Blaufuss v. Ball

305 P.3d 281, 2013 WL 3483815, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 85
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 12, 2013
Docket6796 S-14484
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 305 P.3d 281 (Blaufuss v. Ball) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blaufuss v. Ball, 305 P.3d 281, 2013 WL 3483815, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 85 (Ala. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

After a trial the superior court granted a decree of divorce, distributed marital debts and property, and ordered the husband to pay spousal support for an indefinite time period. More than three years later-in front of a different superior court judge-the wife sought relief for the husband's failure to *283 pay any spousal support. The husband in turn filed a motion to set aside the original spousal support award, arguing the judgment was void: (1) for lack of personal and subject matter jurisdiction at the trial; and (2) because he had not received due process during the trial. The superior court granted the husband's motion, declaring the spousal support judgment void because the husband had not received due process during the trial. The wife appeals; we reverse.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Melvin Ball and Andrea Blaufuss ({/k/a Andrea Ball) were married in Washington in 1980. Ball left Blaufuss and moved to Alaska in 2002, but he continued to support Blau-fuss and their minor child until 2006. In October 2006 Ball filed for divorce in Alaska. The trial court issued a domestic relations pretrial order listing the documentation requirements for spousal support motions-the order explained that "[alll motions and oppositions involving spousal support must be accompanied by a financial declaration affidavit." This order was served on Blaufuss.

Blaufuss did not timely respond to the divorce complaint, and in March 2007 Ball filed a default application. In April Blan-fuss's sister, Kathie Price, emailed the superior court a response explaining that Blau-fuss: (1) suffered from mental illness and her condition had been deteriorating; (2) was classified as categorically needy by Washington state; (8) was dependent on Ball as her sole source of income; (4) was in arrears for six months on her mobile home lot space fees; (5) owed more than $4,000 in property taxes on her mobile home; (6) had no money to pay her electric bill; (7) had a broken furnace and had been heating her home using the oven; and (8) had moved in with Price. Price requested spousal support for Blaufuss. Blaufuss signed a note authorizing Price's response.

The trial court accepted the email as Blau-fuss's answer, denied Ball's default request, and scheduled a trial-setting conference. After that conference the court issued an order explaining that divorce, spousal support, and property and debt would be addressed at trial. Trial took place in June 2007. Ball, Blaufuss, and Price appeared telephonically.

Ball testified that he sent Blaufuss money after he moved to Alaska in 2002, but stopped supporting her in November 2006 because he "found out about her use of cocaine and spending the money on ... drugs and [that] she also was ... being unfaithful." Ball testified that he had earned approximately $94,000 a year, but that his income recently had dropped to approximately $54,000 a year. When asked about Blaufuss's assertion that she "suffers from mental illness, severe depression and anxiety disorders and is not able to care for herself," Ball testified that Blaufuss was

fine as long as she doesn't take a lot of drugs. She had a job, she was holding a job until she started using nareoties, painkillers, and mixing them with antidepressants. She'd been through rehab, been through a program to get cleaned up a couple of times, and she finally ended up resorting to illegal street drugs.... I know that she can-she would be able to hold a job.

Ball also asserted that between 2002 and 2006 he had provided for Blaufuss by depositing more than $20,000 into Price's bank account, but that he did not want to pay further spousal support because he did not "feel that [he] should have to take care of her because of her problems that ... obviously she's born with."

After Ball testified, the court requested Blaufuss's testimony. Price responded, explaining that she did not know if her sister was in an emotional condition to testify and offered to "answer any questions that [the court] would have." The court voir dired Price and then Blaufuss.

Price testified that Blaufuss and Ball owed property taxes and space fees on their mobile home and that they had incurred a $1,700 cellular telephone debt in Price's name. Price explained that Blaufuss "suffers from mental illness, severe depression and anxiety disorders." When the court asked if Blau-fuss's mental illness was documented, Price responded "I have numerous pieces of doeu-mentation," but none were produced at trial. Price testified that ten years earlier Blaufuss *284 had worked for less than a year but had not been emotionally stable enough to continue working. Price further explained that Blau-fuss lived with her and that she administered Blaufuss's medication and kept drugs and alcohol out of the home. Finally, Price testified about her expenses incurred in caring for Blaufuss and the amount of state assistance Blaufuss received.

The court again requested Blaufuss's testimony. Blaufuss stated that she agreed with her sister's testimony. Blaufuss added that she had not used cocaine for almost a year.

Later that month the trial court issued findings and a decree of divorcee. The court found that Blaufuss suffered from mental illness and had chronic substance abuse problems, was unemployable, and needed supervision and assistance. The court awarded Blaufuss $1,000 monthly, indefinitely, for spousal support. The trial court also awarded Blaufuss the mobile home and the property tax liability, and ordered Ball to pay unpaid mobile home space fees and $1,700 to Price for the cellular telephone debt.

In January 2010, having received no spousal support payments, Blaufuss moved to find Ball in contempt. On November 14, 2010, Superior Court Judge Steve W. Cole, who had not been the divorce trial judge, scheduled a December 2010 hearing. The hearing was continued, and on December 30 Ball filed an Alaska Civil Rule 60(b)(4) motion 1 alleging that at the time of the original divorce the superior court: (1) lacked personal jurisdiction over Blaufuss because she was not an Alaska resident; (2) did not have subject matter jurisdiction over property outside of Alaska to address the mobile home debt; and (3) did not have jurisdiction to address Price's $1,700 claim because Price "never submitted herself to the personal jurisdiction of the court." Ball also alleged that he had not received due process during the divorce trial because: (1) the court ordered spousal support with no financial documentation and relied on hearsay testimony from Price; (2) Blaufuss provided no evidence supporting her allegations; (8) the court required no documentation supporting Blaufuss's medical claims; and (4) the court ignored Ball's testimony even though Blaufuss's testimony was inconsistent.

Blaufuss responded, arguing that: (1) the court had subject matter jurisdiction under AS 25.24.010; 2

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305 P.3d 281, 2013 WL 3483815, 2013 Alas. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaufuss-v-ball-alaska-2013.