How to draft a clear percentage-based divorce judgment
A good Oregon divorce judgment does more than state a percentage. It defines the property with enough detail that a third party, such as a title company or retirement plan administrator, can understand what must happen. Include account names, the last four digits of account numbers where appropriate, property addresses, and the exact debt or asset being divided.
The judgment should also state the valuation or cutoff date when that matters. For debts, that may be the balance as of the date of separation or filing. For retirement accounts, it may be the marital share accrued through a specific date, with gains and losses allocated from that point until transfer.
It also helps to spell out the mechanics. If a home will be sold, say who chooses the realtor, how listing price changes are handled, who pays carrying costs before sale, and how net proceeds are calculated. If one spouse must refinance a loan, include a deadline and explain what happens if the refinance does not occur on time.
Finally, address taxes and implementation documents. Some transfers need a deed, a vehicle title transfer, or a QDRO. If the parties expect to divide a retirement plan, business proceeds, stock units, or future sale proceeds by percentage, the judgment should say who prepares the required paperwork and how the cost will be paid.