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CourtListener opinion 4693031

Date unknown · US

Extracted case name
In re Estate of MacAnally
Extracted reporter citation
20 P.3d 1197
Docket / number
20CA0038 El Paso County District
QDRO relevance 5/5Retirement relevance 5/5Family-law relevance 5/5gold label pending
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Machine-draft public headnote: CourtListener opinion 4693031 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.

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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

, superseding state laws that "relate to any employee benefit plan," id. § 1144(a). Id. at 885. 24 ¶ 41 Notably, Congress created an exception from ERISA's preemption and anti-alienation provisions for a narrow category of state court orders known as qualified domestic relations orders. 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(A). "Where Congress explicitly enumerates certain exceptions to a general prohibition, additional exceptions are not to be implied, in the absence of evidence of a contrary legislative intent." Andrus v. Glover Constr. Co., 446 U.S. 608, 616-17 (1980). As the district court in this case noted in its well-reasoned order,

retirement benefits

RISA does not contain a statutory order of precedence, "the protection of beneficiaries . . . [is] a paramount ERISA objective." VanderKam v. VanderKam, 776 F.3d 883, 886 (D.C. Cir. 2015). As the District of Columbia Circuit has explained, ERISA protects retirement benefits for millions of pension plan participants and their beneficiaries. 29 U.S.C. § 1001(b). Finding that the stability of retirement benefits directly affects the national economy, id. § 1001(a), Congress acted to ensure that accrued benefits remain unaltered by individuals and states alike. It accomplished this by prohibiting participants from assigni

pension

personally liable for the amount of the payment . . . , to the person who would have been entitled to it were this section or part of this section not preempted. § 15-11-804(8)(b). C. ERISA ¶ 17 "ERISA is a comprehensive statute regulating employee pension and welfare plans." Estate of MacAnally, 20 P.3d at 1199. "The purpose of ERISA is ‘to protect the interests of employees and their beneficiaries in employee benefit plans and to ensure that plans and plan sponsors are subject to a uniform body of benefit law . . . .'" Id. at 1201 (quoting Barrett v. Hay, 893 P.2d 1372, 1380 (Colo. App. 1995)). ¶

ERISA

not the official language of the division. Any discrepancy between the language in the summary and in the opinion should be resolved in favor of the language in the opinion. SUMMARY May 27, 2021 2021COA75 No. 20CA0038 Ragan v. Ragan — Employment Law — ERISA; General Provisions Concerning Probate and Nonprobate Transfers — Revocation of Probate and Nonprobate Transfers by Divorce This appeal concerns the interplay between Colorado's divorce revocation statute, section 15-11-804, C.R.S. 2020, under which any beneficiary designation of a former spouse is automatically revoked upon divorce, and the Employee R

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US
Deterministic extraction
reporter: 20 P.3d 1197 · docket: 20CA0038 El Paso County District
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May 14, 2026

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Clean opinion text

The summaries of the Colorado Court of Appeals published opinions
 constitute no part of the opinion of the division but have been prepared by
 the division for the convenience of the reader. The summaries may not be
 cited or relied upon as they are not the official language of the division.
 Any discrepancy between the language in the summary and in the opinion
 should be resolved in favor of the language in the opinion.

 SUMMARY
 May 27, 2021

 2021COA75

No. 20CA0038 Ragan v. Ragan — Employment Law — ERISA;
General Provisions Concerning Probate and Nonprobate
Transfers — Revocation of Probate and Nonprobate Transfers by
Divorce

 This appeal concerns the interplay between Colorado's divorce

revocation statute, section 15-11-804, C.R.S. 2020, under which

any beneficiary designation of a former spouse is automatically

revoked upon divorce, and the Employee Retirement Income

Security Act of 1974 (ERISA), 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461, under which

an ERISA plan administrator must distribute plan proceeds to the

beneficiary named in the plan. In In re Estate of MacAnally, 20 P.3d

1197, 1203 (Colo. App. 2000), a division of this court held that

ERISA preempts the divorce revocation statute in the

"pre-distribution" context by requiring plan proceeds to be

distributed to the named beneficiary. A division of the court of
 appeals now recognizes that ERISA preemption extends to

post-distribution lawsuits pursuant to section 15-11-804(8)(b). The

division therefore concludes as a matter of first impression in

Colorado that, absent an express waiver of rights to the proceeds,

ERISA precludes a lawsuit against a former spouse to recover

insurance proceeds that were distributed to her as the named

beneficiary.
 COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS 2021COA75

Court of Appeals No. 20CA0038
El Paso County District Court No. 19CV31274
Honorable Gregory R. Werner, Judge

Rozalyn Ragan, Personal Representative of the Estate of Charles Phillip Ragan,
Deceased,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

Melissa Ragan, a/k/a Melissa Hudson,

Defendant-Appellee.

