← LexyCorpus index

LexyCorpus case page

CourtListener opinion 2829941

Date unknown · US

Extracted case name
pending
Extracted reporter citation
829 N.E.2d 476
Docket / number
49A05-1409-DR-434 v
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 2829941 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

awarded Benny his vehicles, subject to any debts thereon, and his 401(k). The trial court ordered the parties to "divide [Benny's] Rail Road Retirement Account (Tier 1 and 2) equally. To the extent the plan will not allow any portion to be divided via QDRO, the benefits shall be paid by Husband to Wife when the account reaches pay status." Id. at 52. Benny now appeals. Analysis [7] The parties disagree regarding the standard of review. Although characterized as a finding rather than a conclusion, the trial court concluded that a 50/50 division of the marital estate was appropriate. See Fraley v. Minge

retirement benefits

y in the dissolution of his marriage to Tonya Harris. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand. Issues [2] Benny raises two issues, which we restate as: I. whether the trial court properly ordered Benny to pay Tonya half of his Tier I railroad retirement benefits when the account reaches pay status; and II. whether the trial court's distribution of marital property effectuated a 50/50 division of the marital estate. Tonya raises one issue, which we restate as whether she is entitled to appellate attorney fees. Facts [3] Benny and Tonya were married on August 16, 2008. The couple had no children, and bo

pension

purchase price of the house because that money was - - is coming - - is following her since he is not making a claim on the house." Id. at 90. Benny proposed that his Tier II railroad retirement benefits be divided 50/50 and that "all maritally acquired pension and 401(k) of [Tonya] be divided 50/50." Id. at 87. [6] On June 9, 2014, the trial court issued a final order and concluded, "A Fifty/Fifty (50%/50%) division of the marital estate is appropriate given the circumstances of the parties." App. p. 51. The trial court awarded Tonya the marital residence, her car, her bank accounts, and her 401(k) account

401(k)

ce of the house because that money was - - is coming - - is following her since he is not making a claim on the house." Id. at 90. Benny proposed that his Tier II railroad retirement benefits be divided 50/50 and that "all maritally acquired pension and 401(k) of [Tonya] be divided 50/50." Id. at 87. [6] On June 9, 2014, the trial court issued a final order and concluded, "A Fifty/Fifty (50%/50%) division of the marital estate is appropriate given the circumstances of the parties." App. p. 51. The trial court awarded Tonya the marital residence, her car, her bank accounts, and her 401(k) account. In addi

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: 829 N.E.2d 476 · docket: 49A05-1409-DR-434 v
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

Aug 24 2015, 9:21 am

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE
Jeffery Leeper Julie C. Dixon
Indianapolis, Indiana Lori B. Schmeltzer
 Ciyou & Dixon, P.C.
 Indianapolis, Indiana

 IN THE
 COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

Benny Harris, August 24, 2015

Appellant-Petitioner, Court of Appeals Cause No.
 49A05-1409-DR-434
 v. Appeal from the Marion Superior
 Court
Tonya Harris (n/k/a Keith), The Honorable Robert Altice, Judge
Appellee-Respondent. The Honorable Kimberly Mattingly,
 Magistrate
 Cause No. 49D05-1303-DR-10467

Barnes, Judge.

Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 1 of 16
 Case Summary
[1] Benny Harris appeals the trial court's distribution of marital property in the

 dissolution of his marriage to Tonya Harris. We affirm in part, reverse in part,

 and remand.

 Issues
[2] Benny raises two issues, which we restate as:

 I. whether the trial court properly ordered Benny
 to pay Tonya half of his Tier I railroad
 retirement benefits when the account reaches
 pay status; and

 II. whether the trial court's distribution of marital
 property effectuated a 50/50 division of the
 marital estate.

 Tonya raises one issue, which we restate as whether she is entitled to appellate

 attorney fees.

 Facts
[3] Benny and Tonya were married on August 16, 2008. The couple had no

 children, and both were employed during the marriage. On March 19, 2013,

 Tonya filed a petition for dissolution of the marriage. Benny later cross-

 petitioned.

