← LexyCorpus index

LexyCorpus case page

CourtListener opinion 10499144

Date unknown · US

Extracted case name
In re Marriage of Thurston
Extracted reporter citation
445 P.3d 971
Docket / number
57344-0-II The trial
QDRO relevance 5/5Retirement relevance 5/5Family-law relevance 5/5gold label pending
Research-use warning: This page contains machine-draft public annotations generated from public opinion text. The headnote is not Willie-approved gold-label work product and is not legal advice. Verify the full opinion and current law before relying on it.

Machine-draft headnote

Machine-draft public headnote: CourtListener opinion 10499144 is included in the LexyCorpus QDRO sample set as a public CourtListener opinion with relevance to pension / defined benefit issues. The current annotation is conservative: it identifies source provenance, relevance signals, and evidence quotes for attorney/agent retrieval. It is not a Willie-approved legal headnote yet.

Retrieval annotation

Draft retrieval summary: this opinion has QDRO relevance score 5/5, retirement-division score 5/5, and family-law score 5/5. Use the quoted text and full opinion below before relying on the case.

Category: pension / defined benefit issues

Evidence quotes

QDRO

the Matter of the Marriage of: No. 57344-0-II LAURIE MARIE HELM, Respondent, and UNPUBLISHED OPINION CLAYTON AUSTIN HELM, Appellant. CHE, J. ⎯ Clayton Helm appeals the trial court's entry of a new Qualified Domestic Relations Order Military (2022 QDRO). Clayton1 is a retired member of the U.S. military. Clayton and Laurie Helm married on September 30, 2001. The marriage was dissolved on September 30, 2014. The decree of dissolution awarded Laurie half of the marital portion of Clayton's military pension. In 2015, the trial court entered an agreed Military Retired Pay Division Order (2015 order) di

retirement benefits

's military pension, the trial court found The marital portion of the uniformed services retired pay of [Clayton] (hereafter military pension or retired pay) is subject to marital property division. [Laurie] is entitled to a share of [Clayton's] military retirement benefits, as set out in the Decree. [Laurie's] entitlement to retired pay accrues upon the retirement of [Clayton]. The remaining portion of [Clayton's] military retired pay is the sole and separate property of [Clayton]. [F]or the purposes of calculating the marital portion, the parties were married on September 30, 2001 and separated on September 30, 2014.

pension

2 QDRO). Clayton1 is a retired member of the U.S. military. Clayton and Laurie Helm married on September 30, 2001. The marriage was dissolved on September 30, 2014. The decree of dissolution awarded Laurie half of the marital portion of Clayton's military pension. In 2015, the trial court entered an agreed Military Retired Pay Division Order (2015 order) directing distribution of Clayton's disposable military retired pay. Clayton then retired from the military in 2019. In 2021, Defense Finance and Accounting Services (DFAS) determined the 2015 order did not support payments of Clayton's disposable military reti

domestic relations order

is insufficient to support a COMMUNITY PROPERTY award . . . We have terminated the community property award and an audit will be performed."5 CP at 129. On July 8, 2022, Laurie filed a CR 60 motion to correct a scrivener's error and enter a new qualified domestic relations order. Laurie sent a setting order for the motion hearing to Clayton. In her motion, she appeared to argue that the 2015 order did not meet DFAS's current requirements for military retirement orders and needed to be updated in order for DFAS to resume its payments to her. On August 5, Clayton filed his response to Laurie's motion. The record contains a CR 2A

Source and provenance

Source type
courtlistener_qdro_opinion_full_text
Permissions posture
public
Generated status
machine draft public v0
Review status
gold label pending
Jurisdiction metadata
US
Deterministic extraction
reporter: 445 P.3d 971 · docket: 57344-0-II The trial
Generated at
May 14, 2026

Related public corpus pages

Deterministic links based on shared title/citation terms and QDRO / retirement / family-law retrieval scores.

Clean opinion text

Filed
 Washington State
 Court of Appeals
 Division Two

 August 6, 2024

 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

 DIVISION II
 In the Matter of the Marriage of: No. 57344-0-II

 LAURIE MARIE HELM,

 Respondent,

 and UNPUBLISHED OPINION

 CLAYTON AUSTIN HELM,

 Appellant.

 CHE, J. ⎯ Clayton Helm appeals the trial court's entry of a new Qualified Domestic

Relations Order Military (2022 QDRO).

