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CourtListener opinion 2707393

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 2707393 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

Luke, appeals from the January 17, 2013 judgment of the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division. Appellant was married to appellee, Dreama D. Luke, on December 18, 1976, and the couple divorced on August 26, 2005. At that time, a Qualified Domestic Relations Order ("QDRO") was entered, which awarded a portion of appellant's pension to appellee. Appellee died in July 2012. Thereafter, appellant moved the trial court for interpretation of the QDRO seeking reversion of appellee's pension allocation to appellant. The trial court adopted the magistrate's finding that the portion of appellant's pension awarded to appe

pension

omestic Relations Division. Appellant was married to appellee, Dreama D. Luke, on December 18, 1976, and the couple divorced on August 26, 2005. At that time, a Qualified Domestic Relations Order ("QDRO") was entered, which awarded a portion of appellant's pension to appellee. Appellee died in July 2012. Thereafter, appellant moved the trial court for interpretation of the QDRO seeking reversion of appellee's pension allocation to appellant. The trial court adopted the magistrate's finding that the portion of appellant's pension awarded to appellee in the QDRO did not revert back to appellant upon appellee's deat

alternate payee

t as a matter of fact and law in its determination that the Qualified Domestic Relations Order was not in the nature of a survivor annuity which by its terms allowed for survivorship and/or reversion to the plan participant/appellant upon the death of the alternate payee. {¶6} Appellant's second and third assignments of error raise objections to the trial court's adoption of the magistrate's decision. By failing to timely object to the magistrate's findings below, however, appellant has waived all but plain error on appeal. Civ.R. 53(D)(3)(b)(iv). Regarding plain error, the following standard of review was announced b

domestic relations order

als from the January 17, 2013 judgment of the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division. Appellant was married to appellee, Dreama D. Luke, on December 18, 1976, and the couple divorced on August 26, 2005. At that time, a Qualified Domestic Relations Order ("QDRO") was entered, which awarded a portion of appellant's pension to appellee. Appellee died in July 2012. Thereafter, appellant moved the trial court for interpretation of the QDRO seeking reversion of appellee's pension allocation to appellant. The trial court adopted the magistrate's finding that the portion of appellant's pension awarded to appe

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

[Cite as Luke v. Luke, 2013-Ohio-5841.]

 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS

 ELEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

 TRUMBULL COUNTY, OHIO

THOMAS E. LUKE, : OPINION

 Plaintiff-Appellant, :
 CASE NO. 2013-T-0014
 - vs - :

DREAMA D. LUKE, DECEASED, et al., :

 Defendant-Appellee. :

Civil Appeal from the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations
Division, Case No. 2004 DR 366.

Judgment: Affirmed.

William P. McGuire, William P. McGuire Co., L.P.A., 106 East Market Street, Suite 705,
P.O. Box 1243, Warren, OH 44482-1243 (For Plaintiff-Appellant).

TIMOTHY P. CANNON, P.J.

 {¶1} Appellant, Thomas E. Luke, appeals from the January 17, 2013 judgment

of the Trumbull County Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division.

Appellant was married to appellee, Dreama D. Luke, on December 18, 1976, and the

couple divorced on August 26, 2005. At that time, a Qualified Domestic Relations Order

("QDRO") was entered, which awarded a portion of appellant's pension to appellee.

Appellee died in July 2012. Thereafter, appellant moved the trial court for interpretation

of the QDRO seeking reversion of appellee's pension allocation to appellant. The trial

court adopted the magistrate's finding that the portion of appellant's pension awarded to
 appellee in the QDRO did not revert back to appellant upon appellee's death and

entered judgment accordingly. On appeal, appellant argues he was denied the

opportunity to object to the magistrate's findings. For the reasons that follow, the

judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

 {¶2} Appellant's first assignment of error states:

 The trial court committed prejudicial error and abused its discretion
 in not following procedural due process to permit the appellant/plan
 participant to object to the magistrate's report dated 01/14/13, when
 the trial court entered judgment and mailed both the magistrate's
 report and its own decision of 01/17/13 which violated Ohio Rules
 of Civil Procedure, Civil Rule 53(E)(1) and (3) requiring magistrate's
 decisions to be mailed to the parties allowing 14 days to the parties
 to object to the magistrate's decision; and Civil Rule 53(E)(4)(b) for
 the trial court to hold a hearing on the objections to the magistrate's
 decision.

