Rachel F. Shoenthal v. Dekalb County Employees Retirement System Pension Board
Rachel F. Shoenthal v. Dekalb County Employees Retirement System Pension Board
Opinion
In the third appearance of this case before this Court, 1 Rachel and Rebecca Shoenthal (collectively "Plaintiffs"), daughters of the late Judge Elliott Shoenthal, contend that the trial court erred in awarding attorney fees to the DeKalb County Employees Retirement System Pension Board ("the Board") pursuant to OCGA § 9-15-14. We agree and reverse.
The underlying facts as set out in
Shoenthal v. Shoenthal
,
On October 25, 2013, about a month before his scheduled surgery, Judge Shoenthal changed the beneficiaries on employer-provided life insurance policies by reducing [his wife Fran's] share of the benefit from 100 percent to 50 percent and designating that each of the Plaintiffs receive 25 percent of the benefit. On the morning of November 18, 2013, Judge Shoenthal e-mailed the clerk of the Board, inquiring
about changing the beneficiaries on his pension plan. Specifically, Judge Shoenthal asked, "[w]hat happens to my pension if I die-does it go to my wife? Can I split it between my wife and my children? Second, if I'm able to split it, what do I need to do to modify the beneficiary?" The clerk responded on November 20, 2013, informing Judge Shoenthal that he could change designated beneficiaries by completing a form available on a county website. Judge *652 Shoenthal replied that he would complete a new beneficiary form.
That same month, Judge Shoenthal told his sister that he had revised his will to reflect his "intention to leave everything to [Plaintiffs] and little to nothing to Fran." At a November 23 lunch, Judge Shoenthal told his sister that he was in the process of changing the beneficiary designation for his pension. On November 25, 2013, Judge Shoenthal completed and signed the change-of-beneficiary form, designating the Plaintiffs as the sole beneficiaries. Judge Shoenthal also handwrote, "I want each of my children to receive 50% of my pension." Attached to the change-of-beneficiary form was a Post-It note containing the Board's address. Judge Shoenthal placed the form on or in his desk. Over the next two days, Judge Shoenthal worked in his office and handled repairs to his car.
Judge Shoenthal had surgery on November 27, was released from the hospital the next day, and died from an embolism on December 1, 2013. Judge Shoenthal never mailed or delivered the change-of-beneficiary form.
Around the time Judge Shoenthal was released from the hospital, Fran discovered that he had changed or intended to change the beneficiaries on his pension plan. About a week after Judge Shoenthal's death, Fran submitted an application to receive Judge Shoenthal's pension benefits. Later that month, the change-of-beneficiary form was found on or in Judge Shoenthal's desk, and Fran was told about it. On January 1, 2014, the Board began sending monthly pension payments to Fran. A few days later, one of the Plaintiffs hand-delivered the signed change-of-beneficiary form to the Board and requested that it be honored. The Board informed Plaintiffs that it would not recognize the change-of-beneficiary form, but did not provide a reason.
alleging that the Board wrongfully disbursed and Fran improperly claimed their deceased father's entire pension benefits when their father had designated that benefits be paid to them. The trial court granted the Board's and Fran's motions for judgment on the pleadings on the ground that Judge Shoenthal did not provide notice to the Board of a change in beneficiaries.
We affirmed the trial court, finding that "Judge Shoenthal did not provide written notice to the Board as required by [Section 908 of the] Pension Code,
2
and thus did not effectuate the change in beneficiaries upon which Plaintiffs' claims rest."
[t]here is simply no reasonable interpretation of Section 908 of the Pension Code that could conceivably support Plaintiff's contention that the Pension Board received the requisite written notice that they, and not Defendant Fran Shoenthal, are Judge Shoenthal's beneficiaries under the Pension Plan.
*653 We granted Plaintiffs' application for discretionary review of the award of attorney fees.
Pursuant to OCGA § 9-15-14 (a), the trial court shall award attorney fees when a party asserted a claim, defense or other position with "such a complete absence of any justiciable issue of law or fact" that the party could not reasonably have believed that the court would accept it. We affirm an award under subsection (a) if there is any evidence to support it. Pursuant to OCGA § 9-15-14 (b), the court may award attorney fees if a party brought or defended an action that "lacked substantial justification" or "was interposed for delay or harassment, or if the court finds that an attorney or party unnecessarily expanded the proceeding by other improper conduct." We review a subsection (b) fee award for abuse of discretion.