[4] Benny did not comply with Tonya's discovery requests, and on January 13,

 2014, the trial court ordered him to respond to Tonya's interrogatories and

 requests for production of documents within seven days. At the January 22,

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 2 of 16
 2014 final hearing, Benny had not fully complied with the trial court's order.

 The trial court dissolved the marriage but continued the hearing as it related to

 the distribution of property.

[5] On March 19, 2014, another hearing was held. At the hearing, Tonya argued

 that Benny had wasted marital assets during the marriage. Benny responded to

 that argument by asserting that, as a married couple with significant disposable

 income, they both spent money on personal items. Benny specifically

 referenced purses and a mink coat purchased by Tonya and stated, "We believe

 she should keep them. We also are not asking for necessarily a valuation of

 this." Tr. pp. 85-86. Benny made a similar argument regarding improvements

 to the marital residence, which Tonya purchased shortly before the marriage.

 Benny argued that Tonya "will enjoy the benefits of those improvements to the

 house and we believe that is okay." Id. at 86. Benny later argued, "We do not

 believe it is significant that she put money that she had saved into the original

 purchase price of the house because that money was - - is coming - - is following

 her since he is not making a claim on the house." Id. at 90. Benny proposed

 that his Tier II railroad retirement benefits be divided 50/50 and that "all

 maritally acquired pension and 401(k) of [Tonya] be divided 50/50." Id. at 87.

[6] On June 9, 2014, the trial court issued a final order and concluded, "A

 Fifty/Fifty (50%/50%) division of the marital estate is appropriate given the

 circumstances of the parties." App. p. 51. The trial court awarded Tonya the

 marital residence, her car, her bank accounts, and her 401(k) account. In

 addition to any debt owed on the marital residence and Tonya's car, the trial

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 3 of 16
 court ordered Tonya to pay various credit card debts. The trial court awarded

 Benny his vehicles, subject to any debts thereon, and his 401(k). The trial court

 ordered the parties to "divide [Benny's] Rail Road Retirement Account (Tier 1

 and 2) equally. To the extent the plan will not allow any portion to be divided

 via QDRO, the benefits shall be paid by Husband to Wife when the account

 reaches pay status." Id. at 52. Benny now appeals.

 Analysis
[7] The parties disagree regarding the standard of review. Although characterized

 as a finding rather than a conclusion, the trial court concluded that a 50/50

 division of the marital estate was appropriate. See Fraley v. Minger, 829 N.E.2d

 476, 482 (Ind. 2005) ("In the event the trial court mischaracterizes findings as

 conclusions or vice versa, we look past these labels to the substance of the

 judgment."). "‘In the absence of special findings, we review a trial court

 decision as a general judgment and, without reweighing evidence or considering

 witness credibility, affirm if sustainable upon any theory consistent with the

 evidence.'" Baxendale v. Raich, 878 N.E.2d 1252, 1257 (Ind. 2008) (quoting

 Perdue Farms, Inc. v. Pryor, 683 N.E.2d 239, 240 (Ind. 1997)).

 I. Railroad Retirement Benefits

[8] Benny contends that the trial court improperly awarded Tonya half of his future

 Tier I railroad retirements benefits. As an initial matter, we must address

 Tonya's argument that Benny invited any error regarding the division of those

 benefits. She asserts that at the final hearing Benny agreed he could be

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 4 of 16
 responsible for offsetting the Tier I benefits. Under the invited error doctrine,

 which sounds in estoppel, a party may not take advantage of an error that he or

 she commits, invites, or which is the natural consequence of his or her own

 neglect or misconduct. Witte v. Mundy ex rel. Mundy, 820 N.E.2d 128, 133 (Ind.

 2005).