 {¶3} A trial court's adoption of a magistrate's decision in no way interferes with

the parties' opportunity to object to the magistrate's findings. The trial court is

specifically empowered to adopt a magistrate's findings during the period for timely

objections. Civ.R. 53(D)(4)(e)(i).1 Doing so does not preclude the parties from raising

objections: "[a] party may file written objections to a magistrate's decision within

fourteen days of the filing of the decision, whether or not the court has adopted the

decision during that fourteen-day period as permitted by Civ.R. 53(D)(4)(e)(i)." Civ.R.

53(D)(3)(b)(i). If the trial court adopts a magistrate's decision during the parties' 14-day

window to timely object, an objection operates as an automatic stay of execution of the

judgment until the court addresses the objection. Civ.R. 53(D)(4)(e)(i).

 {¶4} Thus, appellant was free to object and seek a hearing even after the trial

court adopted the magistrate's decision. However, appellant failed to object or seek a

1. We note that the former provisions of Civil Rule 53(E) are now addressed in Civil Rule 53(D).

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 hearing within the prescribed time. Accordingly, appellant's first assignment of error is

without merit.

 {¶5} For ease of discussion, we address appellant's remaining assignments of

error in a consolidated fashion. Appellant's second and third assignments of error state:

 [2.] The trial court committed prejudicial error in adopting the
 magistrate's decision which held that appellant waived the right of
 survivorship and/or reversion when the pension plan administrator
 unilaterally after acknowledging the survivorship nature of the
 account, required appellant to respond to the plan administrator's
 inquiry.

 [3.] The trial court committed prejudicial error that as a matter of
 fact and law in its determination that the Qualified Domestic
 Relations Order was not in the nature of a survivor annuity which by
 its terms allowed for survivorship and/or reversion to the plan
 participant/appellant upon the death of the alternate payee.

 {¶6} Appellant's second and third assignments of error raise objections to the

trial court's adoption of the magistrate's decision. By failing to timely object to the

magistrate's findings below, however, appellant has waived all but plain error on appeal.

Civ.R. 53(D)(3)(b)(iv). Regarding plain error, the following standard of review was

announced by the Supreme Court of Ohio in Goldfuss v. Davidson, 79 Ohio St.3d 116

(1997), syllabus:

 In appeals of civil cases, the plain error doctrine is not favored and
 may be applied only in the extremely rare case involving
 exceptional circumstances where error, to which no objection was
 made at the trial court, seriously affects the basic fairness, integrity,
 or public reputation of the judicial process, thereby challenging the
 legitimacy of the underlying judicial process itself.

 {¶7} With this highly-deferential standard of review in mind, we turn to the

merits of appellant's second and third assignments of error.

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 {¶8} Appellant's second assignment of error contends the trial court erred in

adopting the magistrate's finding that appellant waived his reversionary interest.

However, the magistrate's decision was not based on a finding of waiver. The

magistrate found the language of the QDRO did not contain the reversion provision

appellant sought to enforce. Thus, the trial court reached the merits on the issue. It did

not base its decision on appellant's failure to respond to a pension company letter

informing appellant that the QDRO did not contain a reversion provision. Because the

trial court reached the merits, any language in the court's decision that suggests waiver

had no effect on the outcome and, therefore, cannot rise to the level of plain error.

State v. Long, 53 Ohio St.2d 91 (1978), paragraph two of the syllabus.

 {¶9} In his third assignment of error, appellant claims the trial court committed

prejudicial error by adopting the magistrate's conclusions of law and fact regarding

interpretation of the QDRO. The QDRO specifies that the pension would revert to

appellant if appellee died prior to receiving benefits. It is silent regarding what would

happen if appellee died after benefits commenced. The trial court determined there

would be no reversion under that circumstance. Significant factual determinations were

made by the magistrate, who, as the fact finder, was in the best position to make those

findings. The trial court's conclusions were reasonable based on those findings given

the language of the QDRO provisions. We do not find plain error in the trial court's

conclusion.

 {¶10} Accordingly, appellant's second and third assignments of error are without

merit.

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 {¶11} Based on the opinion of this court, the judgment of the Trumbull County

Court of Common Pleas, Domestic Relations Division, is affirmed.

CYNTHIA WESTCOTT RICE, J.,

COLLEEN MARY O'TOOLE, J.,

concur.

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