 Clayton1 is a retired member of the U.S. military. Clayton and Laurie Helm married on

September 30, 2001. The marriage was dissolved on September 30, 2014. The decree of

dissolution awarded Laurie half of the marital portion of Clayton's military pension.

 In 2015, the trial court entered an agreed Military Retired Pay Division Order (2015

order) directing distribution of Clayton's disposable military retired pay. Clayton then retired

from the military in 2019. In 2021, Defense Finance and Accounting Services (DFAS)

determined the 2015 order did not support payments of Clayton's disposable military retired pay

1
 Because the parties share the same last name, we refer to the parties by their first names.
 No. 57344-0-II

to Laurie. In 2022, Laurie moved under CR 60 for the trial court to enter a corrected order to

resume her DFAS payments.

 The trial court heard the motion and entered the 2022 QDRO, stating that it did not

consider Laurie's motion to be brought under CR 60, but nevertheless proceeding on the belief

that it had jurisdiction to modify the 2015 order.

 Clayton argues that the trial court erred in considering Laurie's CR 60 motion. He asserts

that the trial court further erred by modifying the 2015 order and entering the 2022 QDRO. And

he contends that the 2022 QDRO incorrectly calculated his disposable military retired pay and

the parties' marital share of that pay, among other things. Both Clayton and Laurie request

attorney fees on appeal.

 We hold that (1) the trial court did not abuse its discretion in considering Laurie's CR 60

motion, (2) the 2015 order was ambiguous, (3) the trial court modified the parties' rights under

the 2015 order when it issued the 2022 QDRO, (4) the 2022 QDRO contains a scrivener's error

regarding attorney fees, and (5) neither party is awarded attorney fees on appeal.

 Because the 2015 order was ambiguous and the 2022 QDRO modified the parties' rights

under the 2015 order, we reverse and remand. On remand, the trial court should reopen the

property distribution solely to calculate the distribution of Clayton's disposable military retired

pay. On remand, the trial court should also correct the scrivener's error in the 2022 QDRO

regarding attorney fees. And we deny both requests for appellate attorney fees.

 2
 No. 57344-0-II

 FACTS

 Clayton is a retired member of the U.S. military. Clayton and Laurie were married on

September 30, 2001, and separated on July 17, 2012. At the time of the parties' separation,

Clayton held the paygrade of E-62 with 15.25 years of service, of which 4 years and 11 months

were accrued before his marriage with Laurie.

 I. DISSOLUTION AND INITIAL ORDERS

 Laurie filed for divorce on November 15, 2012. Clayton was promoted to E-7 on June 1,

2013. A Decree of Dissolution (dissolution decree) was entered on September 30, 2014.

A. Relevant Dissolution Decree Awards

 Exhibit W of the dissolution decree stated that the marriage was 151 months long. It also

provided that Laurie "shall receive half of the funds earned during the marriage in [Clayton's]

pension through the [military]," and that Laurie will receive Clayton's military survivor benefits.

Clerk's Papers (CP) at 66.

 In Exhibit H of the dissolution decree, Clayton was awarded all remaining funds in his

military pension, if any, after Laurie was "awarded her share." CP at 64.

B. 2015 Order

 In 2015, the trial court entered the 2015 order, agreed upon and signed by both parties,

which set forth the provisions for the distribution of Clayton's military retired pay benefits.

2
 E-6 signifies a paygrade, which is an administrative classification used primarily to standardize
compensation across the military services. U.S. Military Rank Insignia, U.S. Dep't of Defense,
http://www.defense.gov/Resources/Insignia/ (last visited July 25, 2024).

 3
 No. 57344-0-II

 Regarding the calculation of Laurie's share of Clayton's military pension, the trial court

found

 The marital portion of the uniformed services retired pay of [Clayton] (hereafter
 military pension or retired pay) is subject to marital property division. [Laurie] is
 entitled to a share of [Clayton's] military retirement benefits, as set out in the
 Decree. [Laurie's] entitlement to retired pay accrues upon the retirement of
 [Clayton]. The remaining portion of [Clayton's] military retired pay is the sole and
 separate property of [Clayton].

 [F]or the purposes of calculating the marital portion, the parties were married on
 September 30, 2001 and separated on September 30, 2014.

CP at 7. The trial court ordered the following calculation to be made to determine Laurie's

share:

 The former spouse is awarded a percentage of the member's disposable military
 retired pay, to be computed by multiplying 50 [percent] times a fraction, the
 numerator of which is 151 months of marriage during the member's creditable
 military service, divided by the member's total number of months of creditable
 military service.