[9] At the hearing, the following exchange took place between Benny's attorney

 and the trial court:

 THE COURT: I can't order the railroad to divide Tier I, but I can
 sure as heck order these parties to write checks to each other.
 MR. JONES: We agree with that, Judge- -
 THE COURT: Just like, you know, our firefighter pensions and all
 that, yes.
 MR. JONES: - - we just don't think it's appropriate.
[10] Tr. p. 104. Although Benny agreed that the trial court could order one party to

 issue a check to another, he specifically asserted that such an order was not

 "appropriate" as it related to the Tier I benefits. Id. This is consistent with his

 position throughout the hearing that the Tier I benefits were not divisible. For

 example, earlier in the hearing, Benny's attorney asserted:

 what Mr. Harris will advise the Court is that his investigation
 indicated that the Tier I could not be divided because the information
 provided from the Railroad Plan was that by law it cannot be divisible
 in a dissolution proceeding. Tier II can be divided.
[11] Id. at 86-87. Benny also offered and the trial court admitted into evidence an

 Attorney's Guide to the Partition of Railroad Retirement Annuities prepared by

 the United States Railroad Retirement Board, which generally supported his

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 5 of 16
 position that Tier I benefits may not be partitioned. See Ex 3 p. 1. Considering

 Benny's argument as a whole, we do not believe that he agreed the Tier I

 benefits could be divided between the parties.

[12] Nor are we persuaded that the trial court ordered the division of the Tier I

 benefits as a sanction for Benny's failure to comply with its discovery orders as

 Tonya suggests. Although Benny did not fully comply with Tonya's discovery

 requests or the trial court's orders related to such, there is no indication that the

 trial court ordered the division of the Tier I benefits as a sanction for Benny's

 failure to comply with discovery orders. Tonya has not established that Benny

 failed to preserve the issue for appellate review.

[13] Regarding the merits of his argument, Benny claims that pursuant to Hisquierdo

 v. Hisquierdo, 439 U.S. 572, 99 S. Ct. 802 (1979), his Tier I benefits are not

 marital property subject to division in a dissolution proceeding. At issue is the

 interpretation of 45 U.S.C. § 231m, which pertains to certain railroad

 retirement benefits and provides in part, "no annuity or supplemental annuity

 shall be assignable or be subject to any tax or to garnishment, attachment, or

 other legal process under any circumstances whatsoever, nor shall the payment

 thereof be anticipated[.]" The interpretation of a statute is a question of law,

 which we review de novo. Mertz v. Mertz, 971 N.E.2d 189, 195 (Ind. Ct. App.

 2012).

[14] In Hisquierdo, the Supreme Court addressed the California Supreme Court's

 holding that a husband's railroad retirement benefits were community property

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 6 of 16
 under state law and subject to division in a dissolution proceeding. Hisquierdo,

 439 U.S. at 580, 99 S. Ct. at 808. In considering the general proposition that

 the subject of domestic relations belongs to the laws of the States and not the

 laws of the United States, the Hisquierdo court acknowledged that "State family

 and family-property law must do ‘major damage' to ‘clear and substantial'

 federal interests before the Supremacy Clause will demand that state law be

 overridden." Id. at 581, 99 S. Ct. at 808 (quoting United States v. Yazell, 382 U.S.

 341, 352, 86 S.Ct. 500, 507 (1966)).

[15] After analyzing the use of the term "individual" in the Railroad Retirement Act

 ("the Act") and Congress's intent in drafting §231m, Hisquierdo court concluded

 that the community property interest in railroad retirement benefits:

 conflicts with § 231m, promises to diminish that portion of the benefit
 Congress has said should go to the retired worker alone, and threatens
 to penalize one whom Congress has sought to protect. It thus causes the
 kind of injury to federal interests that the Supremacy Clause forbids. It is not
 the province of state courts to strike a balance different from the one Congress
 has struck.
 Id. at 590, 439 S. Ct. at 813 (footnote omitted) (emphasis added). In support of

 this conclusion, the court explained:

 Congress has made a choice, and § 231m protects it. It is for Congress
 to decide how these finite funds are to be allocated. The statutory
 balance is delicate. Congress has fixed an amount thought appropriate
 to support an employee's old age and to encourage the employee to
 retire. Any automatic diminution of that amount frustrates the
 congressional objective.
 Id. at 585, 99 S. Ct. at 810.

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 7 of 16
 [16] The court also considered the language of §231m prohibiting the anticipation of

 payment and explained that the Tier I benefit "corresponds exactly to those an

 employee would expect to receive were he covered by the Social Security Act."

