← LexyCorpus index

LexyCorpus case page

CourtListener opinion 1066988

Date unknown · US

Extracted case name
pending
Extracted reporter citation
pending
Docket / number
pending
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 1066988 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

CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH Frederick B. Lowe, Judge (Aysel Jafarace, pro se, on brief). (Jerrold G. Weinberg; Michael L. Donner, Sr.; Weinberg & Stein, P.C., on brief), for appellee. Aysel Jafarace appeals the trial judge's entry of a Qualified Domestic Relations Order (QDRO). Upon reviewing the record and briefs of the parties, we conclude that this appeal is without merit. Accordingly, we summarily affirm the decision. See Rule 5A:27. BACKGROUND The parties were divorced by final decree entered on January 8, 2001. The trial judge "affirmed and ratified" the parties' "written Separation and Property Settlement Agr

retirement benefits

parties shall divide the husband's BP Employee Savings Plan and BP Retirement Accumulation Plan. Paragraph ten of the agreement, entitled "Retirement," is as follows: Wife shall receive at the time of Husband's retirement one-half the value of Husband's retirement plan as of July 31, 1989. Such benefits shall be payable to Wife monthly as received by Husband at the rate of 25 percent of the net cash benefit actually received by Husband until Wife receives her total share. Wife shall be responsible for any taxes due on her portion of the retirement. At Husband's option, Husband may pay Wife her portion of the retirem

pension

orporated [it] into th[e January 8, 2001] Decree." In the decree, the trial judge ordered both parties "to fully comply with the terms of the Agreement" and reserved jurisdiction in the decree to enter orders to enforce the terms of the Agreement concerning pension and retirement assets. * Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication. The agreement provides that the parties shall divide the husband's BP Employee Savings Plan and BP Retirement Accumulation Plan. Paragraph ten of the agreement, entitled "Retirement," is as follows: Wife shall receive at the time of Husband's retir

alternate payee

y order wife objected to and appeals from is the QDRO for the Retirement Accumulation Plan. -2- date of distribution because the failure of [husband's] attorney, who drafted the agreement, to provide [wife] with normal gains and losses usually given to the Alternate Payee." Therefore, the only issue before this Court is whether the trial judge erred in including in the QDRO the value specified in the Agreement. See Rule 5A:18. See also Ohree v. Commonwealth, 26 Va. App. 299, 308, 494 S.E.2d 484, 488 (1998) ("The Court of Appeals will not consider an argument on appeal which was not presented to the trial court."). DISC

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
pending
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

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges Benton, Humphreys and Senior Judge Overton

AYSEL JAFARACE
 MEMORANDUM OPINION*
v. Record No. 1086-04-1 PER CURIAM
 AUGUST 17, 2004
ARDOGAL JAFARACE

 FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF VIRGINIA BEACH
 Frederick B. Lowe, Judge

 (Aysel Jafarace, pro se, on brief).

 (Jerrold G. Weinberg; Michael L. Donner, Sr.; Weinberg & Stein,
 P.C., on brief), for appellee.

 Aysel Jafarace appeals the trial judge's entry of a Qualified Domestic Relations Order

(QDRO). Upon reviewing the record and briefs of the parties, we conclude that this appeal is

without merit. Accordingly, we summarily affirm the decision. See Rule 5A:27.

 BACKGROUND

 The parties were divorced by final decree entered on January 8, 2001. The trial judge

"affirmed and ratified" the parties' "written Separation and Property Settlement Agreement, dated

December 9, 1989," and "incorporated [it] into th[e January 8, 2001] Decree." In the decree, the

trial judge ordered both parties "to fully comply with the terms of the Agreement" and reserved

jurisdiction in the decree to enter orders to enforce the terms of the Agreement concerning pension

and retirement assets.

