LexyCorpus case page
CourtListener opinion 4535852
Date unknown · US
- Extracted case name
- PAMELA A. DOBBINS v. MARK J. DOBBINS HUMPHREY
- Extracted reporter citation
- 190 A.3d 244
- Docket / number
- pending
Machine-draft headnote
Machine-draft public headnote: CourtListener opinion 4535852 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“* Chief Justice Saufley participated in the appeal but resigned before this opinion was certified. Justice Alexander also participated in the appeal but retired before this opinion was certified. 1 The parties and the court refer to the court's order as a "qualified domestic relations order" or "QDRO." However, the court's 2009 order is entitled "Court Order Acceptable for Processing Under the Federal Employees Retirement System" (COAP), which is required by 5 C.F.R. §§ 838.101-.1121 (2020). See 5 U.S.C.S. § 8467(a)(1) (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 116-140); see also 2 Brett R. Turner, Equitable Distribution of Property § 6:14 at 104-06 (4th ed.”
retirement benefits“BINS HUMPHREY, J. [¶1] Mark J. Dobbins appeals from a judgment of the District Court (Bangor, Jordan, J.) granting Pamela A. Dobbins's motion to enforce the terms of a 2007 divorce judgment and a 2009 court order acceptable for processing (COAP) federal retirement benefits.1 Mark argues that the language in the * Chief Justice Saufley participated in the appeal but resigned before this opinion was certified. Justice Alexander also participated in the appeal but retired before this opinion was certified. 1 The parties and the court refer to the court's order as a "qualified domestic relations order" or "QDRO." However, th”
pension“[¶2] Pamela and Mark were married in 1976. On July 26, 2006, Pamela filed a complaint for divorce against Mark.2 The court (R. Murray, J.) entered a final divorce judgment on October 17, 2007, which stated, in relevant part, that [Mark] is the owner of pension/retirement plans through the United States Postal Service. The court finds that said pension/retirement accounts are marital property and orders that said pension/retirement accounts be divided equally between the parties. The Court further orders that the necessary [COAP] shall be prepared by [Pamela's] counsel and shall be filed with the Court and f”
ERISA“o 2 Brett R. Turner, Equitable Distribution of Property § 6:14 at 104-06 (4th ed. 2019) (discussing COAPs and the distribution of federal retirement benefits). A QDRO is an order allocating retirement benefits pursuant to a private retirement plan governed by ERISA, see 29 U.S.C.S. § 1056(d) (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 116-140), from which Mark's federal retirement plan is exempt, see 29 U.S.C.S. § 1003(b)(1) (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 116-140). Although a COAP has the same procedural effect as a QDRO, a COAP is required before the United States Office of Personnel Management (OPM) will distribute federal retirement be”
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: 190 A.3d 244
- 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
MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2020 ME 73 Docket: Pen-19-230 Submitted On Briefs: December 17, 2019 Decided: May 21, 2020 Panel: MEAD, GORMAN, JABAR, and HUMPHREY, JJ.* PAMELA A. DOBBINS v. MARK J. DOBBINS HUMPHREY, J. [¶1] Mark J. Dobbins appeals from a judgment of the District Court (Bangor, Jordan, J.) granting Pamela A. Dobbins's motion to enforce the terms of a 2007 divorce judgment and a 2009 court order acceptable for processing (COAP) federal retirement benefits.1 Mark argues that the language in the * Chief Justice Saufley participated in the appeal but resigned before this opinion was certified. Justice Alexander also participated in the appeal but retired before this opinion was certified. 1 The parties and the court refer to the court's order as a "qualified domestic relations order" or "QDRO." However, the court's 2009 order is entitled "Court Order Acceptable for Processing Under the Federal Employees Retirement System" (COAP), which is required by 5 C.F.R. §§ 838.101-.1121 (2020). See 5 U.S.C.S. § 8467(a)(1) (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 116-140); see also 2 Brett R. Turner, Equitable Distribution of Property § 6:14 at 104-06 (4th ed. 2019) (discussing COAPs and the distribution of federal retirement benefits). A QDRO is an order allocating retirement benefits pursuant to a private retirement plan governed by ERISA, see 29 U.S.C.S. § 1056(d) (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 116-140), from which Mark's federal retirement plan is exempt, see 29 U.S.C.S. § 1003(b)(1) (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 