(Citations and punctuation omitted.)
Reynolds v. Clark
,
The Board contends that the award was warranted because Plaintiffs' claim that the language of the Pension Code was subject to more than one interpretation was unreasonable. In support of this contention, the Board maintains that there is no caselaw addressing the meaning of Section 908 of the Pension Code because "no previous potential claimant has been willing to pursue a claim predicated on a position that is so clearly foreclosed by the plain language of the Pension Code." The Board's argument illustrates one of the classic logical fallacies: appeal to ignorance or an argument from ignorance.
4
An argument from ignorance is "the mistake that is committed whenever it is argued that a proposition is true simply on the basis that it has not been proved false, or that it is false because it has not been proved true."
Alabama-Tombigbee Rivers Coalition v. Kempthorne
,
Although we affirmed the trial court's decision in
Shoenthal II
, our ruling required us to construe Section 908 of the Pension Code. The Board has not cited to, and we are not
*654
aware of, another case where we have interpreted this section of the DeKalb County Pension Code or addressed a similar factual scenario. See, e.g.,
Fox v. City of Cumming
,
Compare
Brunswick Floors, Inc. v. Carter
,
In sum, it was not far-fetched for Plaintiffs to argue that the completed form found in Judge Shoenthal's desk constituted "written notice" and that the Board was in "receipt" of the form when it was hand-delivered by Plaintiffs after their father's death.
[W]e must keep in mind that OCGA § 9-15-14 (a) is intended to discourage the bringing of frivolous claims, not the presentation of questions of first impression about which reasonable minds might disagree or the assertion of novel legal theories that find arguable, albeit limited, support in the existing case law and statutes.
Renton v. Watson
,
Further, Plaintiffs cited authority that arguably supported their claim, specifically
Westmoreland v. Westmoreland
,
The Board argues that
Westmoreland
failed to create a justiciable issue of law or fact because it was an interpleader action. The Board specifically argues that, "[a]nother circumstance required for application of the 'substantial compliance' exception recognized by the
Westmoreland
court is a showing that the pension plan ... or other entity controlling the benefits at issue 'stand[s] indifferently' as to the conflicting claims of the parties asserting entitlement to the benefits,
*655
as would be the case in an interpleader action." Because Plaintiffs in this case elected to sue the Board after it paid benefits to Fran, thus giving it a significant stake in the outcome of the case, the Board was forced to pick a side and support Fran's entitlement to benefits; thus, strict compliance was required and Plaintiffs' reliance on
Westmoreland
' s
"substantial compliance" exception suffered from a complete absence of any justiciable issue of law or fact. We disagree. Until our decision in
Shoenthal II
, it was not clear that a benefit association must "stand indifferently" before a trial court can exercise its equitable powers to determine whether the insured did substantially all that he was able to do to effect a change of condition. In
Westmoreland
, Justice Carley took this position in a special concurrence, but a special concurrence is not binding precedent. See
Green v. Green
,
For all of the above reasons, we conclude that Plaintiffs' claims were not frivolous under OCGA § 9-15-14 ; Plaintiffs did not lack substantial justification for bringing their claims and those claims did not suffer from a complete absence of any justiciable issue of law or fact. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court's fee award under OCGA § 9-15-14.
Judgment reversed.
Dillard, C. J., and Ray, P. J., concur.
See
Shoenthal v. Shoenthal
,
Section 908 of the Pension Code provides in relevant part:
All participants shall, on a form provided for that purpose, designate a person or persons to receive the benefits payable in the event of the death of the participant. Such person or persons shall be the beneficiary of the participant. The participant may from time to time change the beneficiary by written notice to the pension board, and upon the receipt by the pension board of such change, the rights of all previously designated beneficiaries to receive any benefit under this plan shall cease.
Shoenthal II
, supra,
Plaintiffs did not challenge below the sufficiency of the evidence submitted in support of the amount of fees requested by the Board or the reasonableness of those fees.
"[A] fancier, and hence less denigrating, way of describing 'an argument from ignorance' " is the Latin phrase "argumentum ad ignorantiam."
Alabama-Tombigbee Rivers Coalition v. Kempthorne
,
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.