Plaintiff appeals as of right from the trial court’s grant of summary disposition to defendants under MCR 2.116(0(2). We affirm.
Charles Edward Thomas, deceased, was a former employee of the city of Detroit who died in 1997. While employed by the city, he participated in an “annuity savings fund” (the fund) under the direction of defendant City of Detroit Retirement System. Plaintiff, the decedent’s former wife, whom he divorced in 1992, was the decedent’s designated beneficiary for the fund at the time of his death. After the retirement system refused to pay plaintiff the benefits accrued in the fund, she filed suit against the retirement system. The decedent’s estate was allowed to intervene in the matter as a defendant. The trial court subsequently granted summary disposition to defendants, finding that plaintiff was precluded from receiving the fund’s proceeds under the following provision from the 1992 divorce judgment:
Pension
It is further ordered and adjudged that each party shall keep and retain, as their exclusive property, free and clear of any claim by the other, any pension benefits to which they are now entitled or may be in the future.[1]
*157Plaintiff contends that the fund at issue here was not covered by the divorce judgment as a “pension” and that because she was the named beneficiary of the fund at the time of the decedent’s death, she is entitled to the proceeds from the fund. We disagree. We review a trial court’s grant of summary disposition de novo. Spiek v Dep’t of Transportation, 456 Mich 331, 337; 572 NW2d 201 (1998).
Black’s Law Dictionary (7th ed), p 1155, defines “pension” as “[a] fixed sum paid regularly to a person (or to the person’s beneficiaries), esp. by an employer as a retirement benefit.” The same dictionary defines “annuity” as “[a]n obligation to pay a stated sum, [usually] monthly or annually, to a stated recipient.” Id. at 88. These definitions indicate a substantial similarity between a pension and an annuity fund. Moreover, the dictionary lists “defined-contribution plan” (similar to the annuity fund at issue here) as a type of “pension plan.” Id. at 1155. Further, the change of beneficiary form in which the decedent designated plaintiff as the beneficiary of the fund stated “I . . . direct . . . the Retirement System ... to pay the accumulated contributions standing to my credit in event of my death before my retirement to [plaintiff]” (emphasis added). This is evidence that the annuity fund at issue here operated as a type of pension.
*158In addition, MCL 552.101(4) states in relevant part:
Each judgment of divorce ... shall determine all rights of the husband and wife in and to all of the following:
(a) Any pension, annuity, or retirement benefits.
(b) Any accumulated contributions in any pension, annuity, or retirement system.
(c) Any right or contingent right in and to unvested pension, annuity, or retirement benefits.
This language mandates that a divorce judgment address any annuities. In spite of this mandate, the divorce judgment at issue here did not separately address the instant annuity fund but instead stated that “each party shall keep and retain, as their exclusive property, free and clear of any claim by the other, any pension benefits to which they are .. . entitled . . . .” The failure to specifically address annuities (other than annuity insurance, see n 1, supra) in the divorce judgment despite the existence of the instant annuity fund is further evidence that the divorce judgment, in referring to a “pension,” was intended to encompass the annuity fund at issue. Accordingly, we hold that the trial court did not err in determining that the fund at issue here was covered by the “pension” provision of the divorce judgment.2
Plaintiff suggests that even if the fund is considered a “pension” under the divorce judgment, she nonetheless is entitled to the proceeds of the fund under Daugherty v Wickes Corp, 9 Mich App 305; 156 NW2d 581 (1967). In Daugherty, the decedent’s former wife, whom he had divorced, was the named beneficiary of his profit-sharing plan at the time of his death. Id. at *159310. The Court held that the profit-sharing plan was covered by a divorce decree stating that neither party “shall hereafter have any right, title or interest to the proceeds of any . . . contract of . . . retirement” held by the other. Id. at 310, 312. The Court held that the former wife was nevertheless entitled to the proceeds of the plan because the decree simply vested complete ownership of the plan in the decedent and left him free to dispose of those proceeds in any manner he saw fit. Id. at 313. The Court concluded that the decedent was free to leave his former wife as the beneficiary of the plan after the divorce and that she was therefore entitled to the proceeds upon his death. Id.