 Id. at 575, 99 S. Ct. at 805 (citing 45 U.S.C. § 231b(a)(1)). Further:

 Like Social Security, and unlike most private pension plans, railroad
 retirement benefits are not contractual. Congress may alter, and even
 eliminate, them at any time. This vulnerability to congressional edict
 contrasts strongly with the protection Congress has afforded recipients
 from creditors, taxgatherers, and all those who would "anticipate" the
 receipt of benefits[.]
 Id. at 575-76, 99 S. Ct. at 805 (footnote omitted).

[17] Because of this uncertainty, the court rejected the wife's request for "an

 offsetting award of presently available community property to compensate her

 for her interest in [husband's] expected benefits." Id. at 588, 99 S. Ct. at 811.

 The court reasoned, "An offsetting award, however, would upset the statutory

 balance and impair [husband's] economic security just as surely as would a

 regular deduction from his benefit check. The harm might well be greater." Id.

 at 588, 99 S. Ct. at 811. Further:

 Any such anticipation threatens harm to the employee, and
 corresponding frustration to federal policy, over and above the mere
 loss of wealth caused by the offset. If, for example, a nonemployee
 spouse receives offsetting property, and then the employee spouse dies
 before collecting any benefits, the employee's heirs or beneficiaries
 suffer to the extent that the offset exceeds the lump-sum death benefits
 the Act provides. See 45 U.S.C. § 231e. Similarly, if the employee
 leaves the industry before retirement, and so fails to meet the "current
 connection with the railroad industry" requirement for certain
 supplemental benefits, see 45 U.S.C. § 231a(b)(1)(iv), the employee
 never will fully regain the amount of the offset. A third possibility, of

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 8 of 16
 course, is that Congress might alter the terms of the Act. In 1974,
 Congress eliminated certain double benefits accruing after 1982. If
 past California property settlements had been based on those benefits,
 then the change in the Act would have worked a multiple penalty on
 future recipients. By barring lump-sum community property
 settlements based on mere expectations, the prohibition against
 anticipation prevents such an obvious frustration of congressional
 purpose. It also preserves congressional freedom to amend the Act,
 and so serves much the same function as the frequently stated
 understanding that programs of this nature convey no future rights and
 so may be changed without taking property in violation of the Fifth
 Amendment.
 Id. at 589-90, 99 S. Ct. at 812 (footnote omitted).

[18] Finally, the court recognized Congress may find the court's distinctions

 undesirable and alluded to the possibility of amending the Act. Id. at 590, 99 S.

 Ct. at 813. In 1983, the Act was amended to allow the division of Tier II

 retirement benefits.1 See 45 U.S.C. §231m(b)(2); Wilborn v. Wilborn, 445 S.W.3d

 629, 633 (Mo. Ct. App. 2014) (acknowledging the amendment of §231m means

 that Tier II benefits may now be treated as marital property subject to division

 and that Hisquierdo's conclusion regarding Tier I benefits remains the same).

 Neither party suggests that the Act has been amended to allow the division of

 Tier I benefits even though Congress could have done so.

[19] More recently, in Severs v. Severs, 837 N.E.2d 498, 501 (Ind. 2005), our supreme

 court determined that social security disability benefits are not marital property

 1
 Benny concedes the Tier II benefits are subject to division. See Appellant's Br. p. 6.

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 9 of 16
 subject to division. The court reached this conclusion after referencing state

 law and then pointed out that "federal law dictates the same result as to social

 security benefits—disability or otherwise." Severs, 837 N.E.2d at 501. In its

 analysis, the court looked to a federal statute prohibiting the assignment of

 social security benefits and cited Hisquierdo for the proposition that the anti-

 assignment provisions of the Railroad Retirement Act of 1974 and the Social

 Security Act "are virtually identical" and the "holding that a trial court's

 assignment of Tier I benefits pursuant to a marital dissolution is a violation of

 both the antiassignment provision and the purpose of the benefit generally[.]"

 Id.