116-140). Although a COAP has the same procedural effect as a QDRO, a COAP is required before the United States Office of Personnel Management (OPM) will distribute federal retirement benefits and is subject to different requirements. See 5 C.F.R. §§ 838.101-.1121; see also 5 U.S.C.S. §§ 8301-8480 (LEXIS through Pub. L. No. 116-140). Because of 2 COAP stating that he "is required to retire at age 62" is inconsistent with the underlying divorce judgment and that the court lacked the authority to order him to retire. We agree and vacate the judgment. I. BACKGROUND A. Divorce Judgment and COAP [¶2] Pamela and Mark were married in 1976. On July 26, 2006, Pamela filed a complaint for divorce against Mark.2 The court (R. Murray, J.) entered a final divorce judgment on October 17, 2007, which stated, in relevant part, that [Mark] is the owner of pension/retirement plans through the United States Postal Service. The court finds that said pension/retirement accounts are marital property and orders that said pension/retirement accounts be divided equally between the parties. The Court further orders that the necessary [COAP] shall be prepared by [Pamela's] counsel and shall be filed with the Court and forwarded to the Administrator of said pension/retirement accounts. [Pamela] shall cease to have any survivor benefits from the aforesaid account held by [Mark] upon entry of this judgment. these technical differences and in order to avoid further confusion, we use the term "COAP" throughout this opinion when discussing what the parties and the court refer to as a "QDRO." 2During the pendency of the divorce proceedings, Mark reached a settlement agreement with the United States Postal Service regarding a prior, work-related personnel dispute. As part of the agreement, Mark had agreed to retire at the age of fifty-five. However, before the court entered a final divorce judgment and before Mark retired at age fifty-five, Mark became qualified for disability and began receiving disability retirement benefits from the federal Office of Personnel Management in January 2008. 3 On May 14, 2009, the court entered a COAP, which directed the United States Office of Personnel Management (OPM) to pay directly to Pamela "an amount equal to [f]ifty [p]ercent . . . of the [m]arital [p]ortion" of Mark's retirement benefits "determined as of [Mark's] date of retirement." Section 1(e), the provision of the COAP at issue, states that the order "is not intended to award to [Pamela] any portion of [Mark's] disability benefits. [Mark] is required to retire at age 62." [¶3] More than three years later, on July 6, 2012, Pamela filed motions for relief from judgment and to enforce the divorce judgment and COAP, arguing that Mark's qualification for disability payments had prevented her from receiving any of his retirement benefits. The court (Jordan, J.) denied Pamela's motions on December 3, 2012, finding that the COAP did not change the language in the divorce judgment dividing each party's retirement benefits or "require that either party receive any disability benefits received by the other prior to the retirement plans becoming effective." We affirmed the judgment on appeal. See Dobbins v. Dobbins, Mem-13-111 (Nov. 5, 2013). [¶4] Following the 2013 appeal, Mark remained on disability until September 23, 2014, when the Office of Personnel Management determined 4 that he was no longer disabled. Later, in May 2016, Mark was "reinstated and reemployed" by the Postal Service to a position in Virginia. B. Motion to Enforce [¶5] Mark turned sixty-two years old on March 7, 2018. On March 23, 2018, Pamela filed a motion to enforce the 2007 divorce judgment and section 1(e) of the COAP, asking the court to "[o]rder [Mark] to retire immediately" from his job with the Postal Service. See M.R. Civ. P. 120. Alternatively, Pamela requested that, if the court did not order Mark to retire, he be required to pay her the marital portion of the retirement benefits. Following a nontestimonial hearing, the court (Worth, J.) initially granted Pamela's motion to enforce on October 17, 2018, ordering that Mark "retire immediately" and "reimburse [Pamela] for an amount equivalent to her monthly benefit times the number of months that passed between [the first date the benefits would have been dispersed had Mark retired] and the date she begins receiving the benefit from the Federal Retirement System."3 [¶6] Two weeks later, now represented by counsel, Mark filed a motion for a new hearing and for relief from judgment, arguing that the divorce Although Mark was unrepresented by counsel at the nontestimonial hearing, he filed, and the 3 court considered, a "motion to quash," in which he replied to Pamela's motion to enforce. Mark retained counsel after the entry of the court's October 17, 2018, order. 