 JUDGMENT AFFIRMED

 Division V
 Opinion by JUDGE YUN
 J. Jones and Navarro, JJ., concur

 Announced May 27, 2021

The Drexler Law Group, LLC, Matthew B. Drexler, Brian Melton, Stephen A.
Brunette, Colorado Springs, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellant

The Gasper Law Group, PLLC, Kenneth H. Gray, Jack Roth, Colorado Springs,
Colorado, for Defendant-Appellee
 ¶1 At the time of Charles Phillip Ragan's death, his ex-wife,

 Melissa Ragan, a/k/a Melissa Hudson, remained the named

 beneficiary of his employer-sponsored life and accidental death

 insurance policies. After the insurance proceeds were distributed to

 Ms. Ragan, Mr. Ragan's estate (Estate) sued her to recover those

 proceeds.

¶2 The Estate's case implicates the interplay between Colorado's

 divorce revocation statute, section 15-11-804, C.R.S. 2020, and the

 Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 (ERISA),

 29 U.S.C. §§ 1001-1461, which the parties agree governs the

 insurance policies. On one hand, ERISA provides that an employee

 benefit plan "shall . . . specify the basis on which payments are

 made to and from the plan," 29 U.S.C. § 1102(b)(4), and that the

 fiduciary shall administer the plan "in accordance with the

 documents and instruments governing the plan," 29 U.S.C.

 § 1104(a)(1)(D), and make payments to a beneficiary who is

 "designated by a participant, or by the terms of an employee benefit

 plan," 29 U.S.C. § 1002(8). ERISA also provides that it "shall

 supersede any and all State laws insofar as they may now or

 1
 hereafter relate to any employee benefit plan" covered by ERISA.

 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a).

¶3 On the other hand, section 15-11-804(2)(a)(i) (subsection (2))

 of Colorado's divorce revocation statute provides that any

 beneficiary designation of a then-spouse is automatically revoked

 upon divorce. Section 15-11-804(8)(b) (subsection (8)(b)) further

 provides that if "any part of this section is preempted by federal

 law," a former spouse "who . . . received a payment . . . to which

 that person is not entitled under this section is obligated to return

 that payment" or "is personally liable for the amount of the

 payment . . . , to the person who would have been entitled to it were

 this section or part of this section not preempted."

¶4 The Estate concedes that ERISA preempts subsection (2) and

 that the plan administrator properly distributed the insurance

 proceeds to Ms. Ragan. But the Estate argues that

 subsection (8)(b) allows the Estate to recover those proceeds from

 Ms. Ragan, who, by operation of subsection (2), was not entitled to

 those proceeds. The district court disagreed, concluding that

 subsection (8)(b), like subsection (2), is preempted by ERISA and

 2
 that the Estate therefore had "no legal interest" in the insurance

 proceeds.

¶5 We affirm the district court's judgment. In In re Estate of

 MacAnally, 20 P.3d 1197, 1203 (Colo. App. 2000), a division of this

 court held that ERISA preempts Colorado's divorce revocation

 statute in the "pre-distribution" context by requiring an ERISA plan

 administrator to distribute plan proceeds to the beneficiary named

 in the plan. We now recognize that ERISA preemption extends to

 post-distribution lawsuits. Based on our analysis of legal authority

 from other jurisdictions, we conclude as a matter of first impression

 in Colorado that, absent an express waiver of rights to the proceeds,

 ERISA precludes a lawsuit against a former spouse to recover

 insurance proceeds that were distributed to him or her as the

 named beneficiary.

 I. Background

¶6 Charles and Melissa Ragan were married in 2012 and divorced

 in December 2016. Less than five months later, on May 13, 2017,

 Mr. Ragan died in a car-bicycle accident. Before the dissolution of

 the Ragans' marriage, Mr. Ragan took out several life and

 accidental death insurance policies through his employer, Federal

 3
 Express, all of which named Ms. Ragan as the beneficiary.

 Mr. Ragan did not change the beneficiary of these policies after his

 divorce from Ms. Ragan.

¶7 Shortly after Mr. Ragan's death, Ms. Ragan was notified of the

 existence of the policies and received benefits in the amount of

 approximately $535,000. Ms. Ragan contends, and the Estate does

 not dispute, that she was unaware of the existence of the policies

 before Mr. Ragan's death. No party asserts that Ms. Ragan waived

 or voluntarily relinquished her right to receive the insurance

 proceeds.

