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CourtListener opinion 10780794
Date unknown · US
- Extracted case name
- AFTUCK v. AFTUCK. HODGES
- Extracted reporter citation
- pending
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- pending
Machine-draft headnote
Machine-draft public headnote: CourtListener opinion 10780794 is included in the LexyCorpus QDRO sample set as a public CourtListener opinion with relevance to QDRO procedure / domestic relations order 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: QDRO procedure / domestic relations order issues
Evidence quotes
QDRO“proceeds to cover the mortgage that the Husband took out in his own name"). Wife cites to Mermann v. Tillitski, 297 Ga. 881, 883 (778 SE2d 191) (2015), which found that even where the wife failed to follow the divorce decree's mandate that she prepare a qualified domestic relations order ("QRDO") within 30 days of the signing of a settlement agreement, nothing in the agreement suggested this meant she would forfeit earnings in the husband's IRA accruing after the 30-day period to provide the QRDO had run. Here, however, the pertinent issue is whether the Decree prohibited Husband from changing share allocations prior to any transfer to”
retirement benefits“See Morgan v. Morgan, 288 Ga. 417, 419 (2) (704 SE2d 764) (2011) (finding trial court improperly modified divorce decree and did more than merely clarify or construe imprecise language when it supplied a "missing percentage allocation of Husband's military retirement benefits" in Wife's favor where parties had a mutual misunderstanding of how Husband's Navy retirement account would function); 10 Roquemore v. Burgess, 281 Ga. 593, 595 (642 SE2d 41) (2007) (concluding trial court improperly modified divorce settlement agreement by requiring payment of agreed- upon sum from proceeds of sale of marital residence, where plain”
domestic relations order“to cover the mortgage that the Husband took out in his own name"). Wife cites to Mermann v. Tillitski, 297 Ga. 881, 883 (778 SE2d 191) (2015), which found that even where the wife failed to follow the divorce decree's mandate that she prepare a qualified domestic relations order ("QRDO") within 30 days of the signing of a settlement agreement, nothing in the agreement suggested this meant she would forfeit earnings in the husband's IRA accruing after the 30-day period to provide the QRDO had run. Here, however, the pertinent issue is whether the Decree prohibited Husband from changing share allocations prior to any transfer to”
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
THIRD DIVISION
DOYLE, P. J.,
HODGES and WATKINS, JJ.
NOTICE: Motions for reconsideration must be
physically received in our clerk's office within ten
days of the date of decision to be deemed timely filed.
https://www.gaappeals.us/rules
January 15, 2025
In the Court of Appeals of Georgia
A24A1752. AFTUCK v. AFTUCK.
HODGES, Judge.
Appellant Rodney Aftuck ("Husband") and appellee Lisa Aftuck ("Wife")
entered into a Consent Final Judgment and Decree of Divorce providing, inter alia,
that various financial transactions take place by dates certain. The parties later filed
cross-motions for contempt, each alleging that the other had not timely complied with
the terms of the Decree1 and, in Wife's case, also alleging that she had not received the
proportion or type of assets required by the Decree. The trial court declined to hold
either party in wilful contempt, but ordered Husband to make additional asset
transfers to Wife. We granted Husband's application for discretionary appeal, in
1
Husband alleged that wife had not timely vacated the marital residence per the
terms of the Decree.
which he does not challenge the trial court's refusal to hold Wife in contempt, but
rather contends that the trial court erred by impermissibly modifying the Decree when
it ordered him to transfer additional assets to Wife. For the reasons that follow, we
affirm in part and reverse in part.
In matters such as this, while the trial court has broad discretion
to determine whether a divorce decree has been violated and has
authority to interpret and clarify the decree, it does not have the power in
a contempt proceeding to modify the terms of the decree. A trial court has broad
discretion to enforce the letter and the spirit of the decree, but the court must
do so without modifying the original judgment that is being enforced. It is the
function of the court to construe the contract as written and not to make
a new contract for the parties. The test to determine whether an order is
clarified or modified is whether the clarification is reasonable or whether
it is so contrary to the apparent intention of the original order as to
amount to a modification.
