State Dept. of Human Resources v. RLR
State Dept. of Human Resources v. RLR
Opinion
The State Department of Human Resources ("DHR") appeals from a judgment of the Colbert County District Court awarding DHR $4,729, representing an accrued arrearage of child support owed by R.L.R. ("the father"), the father of M.R. and C.R. ("the children"), but not awarding postjudgment interest on that amount. We reverse and remand with instructions.
The father and D.R.W. ("the mother") were divorced in 1979 by the Franklin County Circuit Court; that court's judgment provided that the mother would have custody of the children and that the father would pay child support to the mother. In 1982, DHR brought a child-support action against the father in the Colbert County Juvenile Court, alleging that DHR had provided public assistance toward the support of the children; contending that the father had a legal duty to support the children; and requesting the juvenile court to direct the father to pay a reasonable sum of reimbursement of the support and maintenance of the children and to enter an order for continuing support. The father was served with DHR's petition, but failed to appear at the hearing on the petition; there is no indication that the juvenile court was made aware of the father's support obligation under the 1979 divorce judgment. The juvenile court entered a default judgment in favor of DHR for $3,731 plus cost, and directed the father to pay child support of $25 per week beginning on July 2, 1982. No appeal was taken from that judgment.
From the scant record before this court, it appears that during the 16 years following the juvenile court's judgment, the *Page 497 father did not voluntarily1 make any payments to DHR with respect to either the arrearage or the prospective weekly support obligation. On several occasions since 1982, DHR has attempted to execute upon the juvenile court judgment; however, until 1998, DHR was unsuccessful in obtaining service upon the father.
In 1993, the mother died, and the father filed a petition in the Colbert County Circuit Court seeking custody of the children. The Colbert Circuit Court thereafter entered a judgment awarding custody of the children to the father. Among the factual findings made by the Colbert Circuit Court were the following:
"[A]lthough [the father] did not continue to pay regular child support to [the mother] pursuant to the Franklin County Divorce Decree, he terminated said regular cash payments to [the mother] because [the mother's] father was using those child-support funds to support his drinking, and instead [the mother] and [the father] agreed that the father would buy the children necessities such as clothes and food, in lieu of said child-support payments directly to the mother, and . . . he also at times gave money directly to [the mother]. [The father] did support [the mother and the children] during this period of time by doing so, and the children verified this through their testimony."
On November 25, 1998, DHR and two persons claiming to be the guardians of the children filed in the Colbert County District Court a "petition for writ of ne exeat," in which they alleged that the father had failed and refused to abide by the terms of the 1982 judgment, resulting in substantial arrearages and interest; that the father was justly indebted to the State; that the father had remained outside Alabama for 14 years to avoid payment of child support; that he was in Alabama temporarily; and that it was likely that he would leave the state pending a hearing. The petition sought, among other things, the entry of a judgment against the father in the amount owed under the 1982 juvenile-court judgment "plus interest accrued thereon as provided by law." The father was served with the petition, and the district court held an ore tenus hearing on the petition.
On February 9, 1999, the district court entered a judgment on the petition. In its judgment, the district court concluded that the principal sum owed by the father was $4,729, apparently failing to take into account the 1997 federal tax offset. However, after referencing the above-quoted portion of the 1993 custody judgment, the district court found that while the father "in fact" owed the State postjudgment interest of $12,725, the court would "waive" the interest if the father paid $4,729 within 60 days because of the possibility that the father "could have interpreted th[e] language [in the 1993 custody judgment] to be a waiver of his child-support obligation ordered" by the juvenile court. DHR's postjudgment motion challenging the interest waiver was denied.
On appeal, DHR contends that the district court was, as a matter of law, without power to remit the postjudgment interest due on the sums payable under the 1982 juvenile-court judgment. The father has not favored this court with a brief. Because the record does not contain a transcript of the proceedings before the district court, we presume that that court's factual findings are correct, and we review its judgment to determine whether that court misapplied the law to those facts. See Ex parte State exrel. Lamon,
Pursuant to §
Under Alabama law, all judgments, other than judgments based upon contract actions, bear interest at the rate of 12 percent per annum. Section
State Dep't of Human Resources v. McGhee,"The law in Alabama is clear that an order to pay child support is a final judgment as of the due date and that an arrearage may be collected as any other judgment is collected. Further, the failure to impose interest on the arrearage when interest is properly requested is error."
The District Court of Colbert County appears to have sought to afford the father some relief from a substantial interest burden because the circuit court of that county had previously noted, in its 1993 custody judgment, the father's efforts to support the children. However, the liability of the father to repay DHR under the judgment of the juvenile court with respect to AFDC benefits that were paid to the mother was distinct from his obligation of support under the Franklin County divorce judgment, and the Colbert Circuit Court's custody judgment could not, as a matter of law, supersede the juvenile court's support judgment. See Sharp v. Sharp,
The facts of this case closely resemble those of Stateex rel. State Dep't of Human Resources v. Orr,
"This court is mindful of the tremendous burden placed upon trial courts, and their herculean efforts in the exercise of their duties, to enforce orders of child support. This court is aware of the efforts of the trial [judge], as well as other [judges] of the state, in handling a sometimes overwhelming load of cases involving support; however, we have no authority to ignore the statutes or the clear and settled legal precedent."
We agree with DHR that the district court was, as a matter of law, without authority to "waive" the imposition of statutorily mandated postjudgment interest on the juvenile court's 1982 support judgment in favor of DHR. Accordingly, we must reverse the judgment of the district court and remand for recalculation of the amounts owed by the father to DHR. On remand, the trial court is instructed to credit the father's payments, including his April 15, 1997, payment of $2,177, toward the principal amount the father owes under the juvenile court's support judgment (see §
REVERSED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Yates, Monroe, and Thompson, JJ., concur.
Crawley, J., concurs in the result.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- State Department of Human Resources v. R.L.R.
- Cited By
- 7 cases
- Status
- Published