¶8 Following a hearing, a domestic relations court found that the

 insurance proceeds were not a material asset or liability of the

 marital estate, that no maintenance or child support obligations

 had to be secured with the proceeds, and that, therefore, the

 Estate's claim for recovery of the proceeds from Ms. Ragan was not

 within that court's continuing jurisdiction.

¶9 In May 2019, the Estate filed a complaint in district court

 against Ms. Ragan and her businesses,1 seeking to recover the

 1The complaint alleges that Ms. Ragan used the insurance
 proceeds to establish her businesses.

 4
 insurance proceeds pursuant to subsection (8)(b) and asserting

 related claims for breach of contract, breach of the covenant of good

 faith and fair dealing, unjust enrichment, civil theft, and piercing

 the corporate veil. The primary basis for the Estate's claims is that

 DECEDENT's designations of FORMER
 SPOUSE as beneficiary of said policies were
 revoked as a matter of law upon entry of the
 above-referenced Decree of Dissolution on
 December 28, 2016, under C.R.S.
 § 15-11-804(2)(a), with the same effect as if
 FORMER SPOUSE had disclaimed said
 beneficiary designations, under C.R.S.
 § 15-11-804(4).

 Thus, the Estate alleges that "FORMER SPOUSE was not entitled to

 receive the insurance benefits specified above, and is obligated to

 return or repay same to the ESTATE, together with any benefits

 arising from payment of said benefits to her, under C.R.S.

 § 15-11-804(8)."

¶ 10 Ms. Ragan filed a motion for declaratory relief pursuant to

 C.R.C.P. 57 and a motion to dismiss pursuant to C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5).

 She argued that because ERISA preempts subsection (2) by

 requiring the insurance proceeds to be distributed to her, it likewise

 preempts subsection (8)(b) by precluding a post-distribution lawsuit

 against her to recover those proceeds. In response, the Estate

 5
 argued that although ERISA preempts subsection (2), it does not

 preempt subsection (8)(b) because attempting to recover benefits

 before they have been distributed to the beneficiary differs from

 attempting to recover benefits from the beneficiary after they have

 been disbursed.

¶ 11 The district court granted both of Ms. Ragan's motions. It

 concluded that precedent from the United States Supreme Court

 and other courts, including a division of this court, makes clear

 that ERISA preempts any revocation statute — like section

 15-11-804 — that automatically revokes a beneficiary designation

 upon divorce. The only exception, the court explained, is in the

 context of waiver by private agreement between the parties.

 Because "no facts have been pled in this case that such an

 agreement exists" and "the Estate does not reference any such

 waiver in this case," the court concluded that ERISA preempts the

 Estate's post-distribution claims against Ms. Ragan to recover

 funds that were properly distributed to her as the named

 beneficiary.

¶ 12 The Estate filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment. The

 court denied the motion, noting that "all of the cases cited by [the

 6
 Estate] involve a purported voluntary relinquishment of a claim by

 the beneficiary" while this case, in contrast, involves the revocation

 of a beneficiary's interest by operation of state law.

 II. Analysis

¶ 13 The Estate contends that the district court erred by

 concluding that ERISA preempts subsection (8)(b).2 Specifically, the

 Estate argues that ERISA does not preempt its claims because they

 are "for post-distribution recovery of insurance proceeds paid to a

 decedent's former spouse, and [are] not an action against an ERISA

 plan administrator to attempt to recover insurance proceeds prior

 to distribution by the ERISA plan administrator." Ms. Ragan

 contends that the Estate's appeal is frivolous and requests an

 assessment of fees and costs as sanctions pursuant to C.A.R. 38(b).

 After setting out the standard of review, we turn first to Colorado's

 divorce revocation statute, then to ERISA and the body of case law

 surrounding ERISA preemption. We then address Ms. Ragan's

 request for sanctions.

 2The Estate does not argue on appeal that its claims for breach of
 contract, breach of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing,
 unjust enrichment, civil theft, and piercing the corporate veil
 survive if ERISA preempts subsection (8)(b).

 7
 A. Standard of Review

¶ 14 We review the district court's summary judgment ruling on a

 declaratory judgment claim under C.R.C.P. 57 de novo. Fire House

 Car Wash, Inc. v. Bd. of Adjustment for Zoning Appeals, 30 P.3d 762,

 766 (Colo. App. 2001). We also review the district court's ruling on

 a motion to dismiss under C.R.C.P. 12(b)(5) de novo. Scott v. Scott,

 2018 COA 25, ¶ 17. And we review the district court's statutory

 interpretation de novo. In re Estate of Johnson, 2012 COA 209, ¶ 8.