CP at 8.

 Disposable military retired pay is a member's total monthly retired pay (gross pay)

entitlement minus authorized deductions.3 However, the 2015 order did not specify when the

pension was to be divided in half nor the specific formula that should be used to calculate

Clayton's disposable retired pay.

3
 "Former Spouse Payments From Retired Pay" Summary of Major Changes, U.S. Dep't of
Defense, Volume 7B, Ch. 29, (2021), https://comptroller.defense.gov/Portals/45/documents
/fmr/archive/07barch/07b_29_Jun21.pdf

 4
 No. 57344-0-II

 Based on the above provisions, Laurie's share is calculated using the following formula:

 50 percent x (151 months of marriage/Clayton's total months of creditable military
 service) x Disposable Retired Pay.4

See CP at 8.

 In determining Clayton's "Disposable Retired Pay for the purpose of calculating the

amount due to be paid to [Laurie]," the 2015 order specified that

 [Clayton] shall be deemed to have retired as an E7 Master Sergeant with 20 years
 of creditable military service (including any statutory increases in Disposable
 Retired Pay for a service member of that rank and number of years of service made
 between now and the date of his actual retirement, irrespective of his actual rank or
 years of creditable service at retirement).

CP at 8.

 The parties further agreed that Laurie "shall be covered by the Survivor Benefit Plan . . .

regardless of the remarriage of [Clayton]. [Laurie] shall receive Survivor Benefit Plan

protections at the rate required to ensure the continuance of the amount to be received by

[Laurie] from [Clayton's military] pension in the event of [Clayton's] death, not to exceed the

maximum annuity allowed by law under the Survivor Benefit Plan." CP at 8. Lastly, the 2015

order stated

 (9) This court reserves jurisdiction to amend or modify the provisions of this order
 in light of comments received from (a) the Designated Agent, (b) another court of
 competent jurisdiction, or (c) any other organization or party, during the process of
 deciding whether this order will be accepted and honored by the Designated Agent.

 (10) This court also reserves jurisdiction to amend, modify, or terminate the
 provisions of this order, even after it has been accepted or approved by the
 Designated Agent.

CP at 9-10.

4
 The "/" in the formula signifies a fraction.

 5
 No. 57344-0-II

 II. CR 60 PROCEEDINGS

 On December 31, 2019, Clayton retired from the military with a total of 273 months of

service. Laurie then began receiving a portion of Clayton's retirement benefits from DFAS.

Clayton disagreed with DFAS's payment amount to Laurie and submitted a claim to DFAS,

which caused DFAS to conduct an audit.

 In April 2021, DFAS notified Laurie that "the award language in the [2015 order] . . . is

insufficient to support a COMMUNITY PROPERTY award . . . We have terminated the

community property award and an audit will be performed."5 CP at 129.

 On July 8, 2022, Laurie filed a CR 60 motion to correct a scrivener's error and enter a

new qualified domestic relations order. Laurie sent a setting order for the motion hearing to

Clayton. In her motion, she appeared to argue that the 2015 order did not meet DFAS's current

requirements for military retirement orders and needed to be updated in order for DFAS to

resume its payments to her. On August 5, Clayton filed his response to Laurie's motion. The

record contains a CR 2A agreement dated August 5, which is signed by both parties and provides

for electronic service of documents.

 At the motion hearing, Clayton moved to deny Laurie's CR 60 motion on the basis that

she had not complied with the procedural requirements of CR 60(e). The trial court stated it did

not consider Laurie's motion as a CR 60 motion but proceeded on the basis that in the 2015

order, the court reserved jurisdiction to amend or modify the 2015 order provisions.

5
 In January 2022, DFAS notified Laurie she received $9,683.42 in overpayments for the period
of March 1, 2020, through March 31, 2021, and Laurie repaid it in full.

 6
 No. 57344-0-II

 The trial court entered the 2022 QDRO with written findings and conclusions that stated

the 2022 QDRO "shall modify the order signed on January 13, 2015 pro tunc." CP at 270. In

regard to the calculation of Laurie's share of Clayton's military pension, the 2022 QDRO

awarded Laurie, "27.6557 [percent] of the disposable military retired pay [Clayton] would have

received had [he] retired with a retired pay base (High-3)6 of $4,586.10 and with 22 years and 9

months of creditable service on December 31, 2019." CP at 266. The 2022 QDRO also required

Laurie to reimburse Clayton 72.335 percent of the survivor benefit plan premium each year.7

Additionally, the 2022 QDRO appears to order Clayton to pay attorney fees to Laurie while also

ordering he "should not have to pay court costs, lawyer fees, and other reasonable costs because

[ ]: the court does not believe either party acted in bad faith." CP at 259.