While we agree that Daugherty supports plaintiffs argument in the instant case, we are not strictly bound to follow Daugherty, a 1967 case, under MCR 7.215(I)(1). We do not believe that Daugherty was correctly decided. The Daugherty Court stated the following in reaching its decision:
[Under the divorce decree,] the profit-sharing plan became Emil Hildebrandt’s property to do with as he pleased. He could have changed beneficiaries free and clear of any claim by his former spouse. However, the decree left him free to give his profit-sharing benefits to Mary Ann if he so desired. The point is that he took no step to give his profit-sharing benefits to anyone else. We agree that pursuant to the divorce decree, the profit-sharing plan became Hildebrandt’s sole property. The issue is what did he do with this property after the divorce.
Notice for a moment the effect of the appellee’s . . . argument upon a man who wants his divorced wife to have the benefits of his profit-sharing plan. Should a divorce decree like the one before us have the effect of frustrating such an intention? Of course not. How, then, would he accomplish such an objective after divorce? Should our judge-made law *160require that the divorced man execute a new beneficiary provision keeping his former wife as the named beneficiary? One can hardly think of anything more offensive to common sense than a requirement that he must execute another beneficiary provision in order to retain the same beneficiary. [Daugherty, supra at 313.]
This reasoning is unpersuasive. We believe that language in a divorce decree awarding one party the proceeds of a fund “free and clear” of any claim by that party’s spouse — such as the language in the instant divorce judgment — operates to void a designation listing the spouse as the beneficiary. To hold otherwise would be to contravene the clear language of the decree and thereby frustrate the expressed intent of the parties who signed it.
The divorce decree at issue in Daugherty stated that “neither the plaintiff . . . nor the defendant . . . shall hereafter have any right, title or interest to the proceeds of any . . . contract of . . . retirement . . . [held by the other] in which either was heretofore named or designated as beneficiary . . . .” Id. at 310. Similarly, the divorce judgment at issue in the instant case stated that “each party shall keep and retain, as their exclusive property, free and clear of any claim by the other, any pension benefits to which they are now entitled or may be in the future.” These phrases clearly divested the surviving, divorced spouse of any interest in their deceased former spouse’s retirement or pension benefits. Should the parties in a particular case decide to keep each other as beneficiaries in spite of their divorce, they need merely specify as much in the divorce decree. The concerns of the *161Daugherty Court as expressed in the above excerpt are simply unfounded.3
This holding finds support in Mohamed v Kerr, 53 F3d 911, 912-913, 915-916 (CA 8, 1995) (divorce decree awarding each party “ ‘full right, title, interest and equity [in various retirement and insurance policies] free and clear of any claim by the other party’ ” operated to terminate any beneficiary interests or rights, “notwithstanding that they [were] not expressly mentioned”), and Clift v Clift, 210 F3d 268, 272 (CA 5, 2000) (divorce decree stating that the wife was “ ‘divested of all right, title, interest, and claim in and to’ ” a life insurance policy prevented her from claiming proceeds after the husband’s death, even though she remained the designated beneficiary). As stated in Clift, “[h]ad [the wife claiming the benefits] intended to retain her beneficiary interest, she should have demanded that the divorce decree so provide.” Id. We acknowledge that Mohamed and Clift do not constitute binding authority on this Court and that other federal cases reach somewhat contradictory conclusions. See, e.g., Lyman Lumber Co v Hill, 877 F2d 692, 693-694 (CA 8, 1989). Nonetheless, we view Mohamed and Clift as persuasive authority for our decision.
Because the divorce decree at issue in this case awarded the decedent his pension benefits “as [his] exclusive property, free and clear of any claim by [plaintiff],” plaintiff was not entitled to the proceeds *162of the fund after his death, even though she remained the named beneficiary of the fund.
Plaintiff additionally argues that the trial court erred in allowing the estate of Charles Edward Thomas, deceased, to intervene. We decline to review this argument because it is inadequately briefed. See Palo Group Foster Care, Inc v Dep’t of Social Services, 228 Mich App 140, 152; 577 NW2d 200 (1998).
Affirmed.