 B. Colorado's Divorce Revocation Statute

¶ 15 Subsection (2) provides that, with certain exceptions not

 applicable here, a divorce revokes any revocable disposition or

 appointment of property made by a divorced individual to the

 individual's then-spouse in a governing instrument, including a

 beneficiary designation in an insurance policy. § 15-11-804(2)(a)(i);

 Estate of Johnson, ¶ 9.

¶ 16 Subsection (8)(a) then provides that "a former spouse . . . who,

 not for value, received a payment . . . to which that person is not

 entitled under this section is obligated to return the payment . . . ,

 or is personally liable for the amount of the payment . . . , to the

 8
 person who is entitled to it under this section." Subsection (8)(b)

 further provides that

 [i]f this section or any part of this section is
 preempted by federal law with respect to a
 payment . . . covered by this section, a former
 spouse . . . who, not for value, received a
 payment . . . to which that person is not
 entitled under this section is obligated to
 return that payment . . . , or is personally
 liable for the amount of the payment . . . , to
 the person who would have been entitled to it
 were this section or part of this section not
 preempted.

 § 15-11-804(8)(b).

 C. ERISA

¶ 17 "ERISA is a comprehensive statute regulating employee

 pension and welfare plans." Estate of MacAnally, 20 P.3d at 1199.

 "The purpose of ERISA is ‘to protect the interests of employees and

 their beneficiaries in employee benefit plans and to ensure that

 plans and plan sponsors are subject to a uniform body of benefit

 law . . . .'" Id. at 1201 (quoting Barrett v. Hay, 893 P.2d 1372, 1380

 (Colo. App. 1995)).

¶ 18 ERISA provides that an employee benefit plan "shall . . .

 specify the basis on which payments are made to and from the

 plan," 29 U.S.C. § 1102(b)(4), and that the fiduciary shall

 9
 administer the plan "in accordance with the documents and

 instruments governing the plan," 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1)(D).

 Additionally, each ERISA-governed plan must "provide that benefits

 provided under the plan may not be assigned or alienated."

 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(1). With certain exceptions not relevant here, a

 plan fiduciary must "discharge his duties with respect to a plan

 solely in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries."

 29 U.S.C. § 1104(a)(1).

¶ 19 ERISA further contains an express preemption provision,

 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a), which states that ERISA "shall supersede any

 and all State laws insofar as they may now or hereafter relate to any

 employee benefit plan" covered by ERISA.

 D. Law Governing ERISA Preemption

¶ 20 Two types of preemption — statutory or express preemption

 and direct or conflict preemption — have been used to conclude

 that ERISA preempts state divorce revocation statutes.

¶ 21 Statutory or express "preemption occurs when a statute

 expressly states that it preempts other law." Estate of MacAnally,

 20 P.3d at 1201. "In the ERISA context, ERISA preempts a state

 law pursuant to statutory [or express] preemption where a state law

 10
 relates to any employee benefit plan covered by ERISA." Id.; see

 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a). A state law "‘relates to' an employee benefit

 plan . . . if it has a connection with or reference to such a plan."

 Barrett, 893 P.2d at 1376 (quoting Shaw v. Delta Air Lines, Inc.,

 463 U.S. 85, 96-97 (1983)).

¶ 22 Direct or conflict preemption, in turn, occurs where

 "compliance with both federal and state regulations is a physical

 impossibility, . . . or where state law stands as an obstacle to the

 accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives

 of Congress." Boggs v. Boggs, 520 U.S. 833, 844 (1997) (citation

 omitted). "In the face of [a] direct clash between state law and the

 provisions and objectives of ERISA, the state law cannot stand." Id.

¶ 23 In Estate of MacAnally, 20 P.3d at 1203, a division of this

 court held that ERISA preempts Colorado's divorce revocation

 statute in the "pre-distribution" context — that is, before benefits

 are distributed to a named beneficiary by an ERISA plan

 administrator. At the time of Richard MacAnally's death, his former

 spouse, Imogene Levin, remained the named beneficiary of his

 ERISA-governed annuity contracts. Id. at 1199. MacAnally's estate

 argued that Levin's designation as the beneficiary was revoked by

 11
 operation of law. Id. The division noted that, under 29 U.S.C.

 § 1104, an ERISA plan administrator must pay a death benefit to

 the beneficiary named in the plan (Levin) if the plan participant dies

 before retirement, while the divorce revocation statute, in contrast,

 changed the beneficiary to whom benefits must be paid from Levin

 to an unnamed beneficiary (MacAnally's estate). Id. at 1203. Under

 these circumstances, the division concluded, the divorce revocation

 statute directly conflicted with ERISA, and based on principles of

 direct or conflict preemption, ERISA preempted the divorce

 revocation statute. Id.