 Clayton appeals.

 ANALYSIS

 I. APPROPRIATENESS OF ADDRESSING THE CR 60 MOTION

 Clayton argues the trial court erred by considering Laurie's CR 60 motion to vacate the

2015 order because Laurie did not identify any clerical mistake, the motion was not made within

a reasonable time, and Laurie failed to obtain and serve an order to show cause. Clayton further

asserts that the 2015 order's "reservation of jurisdiction" does not give the trial court unlimited

6
 The High-3 is a method for determining the retired pay base and is the average of the highest
36 months of basic pay.
7
 Laurie argues the court erred in exceeding the scope of clarification by ordering Laurie to pay
100 percent of the Survivor Benefit Plan. Laurie did not cross appeal this matter. Thus, we do
not address her argument. See Freedom Found. v. Dep't of Soc. & Health Servs., 9 Wn. App. 2d
654, 663 n.2, 445 P.3d 971 (2019) (A cross appeal is required if the respondent is seeking
affirmative relief rather than urging additional grounds for affirming the trial court).

 7
 No. 57344-0-II

ability to change the substance of a court's order without first satisfying RCW 26.09.170. Br. of

Appellant at 47. Clayton's arguments fail.

A. Legal Principles

 We review a decision under CR 60(b) for an abuse of discretion. Barr v. MacGugan, 119

Wn. App. 43, 46, 78 P.3d 660 (2003). A trial court abuses its discretion when it bases its

decision on untenable grounds or makes its decision for untenable reasons. Shandola v. Henry,

198 Wn. App. 889, 897, 396 P.3d 395 (2017).

 Clerical mistakes present in judgments, orders, or other parts of the record may be

corrected by the court at any time and, on motion, the court may relieve a party from a final

judgment or order on the basis of mistakes, inadvertence, excusable neglect, newly discovered

evidence, fraud, or "[a]ny other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment." CR

60(a), (b)(11). Furthermore, CR 60 "does not limit the power of a court to entertain an

independent action to relieve a party from a judgment, order, or proceeding." CR 60(c).

 Unlike motions brought under CR 60(b)(1)-(3), which must be made within one year

after a court enters its judgment or order, a CR 60(b)(11) motion must be brought within a

"reasonable time." In re Marriage of Thurston, 92 Wn. App. 494, 499-500, 963 P.2d 947

(1998); see also CR 60(b)(11). What constitutes a reasonable time depends on the facts of the

case. Thurston, 92 Wn. App. at 500. "The mere passage of time between the entry of the

judgment and the motion to set it aside is not controlling." Thurston, 92 Wn. App. at 500.

Rather, a "triggering event for the motion may arise well after entry of the judgment that the

moving party seeks to vacate." Thurston, 92 Wn. App. at 500. In determining timeliness, courts

 8
 No. 57344-0-II

may consider whether "the nonmoving party is prejudiced by the delay and whether the moving

party has a good reason for failing to take action sooner." Thurston, 92 Wn. App. at 500.

B. The Trial Court Did Not Abuse Its Discretion When It Considered Laurie's CR 60 Motion

 Laurie's motion was based on CR 60(a), CR 60(b)(11), and CR 60(c).8

 Here, years after the trial court entered the 2015 order, Clayton submitted a claim to

DFAS objecting to the amount DFAS was sending to Laurie. As a result, DFAS determined the

2015 order insufficient to support payments to Laurie. This was the triggering event for Laurie's

motion. Because of DFAS's determination, the trial court had to issue a new order to implement

the terms of the original dissolution decree. And Clayton appears to concede that changes to the

2015 order were required for DFAS to resume distribution of payments established by the

decree. Therefore, Laurie had a good reason for not taking action sooner as there was no need

for her motion prior to DFAS's determination. Moreover, Clayton does not show how the delay

prejudiced him. Thus, under these facts, we conclude that Laurie's motion was brought within a

reasonable time.

