So someone forgot to draft that QDRO. Now what?
Published for On the Civil Side on July 24, 2015.
An equitable distribution judgment was entered 11 years ago. The order states plaintiff is entitled to a percentage of defendant’s retirement pay when defendant begins to receive it. The judgment also states that plaintiff’s counsel will draft a QDRO. Now it is time for defendant to retire but no one ever drafted a QDRO. Is there a problem? Can the court enter one now?
Of course the first thought is the statute of limitations. Does GS 1-47 - the 10-year limitation period for “actions upon judgments ” - prohibit a court from entering the QDRO?
We do not an appellate opinion that answers this question, but I don’t think the statute of limitation bars entry of the QDRO. I can’t see how a statute of limitations could bar a party from recovering payments not yet due and owing. Also, I don’t think a QDRO is an “action upon a judgment”; rather it is the means of completing the ED judgment by accomplishing the actual division of the marital interest in the retirement account.
Here is why I think that is true.
What is a QDRO?
QDRO is not a term defined in state law. However, state law does define – sort of - a “DRO”.
The equitable distribution statute provides that absent consent of both parties to another method of distribution, there are only two ways a vested retirement account can be distributed:
- By giving the account to one party and awarding a larger portion of other assets to the other; or
- By “appropriate domestic relations order as a prorated portion of the benefits” paid to the recipient spouse if and when that spouse begins to receive the retirement funds (a “DRO”).
- The name and address of the parties;
- The amount to be paid to the alternate payee;
- The number of payments; and
- The name of the plan.
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