¶ 24 The year after Estate of MacAnally, the United States Supreme

 Court reached a similar conclusion. See Egelhoff v. Egelhoff,

 532 U.S. 141 (2001). In Egelhoff, a husband designated his wife as

 the beneficiary of an ERISA-governed life insurance policy provided

 by his employer. After the couple divorced, the husband failed to

 change the beneficiary of the life insurance policy. Id. at 144.

 When the husband died, the plan proceeds were paid to his ex-wife

 according to the pre-divorce beneficiary designation. The

 decedent's children from a previous marriage sued the ex-wife to

 recover the proceeds, citing a Washington statute that provided for

 12
 automatic revocation upon divorce of the designation of a former

 spouse as beneficiary. Id. at 144-45. Based on ERISA's express

 preemption provision, 29 U.S.C. § 1144(a), the Court held that

 ERISA preempted the Washington statute. Egelhoff, 532 U.S. at

 146.

¶ 25 The Court reasoned that the Washington statute required plan

 administrators to pay benefits to the beneficiaries chosen by state

 law rather than to those identified in the plan documents. Id. at

 147. This outcome, the Court said, contradicts ERISA's

 requirements that a plan "shall . . . specify the basis on which

 payments are made to and from the plan," 29 U.S.C. § 1102(b)(4),

 and that the fiduciary shall administer the plan "in accordance with

 the documents and instruments governing the plan," 29 U.S.C.

 § 1104(a)(1)(D), making payments to a beneficiary who is

 "designated by a participant, or by the terms of an employee benefit

 plan," 29 U.S.C. § 1002(8). Egelhoff, 532 U.S. at 147. Further, the

 Court concluded that the Washington statute interfered with

 ERISA's objective of nationally uniform plan administration, which

 enables employers to "establish a uniform administrative scheme"

 and provide "a set of standard procedures to guide processing of

 13
 claims and disbursement of benefits." Id. at 148 (quoting Fort

 Halifax Packing Co. v. Coyne, 482 U.S. 1, 9 (1987)). No such

 uniformity can exist if plans are subject to different legal obligations

 in different states because plan administrators would need to know

 every state's law on this subject to determine whether the

 designation of a beneficiary had been revoked by operation of law.

 Id. at 149.

 E. ERISA Preempts Subsection (8)(b)

¶ 26 The Estate acknowledges that, under Estate of MacAnally and

 Egelhoff, subsection (2) is preempted by ERISA and that the plan

 administrator thus properly distributed the insurance proceeds to

 Ms. Ragan. However, the Estate contends that ERISA does not

 preempt the Estate's "post-distribution" suit under subsection (8)(b)

 to recover those funds.

¶ 27 The Estate bases its argument on Kennedy v. Plan

 Administrator for DuPont Savings & Investment Plan, 555 U.S. 285

 (2009), and Andochick v. Byrd, 709 F.3d 296 (4th Cir. 2013). In

 Kennedy, the Supreme Court held that an ERISA plan

 administrator must distribute benefits to the beneficiary named in

 the plan, notwithstanding the fact that the named beneficiary

 14
 signed a waiver disclaiming her right to the benefits. 555 U.S. at

 288. But the Court left open the question of whether, once the

 benefits were distributed by the administrator, the plan

 participant's estate could enforce the named beneficiary's waiver

 against her. Id. at 299 n.10 ("Nor do we express any view as to

 whether the Estate could have brought an action in state or federal

 court against [the named beneficiary] to obtain the benefits after

 they were distributed.").

¶ 28 In Andochick, the Fourth Circuit took up the question left open

 by Kennedy and held that ERISA does not preempt

 "post-distribution suits to enforce state-law waivers" against ERISA

 beneficiaries. 709 F.3d at 299-301; see also, e.g., Estate of

 Kensinger v. URL Pharma, Inc., 674 F.3d 131, 132 (3d Cir. 2012)

 (after ERISA plan administrator distributes funds to named

 beneficiary who waived her right to plan proceeds, plan

 participant's estate can sue named beneficiary to enforce her waiver

 and recover the funds); Sweebe v. Sweebe, 712 N.W.2d 708, 710

 (Mich. 2006) ("While a plan administrator is required by ERISA to

 distribute plan proceeds to the named beneficiary, the named

 15
 beneficiary can then be found to have waived the right to retain

 those proceeds.").

¶ 29 The Estate argues that, if ERISA does not preempt

 post-distribution suits to enforce express waivers by named

 beneficiaries of their rights to ERISA plan proceeds, neither should

 it preempt a post-distribution suit based on a state statute that

 purports to divest a named beneficiary of her right to plan proceeds

 by operation of law. For three reasons, we are not persuaded.