 Clayton also argues that Laurie failed to obtain and serve a show cause order. CR

60(e)(3) requires, in pertinent part, service of the motion, an affidavit, and order to show cause

upon all parties as in the case of summons in a civil action at such time before the date fixed for

the hearing. On July 8, Laurie filed her CR 60 motion and sent a setting order for the motion

hearing to Clayton. On August 5, Clayton filed his response to Laurie's motion. Further, the

8
 The trial court stated it did not consider Laurie's motion as a CR 60 motion and proceeded on
the basis that the court reserved jurisdiction to amend or modify the 2015 order provisions. The
trial court did not state what it considered Laurie's motion as. Nonetheless, Laurie's motion was
properly brought under CR 60.

 9
 No. 57344-0-II

record contains a CR 2A agreement dated August 5, which is signed by both parties and provides

for electronic service of documents. Thus, Laurie did obtain a show cause order and it appears

Laurie served notice of the motion to Clayton according to their agreement and the requirements

of CR 60.

 Therefore, the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it considered Laurie's CR 60

motion.

 II. QUALIFIED DOMESTIC RELATIONS ORDERS

 The 2015 order provided the following calculation to determine Laurie's share of

Clayton's military pension:

 The former spouse is awarded a percentage of the member's disposable military
 retired pay, to be computed by multiplying 50 [percent] times a fraction, the
 numerator of which is 151 months of marriage during the member's creditable
 military service, divided by the member's total number of months of creditable
 military service.

CP at 8.

 However, the 2015 order did not specify when the pension was to be divided in half nor

the specific formula that should be used to calculate Clayton's disposable retired pay. The 2015

order also specified that, in determining Clayton's disposable retired pay,

 [Clayton] shall be deemed to have retired as an E7 Master Sergeant with 20 years
 of creditable military service (including any statutory increases in Disposable
 Retired Pay for a service member of that rank and number of years of service made
 between now and the date of his actual retirement, irrespective of his actual rank or
 years of creditable service at retirement).

CP at 8.

 10
 No. 57344-0-II

 The 2022 QDRO awarded Laurie 27.6557 percent of the disposable military retired pay

Clayton would have received had he retired with a retired pay base "of $4,586.10 and with 22

years and 9 months of creditable service on December 31, 2019." CP at 266.

 Clayton argues the 2015 order was not ambiguous and therefore, not subject to

clarification nor modification. Clayton further argues that even if the 2015 order was

ambiguous, the trial court could not modify the order, only clarify it. Clayton asserts the 2022

QDRO modified the substantive terms of the 2015 order and the dissolution decree by:

(1) granting Laurie more than 50 percent of the marital portion awarded to her in the decree

while simultaneously reducing Clayton's right to receive all remaining retirement funds,

(2) calculating Clayton's monthly disposable retired pay based on 22 years and 9 months of

service instead of 20 years, (3) calculating the High-3 based on Clayton's actual date of

retirement, not the date of divorce, which contradicts "statutory increases" language, and

(4) calculating the "Retired Pay Multiplier" as of Clayton's actual retirement date in 2019, not

the date of divorce. Br. of Appellant at 28-35.

 We agree with Clayton that the trial court's 2022 QDRO modified, not clarified, the

parties' rights under the 2015 order.

A. The 2015 Order Was Ambiguous

 We review a trial court's interpretation of a dissolution decree de novo. Lee v. Kennard,

176 Wn. App. 678, 688, 310 P.3d 845 (2013). If a decree is ambiguous, we apply the general

rules of statutory and contract construction to discern the intention of the court that entered it. In

re Marriage of Thompson, 97 Wn. App. 873, 878, 980 P.2d 1287 (1999).

 11
 No. 57344-0-II

 A trial court cannot modify its own decree unless there are conditions justifying the

reopening of the judgment, such as the substantial change of circumstances required to modify a

child support order. RCW 26.09.170(1); see also Thompson, 97 Wn. App. at 878. An

ambiguous decree cannot be modified, but may be clarified. RCW 26.09.170(1); see also

Thompson, 97 Wn. App. at 878.

 When reviewing an ambiguous decree, we are generally limited to examining the

decree's provisions. In re Marriage of Chavez, 80 Wn. App. 432, 435-36, 909 P.2d 314 (1996).

A decree is ambiguous if it fails to specify how, and at what point in time, a pension is to be

divided between spouses. Chavez, 80 Wn. App. at 435. In Chavez, the decree stated that the

spouse was entitled to "50 [percent] of Respondent's military retirement pension," and this court

held the decree was clearly ambiguous because it did not specify how and when the pension was

to be divided in half. Chavez, 80 Wn. App. at 434-35.

