Kinsinger v. Pethel (Signed Opinion)
Annotate this CaseCarol Kinsinger and Todd Pethel were divorced by a final order entered in 2006. The final order incorporated by reference a settlement agreement stating that Kinsinger was entitled to fifty percent of the martial portion of Pethel’s thrift savings plan (TSP). In 2012, Kinsinger prepared and filed a qualified domestic relations order (QDRO), and the family court ordered the Kinsinger be paid one-half of the marital portion of the TSP that was contributed while the parties were married and living together. However, in 2009, Pethel had withdrawn all funds from the TSP. Petitioner filed a petition for contempt of the retirement benefits order. The family court declined to find Pethel in contempt, concluding that Kinsinger failed to timely file her QDRO and therefore forfeited her share of the TSP. The circuit court affirmed, interpreting the family court ruling as an application of the doctrine of laches. The Supreme Court (1) affirmed the circuit court’s finding that Pethel was not in contempt of the QDRO; but (2) reversed the circuit court’s finding that Kinsinger forfeited her share of the TSP under the doctrine of laches. Remanded for entry of a judgment order awarding Kinsinger the amount to which she was entitled.
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