[20] On appeal, Tonya contends that the trial court's order does not run afoul of

 Hisquierdo because she was not awarded an offset of marital property in

 anticipation of Benny receiving railroad retirement benefits. We agree that the

 trial court's ordering Benny to pay Tonya one-half of his Tier I benefits "when

 the account reaches pay status" avoids the problems with anticipating benefits

 as described in Hisquierdo. App. p. 52. Tonya, however, does not address

 Hisquierdo's conclusion that Congress intended this portion of the benefit to go

 to "the retired worker alone" and that the division of the benefit as marital

 property "threatens to penalize one whom Congress has sought to protect."

 Hisquierdo, 439 U.S. at 590, 99 S. Ct. at 813. Based on Hisquierdo and Severs, we

 conclude that Benny's Tier I benefits are his alone and are not marital property

 subject to division. See also Plisinski v. Plisinski, 700 N.E.2d 259, 261 (Ind. Ct.

 App. 1998) (concluding the trial court abused its discretion when it included

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 10 of 16
 Tier I benefits as a marital asset and ordered husband to pay wife her share of

 the benefit); Hodowal v. Hodowal, 627 N.E.2d 869, 875 (Ind. Ct. App. 1994)

 ("Husband's early retirement subsidy was nothing more than possible future

 retirement income and as a matter of law was not marital property at the time

 of separation."). Thus, the trial court erroneously ordered the division of

 Benny's Tier I benefits when the account reaches pay status.

[21] Although we remand for the correction of the trial court's order so that it does

 not require the future division of Benny's Tier I benefits, it is unnecessary for

 the trial court to reconsider its division of marital property. First, because the

 order required the equal division of future benefits, removing them from the

 equation does not tip the remaining division of property in favor of one party or

 the other. Further, any consideration of the Tier I benefits by the trial court as a

 basis for deviating from the 50/50 presumption would, in effect, impair the

 value benefit Congress intended Benny alone to receive and would amount to

 an offset, which Hisquierdo prohibits. Finally, as acknowledged in Hisquierdo,

 there are countless reasons why Benny, who is in his mid-thirties, might not

 receive Tier I benefits in the amount calculated by Tonya at the hearing when

 he finally retires. Thus, any consideration by the trial court of Benny's future

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 11 of 16
 receipt of Tier I benefits as part of its analysis of the parties' financial

 circumstances runs afoul of §231m as discussed in Hisquierdo.2

 II. Division of Marital Property

[22] Benny contends that the trial court did not effectuate a 50/50 division of the

 marital estate after concluding that such a division was appropriate. "By

 statute, the trial court must divide the property of the parties in a just and

 reasonable manner, including property owned by either spouse prior to the

 marriage, acquired by either spouse after the marriage and prior to final

 separation of the parties, or acquired by their joint efforts." Webb v. Schleutker,

 891 N.E.2d 1144, 1153 (Ind. Ct. App. 2008) (citing Ind. Code § 31-15-7-4(a)).

 "An equal division of marital property is presumed to be just and reasonable."

 Id. (citing I.C. § 31-15-7-5). "The division of marital assets is a matter within

 the sound discretion of the trial court." Id.

[23] The party challenging a trial court's division of marital property must overcome

 a strong presumption that the court considered and complied with the

 applicable statute. Id. This presumption is one of the strongest presumptions

 applicable to our consideration on appeal. Id. "Although the facts and

 reasonable inferences might allow for a different conclusion, we will not

 substitute our judgment for that of the trial court." Id. at 1154.

 2
 Put another way, Tonya is not entitled to a portion of Benny's future Tier I benefits any more than he is
 entitled to a portion of her future social security benefits. See Severs, 837 N.E.2d at 501 ("[F]ederal law
 prevents state courts from assigning social security benefits in a property division judgment.").

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 12 of 16
 [24] During the proceedings, Benny failed to comply with the trial court's discovery

 orders and provided very little evidence regarding the value of the parties'

 various assets and debts. See Ex 1. In fact, Benny joined in the admission of

 Tonya's financial declaration. At the final hearing, Benny largely responded to

 Tonya's claim that he wasted marital assets by arguing that both parties spent

 large amounts of money during the marriage, with Tonya spending money on

 the house and purses. Benny's assertions were not focused on informing the

 trial court on how to achieve a 50/50 division of the marital assets.