 Similar to the decree in Chavez, here, the 2015 order awarded Laurie "a percentage of

[Clayton's] disposable military retired pay, to be computed by multiplying 50% times a fraction"

but failed to specify when the pension was to be divided in half (i.e., the date at which the

pension is to be valued). CP at 8. Thus, the 2015 order was ambiguous.

B. The Trial Court Modified the 2015 Order

 Clayton argues the 2022 QDRO modified the substantive terms of the 2015 order with

respect to each term of the hypothetical formula above, which increased Laurie's share of

Clayton's military pension awarded to her in the dissolution decree and in the 2015 order.

Specifically, Clayton claims that the date of his divorce from Laurie, September 30, 2014, should

have been the hypothetical retirement date for all parts of the formula, not the date of his actual

 12
 No. 57344-0-II

retirement—December 31, 2019—that the trial court used. We agree that the 2022 QDRO

modified the parties' rights in the 2015 order regarding Clayton's retirement date but do not

decide the correct retirement date to use. Because the language of the 2015 order is unresolvably

ambiguous and the intent of the court cannot be ascertained by the language in the 2015 order,

we reverse for the trial court to reopen the property distribution solely to address this issue. We

do not address Clayton's other arguments.

 A court modifies a decree when it reduces or extends rights given to one party beyond the

scope originally intended. Thompson, 97 Wn. App. at 878. In contrast, a court clarifies a decree

when it merely defines rights already given, "spelling them out more completely if necessary."

Thompson, 97 Wn. App. at 878.

 The 2015 order dictated that the formula to determine Laurie's share9 is:

 50 percent x (151 months of marriage/Clayton's total months of creditable military
 service) x Disposable Retired Pay

See CP at 8.

 The 2015 order did not provide a formula for the calculation of Clayton's disposable

retired pay and was ambiguous as to whether Clayton's pension should be valued at the date of

the divorce or his actual retirement. In determining Clayton's disposable retired pay, the 2015

order only specified that

9
 The parties agree that Laurie's resulting marital share is 27.6557 percent of Clayton's
disposable retired pay, so this percentage is not in dispute here.

 13
 No. 57344-0-II

 [Clayton] shall be deemed to have retired as an E7 Master Sergeant with 20 years
 of creditable military service (including any statutory increases in Disposable
 Retired Pay for a service member of that rank and number of years of service made
 between now and the date of his actual retirement, irrespective of his actual rank
 or years of creditable service at retirement).

CP at 8 (emphasis added).

 In the 2022 QDRO, the trial court calculated Clayton's disposable retired pay using the

following formula:

 Clayton's disposable retired pay = Retired Pay Base (High-3) x Service Percent
 Multiplier

 Service Percent Multiplier = 2.5 percent x Number of Years of Active Duty Service

See CP at 101. It is not clear from the record whether Clayton is contesting the use of this

formula.

 Essentially, the parties' dispute appears to focus on whether the trial court should have

used the date of divorce or date of Clayton's actual retirement to establish the salary paid to an

E-7 master sergeant with 20 years of creditable military service and whether it was correct to use

22 years and 9 months (273 months) to calculate the service percent multiplier.

 Here, the trial court implemented "a hybrid" method in which it calculated Clayton's

High-3 using 20 years (240 months) of service, measured as if Clayton retired on his actual

retirement date as an E-7 master sergeant with 240 months of service and calculated the service

percent multiplier using 273 months of service. Rept. of Proc. (RP) at 19. The "hybrid" method

used by the court does not appear to clarify the parties' rights established in the 2015 order, but

instead modified the parties' rights.

 14
 No. 57344-0-II

 Clayton asserts the parties' intent in 2015 was to calculate the High-3 using 240 months

of service, measured as if he retired on the date of divorce as an E-7 master sergeant with 240

months of service. Under Clayton's interpretation, the trial court modified the 2015 order.

Laurie maintains that the trial court's 2022 QDRO calculation was correct. But both parties'

proposed interpretations require us to supply terms that are not in the 2015 order. In adopting

either party's interpretation, it requires us to do more than just spell out the terms more

completely. The language of the 2015 order is unresolvably ambiguous such that we cannot

construe the 2022 QDRO consistent with the trial court's intent in 2015.