(Citations and punctuation omitted; emphasis supplied.) Greenwood v. Greenwood, 289
Ga. 163, 164 (709 SE2d 803) (2011). "[W]here a contempt action turns on the
meaning of terms in an incorporated settlement agreement, construction of those
terms is a question of law that is subject to de novo review on appeal." Sutherlin v.
Sutherlin, 301 Ga. 581, 582 (802 SE2d 204) (2017); see OCGA § 13-2-1. We construe
settlement agreements in divorce cases "in the same manner and under the same rules
2
as all other contractual agreements." Kreimer v. Kreimer, 274 Ga. 359, 361 (1) (552
SE2d 826) (2001).
Pertinent to this appeal, the Decree required Husband to complete transfers
within two asset categories to Wife by particular dates: The first involved a transfer
of stocks/noncash assets in an IRA and the second involved cash transfers. We will
discuss each type of transfer in turn, noting at the outset that the parties' own actions
caused these transfers to become intermingled.
(a) The IRA transfer. The Decree provides as follows:
Retirement and Investment Accounts:[] Husband shall transfer three
hundred seventy-five thousand dollars ($375,000.00), from [a
specifically identified] Merrill Edge IRA [] to Wife within thirty (30)
days of the Final Judgment and Decree of Divorce. The funds to be
transferred to Wife shall consist of a pro-rata share of stocks, bonds, and
other non-cash assets within the account, and a tax neutral basis. Upon
completion of transfer, the remaining balance shall be Husband's sole
and exclusive property.
The parties signed the Decree on January 24, 2023; thus, under the terms of the
Decree, Husband should have transferred the above-described assets to Wife within
3
30 days — at the latest, by February 23, 2023. Husband and Wife, however, did not
sign the transfer form until June 11, 2023.
The record shows that on March 14, 2023, Wife's attorney e-mailed Husband's
attorney, asking about the transfers. Husband's attorney responded, acknowledging
that because of a "mix up on our end[,]" meaning the law firm, Husband was unaware
of the payment deadlines. The e-mail asked for "grace" because the delay was "not
[Husband's] fault."
Husband testified that he did not have account information from Wife at the
time her attorney sent the e-mail, and Wife testified that she first set up an account
into which Husband could transfer the assets on March 29, 2023 and later set up
"multiple accounts" because, for reasons that are not entirely clear from the record,
there were problems with all of the accounts' ability to receive transfers. Husband
made several unsuccessful attempts to transfer the assets to these accounts, first
learning that there was a problem with the attempted transfers in April or May 2023.
Wife set up the account into which Husband ultimately was able to transfer the assets
in early June 2023.2
2
We note that although the transcript references specific exhibit numbers
identifying the financial documents to which the parties' testimony refers, not all of
4
Husband testified and presented financial statements showing that between the
time Merrill Lynch executed the $375,000 transfer and the time his account was
debited, the equities had gone up in value and his account was actually debited for
$381,116.25. Wife testified that the value she received when the assets were available
to her on June 28, 2023, however, was only $372,000; documentary evidence she
presented showed the shares were valued at $372,731.25.
(b) The cash transfer. The Decree also provides:
Lump Sum Payment: As part of the equitable division of property,
Husband shall pay Wife one hundred fifty thousand dollars
($150,000.00) in cash in two installments as follows:
1) Twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000.00) no later than February 10,
2023;
2) One hundred twenty-five thousand dollars ($125,000.00) no later than
July 1, 2023.
There appears to be no dispute in this appeal related to the payment of the first
$25,000 cash transfer as stated in the Decree. On June 30, 2023, Husband wrote a
the exhibits in the record are numbered, and the parties' appellate briefs do not
provide record citations to these documents, so it was not always possible for the
Court to identify the documents the parties discussed in their testimony.
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check for the second cash transfer. The check, however, was written not for the
remaining $125,0000, but for $143,600. A note in the memo line says: "[$]150,000 -
[$]6400 (overp[ay]m[en]t) = [$]143,600[.]"
At the hearing, Wife testified that this higher amount was a "mistake" and
Husband testified that he "forgot" he had already made the first $25,000 payment
and thought he owed Wife the full $150,000. He deducted $6,400 from the $150,000
to compensate for what he viewed as the overpayment to Wife from the
aforementioned Merrill Lynch IRA transfer where his account had been debited for
$381,116.25 (rather than the $375,000 in the Decree) because the stock had
appreciated after he initiated the transfer.3
In view of the overpayment caused by his $143,600 check, Husband asked Wife
to write him a check for $25,000. She agreed and sent Husband a check for $25,000.