¶ 30 First, none of the cases relied on by the Estate allows a

 state-law-based post-distribution claim for ERISA benefits in the

 absence of a waiver by the named beneficiary.3 Indeed, several of

 3 During oral argument, counsel for the Estate appeared to argue
 that Evans v. Diamond, 957 F.3d 1098 (10th Cir. 2020), Stillman v.
 Teachers Insurance & Annuity Ass'n College Retirement Equities
 Fund, 343 F.3d 1311 (10th Cir. 2003), and Walsh v. Montes,
 388 P.3d 262, 265 (N.M. Ct. App. 2016), allow post-distribution
 claims for ERISA-governed benefits based on a state statute. But
 none of these cases supports this proposition. Evans, 957 F.3d at
 1104-05, held that a different federal statute, the Federal Employee
 Retirement Systems Act, preempted an estate's lawsuit to enforce a
 beneficiary's waiver and, in doing so, decided that Kennedy v. Plan
 Administrator for DuPont Savings & Investment Plan, 555 U.S. 285,
 299 n.10 (2009), was inapplicable. Stillman, 343 F.3d at 1314-23,
 did not involve ERISA preemption or ERISA-governed benefits. And
 Walsh, 388 P.3d at 266, involved a claim for recovery of
 ERISA-governed benefits based on an express waiver, not a state
 statute.

 16
 the cases explicitly distinguish between post-distribution suits to

enforce waivers and post-distribution suits based on state divorce

revocation statutes. In Sweebe, for example, the Michigan Supreme

Court emphasized that its holding that a valid waiver is not

preempted by ERISA was consistent with the principle that parties

have a broad freedom to contract, 712 N.W.2d at 712, while, in

contrast, a state statute that automatically revoked a beneficiary

designation upon divorce would "clearly invade[] an area that is

covered by ERISA," id. at 713. In Culwick v. Wood, 384 F. Supp. 3d

328, 345 (E.D.N.Y. 2019), the court noted that a former spouse's

contention that ERISA preempted New York's divorce revocation

statute was "a red herring" because the claim against her was

based on her express waiver of her right to plan proceeds, not on

the state statute. And in Hennig v. Didyk, 438 S.W.3d 177, 183

(Tex. App. 2014), the court determined that it need not resolve

whether ERISA preempted a post-distribution suit under Texas's

divorce revocation statute because the named beneficiary expressly

waived her rights to plan proceeds. Thus, while the Estate cites

these and other cases holding that ERISA does not preempt

post-distribution suits to enforce express waivers by named

 17
 beneficiaries, it fails to show how those cases support its contention

 that ERISA should not preempt a post-distribution suit based on a

 divorce revocation statute.

¶ 31 Second, the Washington Court of Appeals examined a case

 almost identical to this one and held that ERISA "preempts a

 party's reliance on [Washington's divorce revocation statute] for

 recovery of ERISA funds in the hands of the designated beneficiary."

 Estate of Lundy v. Lundy, 352 P.3d 209, 215 (Wash. Ct. App. 2015).

 The Lundy court emphasized that, while Kennedy recognized an

 open question in the context of waiver by private agreement

 between the parties, it did "not recognize an open question in the

 context of a state-law-based claim to . . . ERISA benefits" after they

 had been distributed to the named beneficiary. Id. at 214.

¶ 32 In reaching its conclusion, the Lundy court looked to a Ninth

 Circuit case, Carmona v. Carmona, 603 F.3d 1041 (9th Cir. 2010).

 In Carmona, a husband designated his then-wife as his survivor

 beneficiary under two ERISA-governed pension plans. Id. at 1048.

 When the husband remarried, he petitioned the family court to

 revoke his designation of his ex-wife as survivor beneficiary and

 substitute his new wife. Id. at 1049. After the husband's death,

 18
 the court ordered the plan administrator to change the survivor

 beneficiary from his ex-wife to his new wife or, in the alternative,

 ordered that the funds his ex-wife received be placed in a

 constructive trust with his new wife as beneficiary. Id. The Ninth

 Circuit held that the plan administrator was not required to redirect

 the surviving spouse benefits to the new wife and that the

 constructive trust was impermissible because "state law doctrines

 (including constructive trusts) may not be invoked to assign

 benefits to parties other than those designated as beneficiaries

 under ERISA." Id. at 1061. "Any alternative rule," the court

 observed, "would allow for an end-run around ERISA's rules and

 Congress's policy objective of providing for certain beneficiaries,

 thereby greatly weakening, if not entirely abrogating, ERISA's broad

 preemption provision." Id.