[25] On appeal, Benny claims that the trial court awarded Tonya 70% of the marital

 estate. In support of this argument, Benny asserts that Tonya received almost

 $20,000.00 in equity in the marital residence and $7,100.00 in purses and a

 mink coat. However, at the hearing, Benny specifically rejected any claim to

 these assets. See Tr. pp. 86, 90. He cannot not now argue that the trial court

 improperly awarded those items to Tonya. See Witte, 820 N.E.2d at 134

 (explaining that a party may not take advantage of an error that he or she

 invited).

[26] Further, Benny's calculation is based on Tonya receiving the full amount of her

 401(k), which was valued at $89,332.96. However, at the hearing, Benny

 requested only that he be awarded one-half of "maritally acquired" 401(k). Tr.

 p. 87. Thus, his argument is flawed to the extent it relies on the entire value of

 Tonya's 401(k) as opposed to the portion earned during the parties' relatively

 short marriage. Further, Benny's argument is based on Tonya receiving half of

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 13 of 16
 his Tier II benefits, which he proposed be divided 50/50. See Tr. p. 87. Benny

 may not now take advantage of an error that he invited.

[27] Finally, Benny contends that Tonya was awarded the majority of the furniture

 and all of the appliances for which "no discernable value" was provided in the

 record. Appellant's Br. 8. At the hearing, Tonya argued that she was still

 making payments on many of these items. Further, because Benny did not

 present the trial court with evidence of this property's value, we decline to

 address his contention that these items resulted in an improper allocation of the

 marital estate. See Campbell v. Campbell, 993 N.E.2d 205, 215 (Ind. Ct. App.

 2013) (declining to address the purported unequal division of property where

 the party did not present evidence of the value of the items when it was the

 parties' burden to prove the value of the marital assets), trans. denied. Based on

 the arguments Benny made at the hearing and the lack of evidence provided by

 Benny regarding the value of the parties' property, he has not overcome the

 strong presumption that the trial court properly divided the marital estate.

 III. Appellate Attorney Fees

[28] Tonya contends she is entitled to appellate attorney fees pursuant to Indiana

 Appellate Rule 66(E), which allows us to assess damages if an appeal is

 frivolous or in bad faith. She argues that Benny's argument regarding the

 division of marital property is in bad faith and utterly devoid of plausibility.

 Although Benny has not established that the trial court abused its discretion in

 its division of the marital estate, we decline to authorize the payment of

 attorney fees.
 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 14 of 16
 Conclusion
[29] Because the trial court erroneously ordered the division of Benny's Tier I

 railroad retirement benefits when the account reaches pay status, we reverse

 and remand with instructions to strike that language from the order. However,

 Benny has not established that the trial court abused its discretion in dividing

 the marital estate, and Tonya has not established that an award of appellate

 attorney fees is warranted. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.

[30] Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.

 Najam, J., concurs.
 Kirsch, J., concurs in part and dissents in part with opinion.

 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 15 of 16
 IN THE
 COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

 Benny Harris, Court of Appeals Case No.
 49A05-1409-DR-434
 Appellant-Petitioner,

 v.

 Tonya Harris (n/k/a Keith),
 Appellee-Respondent.

 KIRSCH, Judge, concurring in part and dissenting in part.

[31] I fully concur with my colleagues' holding that the trial court erred by ordering

 Husband to make an off-setting payment to Wife for his future receipt of the

 Tier I benefits. I reach a different conclusion regarding the division of the

 remainder of the marital estate, and for such reason, I respectfully dissent.

[32] The majority opinion states that "any consideration of [Husband's] future

 receipt of Tier I benefits as part of its analysis of the parties' financial

 circumstances runs afoul of §231m as discussed in Hisquierdo." To me, it does

 not, and it is entirely appropriate for the trial court to consider Husband's

 exclusive right to the Tier I benefits as it impacts his overall economic

 circumstances in dividing the remainder of the marital estate.
 Court of Appeals of Indiana | Opinion 49A05-1409-DR-434 | August 24, 2015 Page 16 of 16