Because of these various transactions, Wife testified that she received, as to the
3
The mathematical discrepancy in Husband's $6,400 deduction will be
discussed more fully in Division 2.
6
second cash payment, only $118,600 ($125,000 - $6,400 = $118,600) rather than the
$125,000 she should have received.4
The parties filed cross motions for contempt, as noted above, and following a
hearing, the trial court issued the order that is the subject of this appeal.
(c) The trial court's order. The trial court's order found that Wife received
"$375,000" from Husband, but because the stock market rose between February 23,
2023, the last date by which the Husband was to make the transfer pursuant to the
Decree, and June 28, 2023, when Wife actually received the assets, "Husband
benefitted from the delay and transferred to Wife less shares of stock than he would
have had he timely transferred the shares." The trial court ordered Husband to
transfer to Wife an additional 289 shares of Apple stock.
The trial court also determined that although the Decree required Husband to
pay Wife $125,000 in cash by July 1, 2023, he "shorted the Wife on this payment by
$6,400[,]" and it ordered Husband to pay Wife $6,400 in cash.
Husband filed the instant appeal.
4
As Husband's counsel notes in his appellate brief, "Did they overthink it? Yes.
There is no dispute that the parties' convoluted ways of payment and reimbursement
made things more complex . . . ."
7
1. The IRA transfer. As noted above, the trial court awarded additional Apple
shares to Wife, finding that Husband transferred to Wife fewer shares than he would
have had the transfer been timely. Husband argues on appeal that the trial court
impermissibly modified the Decree by awarding Wife 289 additional shares of Apple
stock in excess of the $375,000 worth of shares as listed in the Decree.5 We agree.
First, Wife points to no evidence, nor do we find any, showing that Husband
benefitted from any transfer delay. Indeed, the record shows his account was
ultimately debited for more than $381,000 rather than the $375,000 in the Decree.
Second, Wife argues that, because the asset holdings within the account had changed
by the time she received the transfer, she did not receive the same "pro rata"
allocation of shares she would have received had Husband timely paid her in
accordance with the Decree. In other words, Wife believes she received shares that
were less valuable. She specifically avers that in December 2022, the month prior to
5
As Husband notes in his appellate brief, the trial court stated at the hearing
that it was awarding 289 additional shares of Apple stock, valued at approximately
$42,000, to cover what it calculated was the amount by which the Husband benefitted
from the late transfer, and to account for how the share allocations held in Husband's
account changed between when he should have made the "pro-rata" transfer per the
Decree (February 23, 2023 at the latest) and when Wife actually received the assets
(June 28, 2023). The trial court's written order, however, does not contain this
rationale.
8
when the parties signed the Decree, Husband's account held shares in different
companies, in different proportions, than what was in the account at the time of the
actual transfer.
Although Wife argues that she should have received more shares of Apple stock
based upon what was in the account a month prior to the signing of the Decree, the
parties point to nothing in the record showing when the asset allocations in the
account changed, and this Court takes no position on the issue. Pertinently, nothing
in the Decree restricted Husband in any way from buying or selling assets within the
account at any time prior to when he initiated the required transfer to Wife. The
relevant portion of the Decree provides only that assets "to be transferred to Wife
shall consist of a pro-rata share of stocks, bonds, or other non-cash assets within the
account[.]"
We note that although the trial court's order found that Husband "benefitted"
because he did not timely transfer the shares by the February 2023 deadline, it is
undisputed that Wife did not set up any account to receive the shares until March
2023 and did not set up an account that actually could receive the shares until June
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2023. Wife cites to no evidence in the record showing that Husband could have
transferred the shares to her at any earlier time.