 *
 Pursuant to Code § 17.1-413, this opinion is not designated for publication.
 The agreement provides that the parties shall divide the husband's BP Employee Savings

Plan and BP Retirement Accumulation Plan. Paragraph ten of the agreement, entitled "Retirement,"

is as follows:

 Wife shall receive at the time of Husband's retirement one-half the
 value of Husband's retirement plan as of July 31, 1989. Such
 benefits shall be payable to Wife monthly as received by Husband
 at the rate of 25 percent of the net cash benefit actually received by
 Husband until Wife receives her total share. Wife shall be
 responsible for any taxes due on her portion of the retirement. At
 Husband's option, Husband may pay Wife her portion of the
 retirement in one lump-sum payment even if he chooses to receive
 the retirement on a monthly basis. In the event Husband takes a
 lump-sum payment, Wife shall receive the total amount at the time
 Husband receives the lump-sum payment. The parties
 acknowledge that Wife's share of the retirement as of July 31,
 1989, is approximately $19,000.

(Emphases added.)

 At a hearing to consider wife's motion for entry of QDRO's regarding the distribution of

husband's retirement accounts, wife's attorney argued that wife "should be getting the $19,000

and whatever growth, again, occurred in [the Retirement Accumulation Plan] account."1

Husband's attorney argued that the agreement unambiguously limited the wife to receive

$19,000 and that any deviation would be tantamount to "rewriting the contract." The trial judge

ruled that the value of wife's share was $19,000, the amount specified in the agreement.

 ISSUES ON APPEAL

 In her brief, wife lists four questions and presents seven questions. The only issue raised

at the hearing and preserved for appeal was the value of wife's share of husband's Retirement

Accumulation Plan. Wife's attorney signed the QDRO "Seen and Objected," noting that the trial

judge failed to include "earnings (dividends, interest, gains and losses) from July 31, 1989 to the

 1
 Although wife moved for entry of two QDRO's, and the trial judge entered orders for
both plans, the only order wife objected to and appeals from is the QDRO for the Retirement
Accumulation Plan.
 -2-
 date of distribution because the failure of [husband's] attorney, who drafted the agreement, to

provide [wife] with normal gains and losses usually given to the Alternate Payee." Therefore,

the only issue before this Court is whether the trial judge erred in including in the QDRO the

value specified in the Agreement. See Rule 5A:18. See also Ohree v. Commonwealth, 26

Va. App. 299, 308, 494 S.E.2d 484, 488 (1998) ("The Court of Appeals will not consider an

argument on appeal which was not presented to the trial court.").

 DISCUSSION

 "Property settlement agreements are contracts subject to the same rules of formation,

validity, and interpretation as other contracts." Bergman v. Bergman, 25 Va. App. 204, 211, 487

S.E.2d 264, 267 (1997).

 "It is the function of the court to construe the contract made by
 the parties, not to make a contract for them. The question for the
 court is what did the parties agree to as evidenced by their contract.
 The guiding light in the construction of a contract is the intention
 of the parties as expressed by them in the words they have used,
 and courts are bound to say that the parties intended what the
 written instrument plainly declares."

Wilson v. Holyfield, 227 Va. 184, 187, 313 S.E.2d 396, 398 (1984) (quoting Meade v. Wallen,

226 Va. 465, 467, 311 S.E.2d 103, 104 (1984)). "A corollary to [this] principle is that courts

cannot read into contracts language which will add to or take away from the meaning of the

words already contained therein." Id.

 Code § 20-107.3(K)(4) allows courts to issue qualified domestic relations orders to

"effectuate the expressed intent of the [decree]." A QDRO may not "modify a final divorce

decree simply to adjust its terms in light of the parties' changed circumstances"; it must be

"consistent with the substantive provisions of the original decree." Caudle v. Caudle, 18

Va. App. 795, 798, 447 S.E.2d 247, 249 (1994); see also Fahey v. Fahey, 24 Va. App. 254,

256-57, 481 S.E.2d 496, 497 (1997) (en banc) (reversing an order that amended a QDRO and

 -3-
 holding that "the court was without authority to substantively modify [the QDRO] simply to

redress [a] changed circumstance").

 The record in this case established that the parties entered into an unequivocal,

unambiguous agreement specifying a sum certain that wife was to receive. Thus, the trial judge

was without authority to substantively modify the QDRO merely because the circumstances now

disadvantage one of the parties. To do so would be to rewrite the parties' contract. Accordingly,

we hold that the trial judge did not err in entering the QDRO, which was consistent with the

Agreement incorporated in the final decree, and we summarily affirm the decision.

 Affirmed.

 -4-