5 judgment and COAP were ambiguous and that the court was not authorized to order him to retire. See M.R. Civ. P. 59(a), 60(b). On January 8, 2019, the court granted, in part, Mark's motion and allowed a new conference to be scheduled "on the narrow issue of the constitutionality of requiring him to fulfill the requirement to retire at a specific age."4 [¶7] The court (Jordan, J.)5 held a status conference on February 5, 2019, and required the parties to file affidavits addressing the COAP and "what factual basis they assert for their position[s]." In his affidavit, Mark stated that he had developed a medical condition during the pendency of the divorce and that he had believed at that time that he would receive "retirement disability" and that his "retirement disability would be automatically converted to retirement by the [U.S.] Office of Personnel Management at age 62." Pamela's affidavit stated that the parties and their attorneys discussed and agreed upon the terms contained in the COAP before it was signed by the court in 2011, and that the parties had already litigated the issue of the divorce judgment and the COAP. 4 Because the court found that the parties had previously litigated in 2012 the issue of whether the divorce judgment and the COAP were consistent, the court denied Mark's motion for a new hearing "on any issues related to consistency or ambiguity between the [COAP] and the divorce judgment." 5 It is not clear why one judge could not—and did not—address all of the complex litigation in this case. 6 [¶8] On March 22, 2019, without holding a hearing, the court found that Mark's failure to challenge the COAP language during the 2012 proceedings "amount[ed] to a waiver and concession as to its appropriateness," and that Mark had "voluntarily conferred upon the court the authority to order him to retire." The court concluded that Mark "does not have to retire," but must pay Pamela "the equivalent of what she would have received if he retired as per the [COAP]." [¶9] Mark moved for further findings of fact, to alter or amend the judgment, and for relief from judgment, see M.R. Civ. P. 52, 59, 60, arguing, in part, that the court's March 22, 2019, order "impermissibly alter[ed] the division of property pursuant to the underlying [COAP] and divorce decree." Pamela objected to Mark's motion and moved for relief from judgment. She argued that the court should amend its order and require, instead, that Mark retire immediately pursuant to section 1(e) of the COAP. [¶10] On May 24, 2019, the court denied Mark's motion. In a separate order issued that same day, the court amended its March 22, 2019, order, striking the requirement that Mark make "equivalent" payments in lieu of retiring. The court found that the divorce judgment and the COAP were "enforceable as written." The court granted Pamela's motion to enforce and 7 ordered that Mark retire. Mark timely appealed. See 19-A M.R.S. § 104 (2020); M.R. App. P. 2B(c)(1). II. DISCUSSION [¶11] We first address Mark's contention that the court was without the statutory authority to order him to retire.6 "We review de novo whether a court has legal authority to take the action it has taken." Petersen v. Van Overbeke, 2018 ME 104, ¶ 10, 190 A.3d 244 (quotation marks omitted). [¶12] "[T]he jurisdiction of the divorce court is purely statutory, and its authority to act on matters of divorce must arise out of the statutory law or not at all." Merrill v. Merrill, 449 A.2d 1120, 1124 (Me. 1982). In relevant part, a court is authorized to divide marital property "in proportions the court considers just after considering all relevant factors." 19-A M.R.S. § 953(1) (2020). It is presumed that "[a]ll property acquired by ether spouse 6 Pamela argues that Mark's contentions in the current matter are barred by res judicata. Similarly, on January 8, 2019, the court (Worth, J.) found that any inconsistencies between the divorce judgment and the COAP "ha[d] already been considered" during the 2012 proceedings and subsequent appeal, and, on March 22, 2019, the court (Jordan, J.) found that Mark's failure to challenge the retirement language in the COAP during the prior proceedings "amount[ed] to a waiver and concession as to its appropriateness." However, we conclude that the 2012 proceedings did not have preclusive effect on Pamela's 2018 motion to enforce because the issue of Mark's date of retirement was not "already decided," nor is it evident that this issue "[was], or might have been, litigated in the first action.\ Berry v. Mainestream Fin.