Pretermitting whether the trial court intended to penalize Husband for not
timely transferring the shares, despite its decision not to hold him in wilful contempt,
nothing in the Decree prohibited Husband from buying, selling, or changing share
allocations within the account prior to the date of transfer. Further, the evidence
shows that Husband initiated a transfer for shares at that time valued at $375,000, as
provided for in the Decree, although because of share price fluctuations which are
endemic to the stock market and which the Decree does not address, Husband's
account ultimately was debited for more than $381,000 and Wife ultimately received
approximately $372,000. The trial court's order effectively modified the Decree to
add a prohibition on stock trading that is nowhere present in the plain language of the
Decree. See Morgan v. Morgan, 288 Ga. 417, 419 (2) (704 SE2d 764) (2011) (finding
trial court improperly modified divorce decree and did more than merely clarify or
construe imprecise language when it supplied a "missing percentage allocation of
Husband's military retirement benefits" in Wife's favor where parties had a mutual
misunderstanding of how Husband's Navy retirement account would function);
10
Roquemore v. Burgess, 281 Ga. 593, 595 (642 SE2d 41) (2007) (concluding trial court
improperly modified divorce settlement agreement by requiring payment of agreed-
upon sum from proceeds of sale of marital residence, where plain language of
agreement did not so require); Berry v. Berry, 351 Ga. App. 731, 733-734 (1) (832 SE2d
881) (2019) (finding trial court improperly modified settlement agreement by
requiring parties to split mortgage debt evenly where "nothing in the agreement stated
that [the Wife] also shared the risk that the sale [of the parties' home] would not result
in sufficient proceeds to cover the mortgage that the Husband took out in his own
name").
Wife cites to Mermann v. Tillitski, 297 Ga. 881, 883 (778 SE2d 191) (2015),
which found that even where the wife failed to follow the divorce decree's mandate
that she prepare a qualified domestic relations order ("QRDO") within 30 days of the
signing of a settlement agreement, nothing in the agreement suggested this meant she
would forfeit earnings in the husband's IRA accruing after the 30-day period to
provide the QRDO had run. Here, however, the pertinent issue is whether the Decree
prohibited Husband from changing share allocations prior to any transfer to Wife. It
contains no such prohibition, nor does Wife point us to anything indicating the
11
parties' mutual intent was that it include such an (unwritten) prohibition. "It is the
function of the court to construe the contract as written and not to make a new
contract for the parties." (Citation and punctuation omitted.) Greenwood, 289 Ga. at
164. "A trial court cannot modify a divorce decree in a contempt action, whether or
not the trial court holds a spouse in contempt." Brown v. Brown, 300 Ga. 559, 561 (796
SE2d 269) (2017). Because the trial court improperly modified the Decree by
requiring Husband to provide Wife with an additional 289 shares of Apple stock, we
reverse this portion of its order.
2. The cash transfer. Husband also asserts that the trial court impermissibly
modified the Decree by ordering him to pay Wife $6,400 in cash.
The convoluted cash and asset transfers undergirding this appeal have already
been outlined above. We note that this $6,400 — which Husband contends on appeal
is an impermissible modification because it is "more than he owes" — is the amount
that Husband chose to deduct from his cash payment to Wife in an attempt to reimburse
himself when market fluctuations caused his IRA to be debited for more than
$381,000 after he initiated the Decree's required $375,000 noncash asset transfer to
Wife. The total amount of the debit — $381,116.25 minus $375,000 — equals
12
$6,116.25, not $6,400. Husband argues on appeal that he should only have to pay Wife
$283.75 ($6,400 minus $6,116.25).
The mathematical errors leading to Husband's complaints on appeal, however,
are of his own making. See Sutherlin, 301 Ga. at 588 (III) (noting that a "party will not
be heard to complain of error induced by [his] own conduct") (citation and
punctuation omitted). Further, he has presented no real argument and cites to no legal
authority whatsoever in support of this enumeration. See Court of Appeals Rule 25
(a) ("At a minimum, the appellant's brief must include . . . argument, which must cite
the authorities relied on . . . .") (emphasis supplied); In the Interest of B. P., 222 Ga.
App. 621, 622 (475 SE2d 673) (1996) (declining to address contention of error where
appellant provided no supporting authority for the argument).
In sum, we affirm the trial court's order directing Husband to pay Wife $6,400
in cash, but we reverse the order insofar as it awards 289 additional shares of Apple
stock to Wife.
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part. Doyle, P. J., and Watkins, J.,
concur.
13