), etc. These complications are part
of why Dual Coverture or Dual Coverture Value are better.
"The former
spouse is awarded 50% of the disposable military retired pay
the member would have received had the member retired with a base pay
of $6,534.30 and with 14 years of creditable service on 16 January 2009. The balance of the
military retired pay is awarded to military member as sole and separate
property."
Instead of $6534.30, you should put your real base pay or "average base
pay of high 36 months" at time of divorce. Instead of years of
creditable service, a Reservist would name the points accrued at time
of divorce. This legal language would invoke the following
division, using the process described in DFAS' Attorney Instructions
document, steps 2(a) throgh 2(c). Assume 252 month (21 yr) retirement
as an O-5 in 2016.
Step 2(a) Hypothetical retirement pay 0.025 * 14 * $6534.30 = $2287.01
Step 2(b) Add in "time value of money" while spouse waits for
actual retirement - 7 years in this case. Using actual COLA rates from the Social Security web page,
2010 1.000
2011 1.000
2012 1.036
2013 1.017
2014 1.015
2015 1.017
2016 1.000
Total COLA (multiply all together) = 1.0876
Value of hypothetical retirement after time value of money $2287.01 * 1.0876 = $2487.35
Step 2(c) Calculate percentage from the ratio
(Hypothetical/Actual). 2016 pay chart says $8617.00 base pay upon
actual retirement, so actual retirement is 0.025 * 21 * $8617 = $4523.93
So percentage is 50% * 2487.35 / 4523.93 = 27.49% (spouse gets $1243.68)
The Single Coverture method is defective because it incorrectly divides actively earned promotion enhancements after the marriage. It is included here for reference.
"The former spouse is awarded a percentage of the
member’s disposable military retired pay, to be computed by multiplying
50% times a fractions, the numerator of which is 168 mo,
and the denominator of which is the total number of months of
retirement creditable service.
This legal language would cause the following division, assuming the
same final retirement numbers above. A reservist can use points
instead of months.
50% * (168 mo / 252 mo) * => 33.33%
Retirement is 2.5% * 21 * $8617 => $4523.93
ex-spouse receives 33.33% * $4523.93 => $1507.82 (higher because
after divorce promotion enhancements are incorrectly also divided with the Single Coverture method).
The Dual Coverture method
introduced on this web page can also be used for equitable
division. Hypothetical is not correct if there were any months of
military duty before the marriage. Hypothetical method above
gives to the ex-spouse "time value of money" calculated from national
COLA averages each year, while the military member gets time value of
money calculated from military pay chart raises each year. The
Dual Coverture method below gives military pay chart raise to both,
which is also more equitable.
"The former spouse is awarded a percentage of the
member’s disposable military retired pay, to be computed by multiplying
50% times two fractions, the first numerator of which is 168 mo,
and the first denominator of which is the total number of months of
retirement creditable service, and the second numerator is the
base
pay of a 14 year O-4 rank,
and the second denominator is the
base pay of the member years and rank upon retirement. Both base
pay amounts are to be taken from the SAME year military chart.
This legal language would cause the following division, assuming final
retirement was with 252 months and O-5 rank in 2016, after 21 years of
service. Notice the second ratio of two base pay numers stays the
same no matter what year pay chart is used.
50% * (168 mo / 252 mo) * ($6,534.30 / $7,697.40) => 28.30%
Retirement is 2.5% * 21 * $8617 => $4523.93
ex-spouse receives 28.30% * $3951.68 => $1280.27
Notice the ex-spouse percentage is nearly identical to
the Hypothetical Method, different only because Social Security COLA is
not exactly the same as military pay raises each of the 7 intervening
years. For any set of years, either method could be slightly higher
than the other method. To be equitable, both should get time
value of money increases based on the same increases (Dual
Coverture instead of Hypothetical).
The Area Method
is an extension of the Dual Coverture method above, which can be used
in all situations. When situations are simple, the math simplifies to be indentical to Dual Coverture.
Conclusion
In summary, even though they misunderstood other
facts, the NJ Appellate Court properly allowed
that post-marriage
promotion enhancement should not be divided, introducing the Dual
Coverture method into case law. This matches other juristictions and
Federal recommendations. The Dual Coverture method is better
than the Hypothetical Method for multiple reasons, and has been
extended to a Area Method method which is better than both
because of its versatility and scope. When declining
the defendant's proposed formulaic implementation of Dual Coveture, the
NJ Appellate Court made a factual error that led them to make a judicial
error with great injustice to a military member.
- Barr v. Barr New Jersey Appellate Court
ruling, January 2011, 418
N.J. Super. 18 (App. Div. 2011). Argued by Jennifer
Millner and Eliana
T. Baer and Robert
A. Epstein v. Mr. Silber and David E. Alberts in front of Axelrad,
R.B. Coleman, and Liholts. (FindLaw.com,
Law.com
#1, Law.com
#2, Leagle.com,
Rutgers.edu,
increa
copy) (31 pgs,
106kb)
- "Be specific in divorce agreements to avoid future legal
trouble", Jennifer Millner, Air
Force Times, 24 March 2011.
- DFAS "Guidance on Dividing Military Retired
Pay", 2 April 2012, 20 pgs,
119 KB pdf. (DFAS.mil,
increa
copy)
- DFAS "Attorney
Instructions - Dividing
Military Retired Pay", April 2001,
19 pgs, 74kb pdf. (DFAS.mil,
increa
copy).
- DoD Report to Committee on Armed Services of the US Senate and
House of Representatives, 1998. (Defense.gov,
increa copy) (84
pgs, 279kb pdf)
- Mork Attorney
Instructions - Division of Reserve and Active Duty Military
Retirement (increa
copy).
- Blog post Dual
Coverture is better than DFAS Hypothetical Method,
February 2011.
This article
originally appeared on the Increa.com
blog. The
shell of this expanded document was created
using AbiWord
under the Linux
Gnome
desktop. Content was edited using Kompozer.