¶ 33 Thus, as the Lundy court noted, Carmona "explicitly

 disapprove[d] of state law ‘end-runs' around ERISA imposed by

 state courts." Lundy, 352 P.3d at 214. Accordingly, the court held

 that ERISA preempts claims under Washington's divorce revocation

 statute both before and after plan proceeds are distributed to the

 named beneficiary. Put another way, the plan participant's estate

 19
 could not "revive" the preempted statute "simply by applying it in a

 postdistribution argument." Id.

¶ 34 We, like the Lundy and Carmona courts, agree that

 subsection (8)(b) cannot be used as a statutory end-run around

 preemption and "cannot be used to contravene the dictates of

 ERISA." Carmona, 603 F.3d at 1061. Accordingly, we conclude

 that subsection (8)(b) cannot revive the preempted subsection (2)

 simply by effecting the same result after ERISA plan proceeds have

 been distributed to the named beneficiary.

¶ 35 Third, addressing a different federal law in Hillman v. Maretta,

 569 U.S. 483 (2013), the United States Supreme Court concluded

 that the law preempted a provision of Virginia's divorce revocation

 statute very similar to Colorado's subsection (8)(b). Although the

 federal law at issue in Hillman was the Federal Employees' Group

 Life Insurance Act of 1954 (FEGLIA), 5 U.S.C. §§ 8701-8716, not

 ERISA, we nonetheless find the Court's reasoning persuasive on the

 issue of whether a state statute can sidestep preemption. See

 Lundy, 352 P.3d at 212 (stating that although Hillman is not

 controlling, it "make[s] clear that the account proceeds go to the

 20
 federally determined beneficiary regardless of state law to the

 contrary").

¶ 36 The Virginia statute at issue in Hillman provided, first, that a

 divorce or annulment revokes a "beneficiary designation contained

 in a then existing written contract owned by one party that provides

 for the payment of any death benefit to the other party." Va. Code

 Ann. § 20-111.1(A) (West 2011) (Section A). In a provision

 equivalent to Colorado's subsection (8)(b), the Virginia statute then

 provided that,

 [i]f this section is preempted by federal law
 with respect to the payment of any death
 benefit, a former spouse who, not for value,
 receives the payment of any death benefit that
 the former spouse is not entitled to under this
 section is personally liable for the amount of
 the payment to the person who would have
 been entitled to it were this section not
 preempted.

 Va. Code Ann. § 20-111.1(D) (Section D).

¶ 37 In Hillman, the husband named his then-wife as the

 beneficiary of his Federal Employees' Group Life Insurance (FEGLI)

 policy. 569 U.S. at 488. They subsequently divorced, and the

 husband remarried. At the time of the husband's death, however,

 his ex-wife remained the named beneficiary of his FEGLI policy. Id.

 21
 at 488-89. After the proceeds were distributed to the ex-wife, the

 new wife sued the ex-wife, arguing that the ex-wife "was liable to

 her under Section D for the proceeds of her deceased husband's

 FEGLI policy." Id. at 489. The ex-wife, however, argued that she

 should be allowed to keep the insurance proceeds because

 Section D — like Section A — was directly preempted by FEGLIA.

 Id.

¶ 38 The Supreme Court agreed. Id. at 490. In reaching its

 decision, the Court noted that FEGLIA provides that, upon an

 employee's death, life insurance benefits are paid in accordance

 with a specified "order of precedence." Id. at 486 (quoting 5 U.S.C.

 § 8705(a)). The proceeds accrue "[f]irst, to the beneficiary or

 beneficiaries designated by the employee in a signed and witnessed

 writing received before death." 5 U.S.C. § 8705(a). "[I]f there is no

 designated beneficiary," the benefits are paid "to the widow or

 widower of the employee." Id. Thus, FEGLIA creates a scheme that

 gives highest priority to an insured's designated beneficiary.

 Hillman, 569 U.S. at 493. The Court concluded that

 Section D interferes with Congress' scheme,
 because it directs that the proceeds actually
 "belong" to someone other than the named

 22
 beneficiary by creating a cause of action for
 their recovery by a third party. It makes no
 difference whether state law requires the
 transfer of the proceeds, as Section A does, or
 creates a cause of action, like Section D, that
 enables another person to receive the proceeds
 upon filing an action in state court. In either
 case, state law displaces the beneficiary
 selected by the insured in accordance with
 FEGLIA and places someone else in her stead.

 Id. at 494 (citations omitted).