 The trial court's imputation of values and calculation of disposable retired pay went

beyond spelling out more completely the parties' rights already given in the 2015 order and

dissolution decree. In implementing the 2022 QDRO, the trial court modified the 2015 order by

reducing Clayton's rights and expanding Laurie's rights given in the decree. Thus, the trial court

improperly modified the 2015 order.10 We reverse the trial court's 2022 QDRO and remand the

matter. On remand, the trial court should reopen the property distribution solely to calculate the

distribution of Clayton's disposable retired pay.

 In light of our decision to reverse and remand to the trial court, we do not reach Clayton's

remaining arguments—that it was error for the trial court to order Clayton to pay back pay to

Laurie, find that Laurie did not act in bad faith, include a "Continued Jurisdiction" clause in the

2022 QDRO, include a waiver of privacy statement in the discovery clause of the 2022 QDRO,

10
 Clayton argues the removal of language concerning statutory increases in the 2022 QDRO
modified and nullified the 2015 order. Clayton also argues the trial court's calculation of
Laurie's share of his military pension is incorrect. In light of our decision, we do not reach these
arguments.

 15
 No. 57344-0-II

and include language in the 2022 QDRO that Clayton "prepared and consented" to the order. Br.

of Appellant at 50.

 ATTORNEY FEES

 I. AT TRIAL

 Clayton claims the trial court erred by requiring him to pay Laurie's trial attorney fees.

Notably, the trial court's order states Clayton is liable for Laurie's attorney fees yet also states

that he is not liable for Laurie's attorney fees. The trial court's order contains a scrivener's error,

which is a clerical mistake that, when amended, would correctly convey the trial court's intention

based on other evidence. State v. Wemhoff, 24 Wn. App. 2d 198, 202, 519 P.3d 297 (2022).

 On remand, the trial court should correct this scrivener's error in the 2022 QDRO.

 II. ON APPEAL

 Clayton claims he should be awarded attorney fees on appeal pursuant to RAP 18.1(a),

RCW 26.09.140, and on the basis of intransigence. Both parties claim a need for assistance and

the other party's ability to pay and make claims of intransigence. We disagree and decline to

award attorney fees on appeal.

 RCW 26.09.140, which applies in dissolution cases, states in relevant part that "[u]pon

any appeal, the appellate court may, in its discretion, order a party to pay for the cost to the other

party of maintaining the appeal and attorney's fees in addition to statutory costs." An award is

based upon a balancing of the needs of the requesting party against the other party's ability to

pay. In re Marriage of Lilly, 75 Wn. App. 715, 720, 880 P.2d 40 (1994). Laurie has submitted

an affidavit of financial need as required by RAP 18.1(c), but Clayton has not submitted an

affidavit.

 16
 No. 57344-0-II

 We may also consider "the extent to which one spouse's intransigence caused the spouse

seeking a fee award to require additional legal services." In re Marriage of Crosetto, 82 Wn.

App. 545, 563, 918 P.2d 954 (1996). The financial resources of the spouse seeking fees becomes

irrelevant once intransigence is established. Crosetto, 82 Wn. App. at 564. "Intransigence is the

quality or state of being uncompromising." In re Marriage of Schumacher, 100 Wn. App. 208,

216, 997 P.2d 399 (2000).

 The record does not reflect a continual pattern of obstruction on either party's part.

Furthermore, the trial court noted that it "[did not] see that anybody has done anything

recalcitrant or what have you that would justify awarding fees to one [party] or the other." RP at

21. Aside from Clayton and Laurie's claims that they incurred more expenses, they provide

minimal substantiation for their claims. Moreover, there is no showing that Laurie's CR 60

motion or Clayton's appeal was brought in bad faith. While Laurie has a demonstrated need, it is

unclear that Clayton has an ability to pay. And Clayton has not demonstrated need nor Laurie's

ability to pay.

 We deny both requests for appellate attorney fees.

 CONCLUSION

 We reverse and remand. On remand, the trial court should reopen the property distribution

solely to calculate the distribution of Clayton's disposable retired pay. On remand, the trial court

should also correct the scrivener's error in the 2022 QDRO regarding attorney fees. And we deny

both parties' requests for appellate attorney fees.

 17
 No. 57344-0-II

 A majority of the panel having determined that this opinion will not be printed in the

Washington Appellate Reports, but will be filed for public record in accordance with RCW

2.06.040, it is so ordered.

 Che, J.
 We concur:

 Cruser, C.J.

 Price, J.

 18