Boudreaux v. Boudreaux

170 So. 3d 223, 2015 WL 574559
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 2015
DocketNos. 2013 CA 1149, 2013 CA 1150
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 170 So. 3d 223 (Boudreaux v. Boudreaux) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boudreaux v. Boudreaux, 170 So. 3d 223, 2015 WL 574559 (La. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinions

PETTIGREW, J.

1 gJennifer Boudreaux appeals a district court judgment, which adopted the recommendations of a hearing officer and modified a prior child support order. For the reasons that follow, and under the particular facts and circumstances of this case, we vacate the judgment rendered March 18, 2013, and signed April 14, 2013. We further reinstate the judgment of the district court of May 8, 2012.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Joseph E. Boudreaux, II and Jennifer Boudreaux were married on June 13, 1997. Two children were born during their marriage. On January 5, 2011, Mr. Boudreaux filed a Petition for Divorce seeking a divorce under La. C.C. art. 102, and a determination of incidental matters, including child custody and support. A judgment of divorce was rendered on June 10, 2011.

On June 14, 2011, the parties entered into a consent judgment regarding custody, visitation, and child support. With regard to child support, Mr. Boudreaux agreed to pay Ms. Boudreaux child support in the amount of $1,300.00 per month for March, April, May, and June 2011; $1,500.00 per month for July and August 2011; $1,400.00 for September 2011; and $1,300.00 for October 2011. Thereafter, the judgment ordered Mr. Boudreaux to pay child support in the amount of $1,200.00 per month. This judgment also partitioned the community property, and a separate Joint Custody Implementation Plan was also rendered.

On September 6, 2011, Mr. Boudreaux sought a modification in the custody arrangement and a reduction in the child support award. On February 9, 2012, Ms. Boudreaux also filed a motion seeking to change custody, to set child support, for contempt, and other miscellaneous matters. Following extensive discovery concerning the parties’ finances, and a custody evaluation, the district court heard the parties’ requests to modify custody and child support on March 19 and 20, 2012. On May 8, 2012, the district court signed a judgment that modified the joint custody implementation plan, dismissed Ms. Bou- , dreaux’s contempt request, but denied |sMr. Boudreaux’s request to modify the amount of child support. (The judgment ordered Mr. Boudreaux to continue paying Ms. Boudreaux $1,200.00 per month in 'child support, but allowed him to pay 50 percent [$600.00] on the first of every month, and the remaining 50 percent [$600.00] on the fifteenth of every month.)

• On July 24, 2012, Mr. Boudreaux, as the “noncustodial” obligor parent, applied for support enforcement services in what is commonly referred to as the IV-D program (addressed in more detail later herein’), through the Louisiana Department of Children and Family Services (the Department). To receive the Department’s services, Mr. Boudreaux was required to pay the Department’s administrative fees for its services. According to Mr. Boudreaux, the Department’s services allow him, as the' noncustodial obligor parent, to make a direct payment for the monthly amount of his child support obligation, plus any administrative fees, to the Department, which, in turn, would pay the child support to Ms. Boudreaux, the custodial parent. Subsequently, the Terrebonne Parish District. Attorney’s Office, as contract attorney for the Department, filed an ex-parte motion in the district court, allegedly in accordance with LSA-R.S. 46:236.2, to amend the payee of the child support award' from “Jennifer Boudreaux” to the Department. This motion was granted by the district court on August 13, 2012. We note the certificate supporting the motion to amend was false, or at a minimum, [226]*226materially inaccurate, insofar as it represented that Ms. Boudreaux was receiving benefits from the Department.

On September 5, 2012, Mr. Boudreaux filed a “Motion for Reduction/Termination in Child Support,” seeking a modification of the amount of the child support award due to a “change in marital status.” (Ms. Boudreaux remarried in June 2012.) Service of the motion was made on the District Attorney’s Office, Child Support Enforcement division; Hearing Officer William Dunckelman; and Ms. Bou-dreaux, as the custodial parent. (Because the motion sought a child support modification in a case where allegedly support enforcement services were being provided by the Department, the district court, pursuant to authority granted under Title 46, submitted the matter to a hearing officer to issue recommendations on the motion. See LSA-R.S. 46:236.5 and | ¿Thirty-Second Judicial District Court Rules 14A.1-14A.7.) Further extensive discovery regarding Mr. Boudreaux’s finances ensued.

At the hearing on Mr. Boudreaux’s motion on December 3, 2012, before Hearing Officer Dunckelman with the Office of Child Support (in the IV-D Program), Ms. Boudreaux asserted that the State (through the Department) had no right of action to intercede, contending that the claim was not properly within' the IV-D category of claims over which the hearing officer had jurisdiction. The hearing officer overruled Ms. Boudreaux’s objection. Following a hearing on Mr. Boudreaux’s motion, the hearing officer made a recommendation to the district court to reduce Mr. Boudreaux’s child support obligation from $1,200.00 to $700.00 per month.

Ms. Boudreaux then filed an objection to the hearing officer’s recommendation with the district court, urging that the Department should not be allowed to intervene in the private child support proceedings and further challenging the hearing officer’s recommendation on the merits, urging that remarriage alone does not constitute a substantial change in circumstances for a reduction in child support.

In a judgment rendered March 18, 2013, . and signed on April 4, 2013, the district court accepted the hearing officer’s recommendations.1

Ms. Boudreaux has appealed, urging that the Department was not authorized to intervene when it was not providing support enforcement services to her. She also asserts that the district court legally erred by holding that remarriage can be the sole basis to constitute a material change in circumstances for child support recalculation purposes. Further, she asserts that allowing Mr. Boudreaux to apply for services through the Department when he is neither eligible nor delinquent allows him to forum shop in the hope of reaching a more favorable decision.

ISSUE PRESENTED

The ultimate issue presented by Ms. Boudreaux’s appeal is whether the Department is authorized to intervene in a child support case, even when the paying | ¿spouse is not delinquent and the recipient spouse (Ms. Boudreaux) has not applied for services from the Department and receives no public assistance concerning which the legislature has expressed a compelling interest.

DISCUSSION

Ovemew of the Federal IV-D Program and Louisiana’s Statutory Framework

In 1975, in an effort to address the significant problem of nonsupport of chil[227]*227dren, the United States Congress passed legislation creating the Child Support Enforcement Act. The Act, which was codified as Part D of Title IV of the Social Security Act, is generally referred to as the IV-D program. 42 U.S.C. § 651 et seq. The IV-D program made federal financial support available to the states “[f]or the purpose of enforcing the support obligations owed by absent parents to their children, locating absent parents, establishing paternity, and obtaining child support.” 42 U.S.C.

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170 So. 3d 223, 2015 WL 574559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boudreaux-v-boudreaux-lactapp-2015.