¶ 39 In his concurrence, Justice Thomas observed that "[t]he direct

 conflict between Section D and FEGLIA is . . . evident in the fact

 that Section D's only function is to accomplish what Section A

 would have achieved, had Section A not been pre-empted." Id. at

 501 (Thomas, J., concurring in the judgment). Though Section D

 does not directly preclude the payment of benefits to the designated

 beneficiary, Justice Thomas noted, "it accomplishes the same

 prohibited result by transforming the designated party into little

 more than a passthrough" for the individual state law has

 designated as the true beneficiary. Id. at 501-02.

¶ 40 The Estate argues that Hillman's rationale does not apply to

 this case because ERISA, unlike FEGLIA, does not contain a

 statutory order of precedence. While the Supreme Court

 23
 determined that the federal interest in FEGLIA was "to ensure that

a duly named beneficiary will receive the insurance proceeds and be

able to make use of them," Hillman, 569 U.S. at 491, the Estate

contends that the federal interest in ERISA is "to simply ensure that

employers and plan administrators act in accordance with the

plan's written terms," Walsh v. Montes, 388 P.3d 262, 265 (N.M. Ct.

App. 2016); see also Evans v. Diamond, 957 F.3d 1098, 1104-05

(10th Cir. 2020). But the Estate construes ERISA's purpose too

narrowly. Although ERISA does not contain a statutory order of

precedence, "the protection of beneficiaries . . . [is] a paramount

ERISA objective." VanderKam v. VanderKam, 776 F.3d 883, 886

(D.C. Cir. 2015). As the District of Columbia Circuit has explained,

 ERISA protects retirement benefits for millions
 of pension plan participants and their
 beneficiaries. 29 U.S.C. § 1001(b). Finding
 that the stability of retirement benefits directly
 affects the national economy, id. § 1001(a),
 Congress acted to ensure that accrued benefits
 remain unaltered by individuals and states
 alike. It accomplished this by prohibiting
 participants from assigning or alienating their
 own benefits, id. § 1056(d)(1), and, with limited
 exceptions, superseding state laws that "relate
 to any employee benefit plan," id. § 1144(a).

Id. at 885.

 24
 ¶ 41 Notably, Congress created an exception from ERISA's

 preemption and anti-alienation provisions for a narrow category of

 state court orders known as qualified domestic relations orders.

 29 U.S.C. § 1056(d)(3)(A). "Where Congress explicitly enumerates

 certain exceptions to a general prohibition, additional exceptions

 are not to be implied, in the absence of evidence of a contrary

 legislative intent." Andrus v. Glover Constr. Co., 446 U.S. 608,

 616-17 (1980). As the district court in this case noted in its

 well-reasoned order,

 Congress could have put in place a default rule
 providing that insurance proceeds accrue to a
 widow or widower and not a named
 beneficiary. Congress could have put in place
 a provision that a divorce decree operates to
 control over the designation of a beneficiary.
 Congress could have put in place a provision
 whereby a decedent's will is more reliable
 evidence of the decedent's intention than a
 beneficiary designation form executed years
 earlier. Congress could have provided that the
 benefits automatically revert to the estate of
 the participant upon the participant's divorce
 from the beneficiary. Congress did none of
 that. Instead, Congress established a clear
 and predictable procedure for an employee to
 indicate who the intended beneficiary of his life
 insurance shall be.

 25
 ¶ 42 To sum up, the Estate presents no authority supporting a

 state-law-based claim — rather than one based on waiver by private

 agreement between the parties — to recover ERISA plan proceeds

 after their distribution to the named beneficiary. Further, Lundy

 and Carmona explicitly disapprove of state law "end-runs" around

 ERISA preemption. And finally, we are persuaded by the reasoning

 in Hillman that federal law preempts a state statute similar to

 subsection (8)(b). Accordingly, we agree with the district court's

 conclusion that ERISA preempts the Estate's post-distribution

 claims to recover the insurance proceeds from Ms. Ragan.

 F. Sanctions

¶ 43 Ms. Ragan contends that the Estate's appeal is frivolous and

 requests an assessment of fees and costs pursuant to C.A.R. 38(b).

 That we ultimately disagree with the Estate's arguments does not

 mean the appeal was frivolous as filed or argued. See City of Aurora

 v. Colo. State Eng'r, 105 P.3d 595, 620 (Colo. 2005) ("Meritorious

 actions that prove unsuccessful and good faith attempts to extend,

 modify, or reverse existing law are not frivolous."). No prior

 Colorado case has addressed the enforceability of subsection (8)(b).

 And because the Estate raised arguably meritorious contentions on

 26
 an issue of first impression in Colorado, we deny Ms. Ragan's

 request for fees and costs.

 III. Conclusion

¶ 44 We affirm the judgment and deny Ms. Ragan's request for fees

 and costs pursuant to C.A.R. 38(b).

 JUDGE J. JONES and JUDGE NAVARRO concur.

 27