Cameron v. Hughes

825 P.2d 882, 1992 Alas. LEXIS 13, 1992 WL 19712
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 7, 1992
DocketS-3506
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 825 P.2d 882 (Cameron v. Hughes) 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
Cameron v. Hughes, 825 P.2d 882, 1992 Alas. LEXIS 13, 1992 WL 19712 (Ala. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

This appeal involves various orders which were entered by the superior court subsequent to its grant of a divorce decree which required appellant Karl Cameron to pay support for the parties’ minor child.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Karl Cameron and Kathryn (Cameron) Hughes were married in July 1965. They had one child, Jolyna Marie Cameron, born June 17,1966. After 12 years of marriage, in December 1977, Cameron and Hughes divorced. Under the parties’ child custody and support agreement, Cameron agreed to pay $200.00 per month in child support and to assume responsibility for Jolyna’s medical expenses.

In 1983, Cameron injured his back and suffered pulmonary problems while working in Kodiak. Since that time, Cameron has received workers' compensation and social security disability benefits. Following his injury, Cameron moved to California.

Cameron was in arrears on his child support payments and on December 12, 1985, the superior court reduced the arrearages to judgment awarding Hughes a total of $26,746.31 for unpaid child support. 1 By March 1,1989, the amount owed by Cameron under the judgment had increased to $35,717.68. On March 1,1989, the attorney for Cameron’s workers’ compensation carrier was served with a writ of execution (garnishment) for the total amount owed by Cameron to Hughes. Thereafter Cameron’s workers’ compensation and disability benefits were, pursuant to execution, de *884 posited in the registry of the superior court. Cameron estimated that as of May 24, 1989, $7,195.19 of his benefits had been deposited in the court’s registry.

Cameron claimed an exemption from execution in a hearing before a superior court master. The master found that the only income Cameron and his present wife had was comprised of Cameron’s social security and workers’ compensation benefits, total-ling $4,158.52 per month. The master further found that Cameron had assigned most of the $816 he received monthly as social security benefits to the Internal Revenue Service for payment of back taxes. The master concluded that since Cameron was a California resident and was supporting a dependant spouse, the non-resident debtor provision, AS 09.38.030(d), applied and that it followed that any execution against Cameron was limited by 15 U.S.C. § 1673 to 50 percent of his aggregate disposable earnings, which included his workers’ compensation and social security benefits.

The superior court, on June 20, 1989, approved the master’s report allowing Hughes to recover for child support, medical payments, interest, and costs and attorney’s fees. On June 30, 1989, Cameron filed a petition for bankruptcy and obtained an automatic stay of the superior court proceedings. Then on July 24, 1989, Cameron filed an appeal to this court from the superior' court’s final order allowing execution against 50 percent of his workers’ compensation and social security benefits. On March 6, 1990, the bankruptcy court granted Hughes’ motion to terminate the automatic stay in order to allow resolution of Cameron’s pending appeal to this court. The bankruptcy court further awarded Hughes one-half of the funds then deposited in its registry.

On September 19, 1990, Hughes moved the superior court to modify the judgment it entered against Cameron in 1985 to reflect the costs Hughes had incurred in collecting the judgment. The superior court, on December 10, 1990, granted the motion increasing the original judgment amount of $26,746.31 by adding $37,714.75 in collection costs and attorney’s fees. In addition, the court ordered that the new total judgment of $64,461.06 accrue 10.5 percent interest per annum from December 12, 1985.

On September 19, 1990, Hughes also moved the superior court for an order requiring Cameron to file a supersedeas bond pursuant to Appellate Rule 204(d) or suffer dismissal of his appeal. Hughes also moved this court for an extension of time to file her appellee’s brief until thirty days after the superior court ruled on her motion to require Cameron to file a supersede-as bond. The motion was denied by Justice Matthews, who observed that a supersede-as bond is not required to maintain an appeal. Thereafter, on December 10, 1990, the superior court granted Hughes’ motion and required Cameron to file a supersedeas bond in the amount of $80,000 as a precondition to his maintaining this appeal.

Subsequently, the superior court denied Cameron’s motion for reconsideration of the court’s December 10,1990 orders which required the filing of an $80,000 supersede-as bond and increased the original judgment which had been entered against Cameron by allowing post judgment collection costs and attorney’s fees. Cameron now appeals from these orders.

II. SUPERSEDEAS BOND

Cameron contends that the superior court erred in requiring him to post a su-persedeas bond pursuant to Appellate Rule 204(d). 2

The parties agree that a supersedeas bond is not required in order to maintain an appeal. However, Hughes asserts that considerations of justice require that a bond be posted. She notes that Cameron’s assets are now under the protection of the bankruptcy court. Without the bond, she contends, she will be unable to execute on the judgment if Cameron’s appeal fails.

We conclude that by requiring Cameron to post a supersedeas bond, the supe *885 rior court violated the Bankruptcy Court’s stay and misinterpreted Appellate Rule 204(d). Cameron correctly argues that the Bankruptcy Court’s automatic stay was not partially terminated for the purpose of authorizing the superior court to require that Cameron post a $80,000 supersedeas bond. Since the stay was terminated “solely for the purposes of pursuing resolution of the pending Alaska State Court Appeal,” the superior court’s December 10, 1990 order requiring that Cameron post a supersedeas bond violated the Bankruptcy Court’s stay.

More importantly, we hold that the superior court lacked discretion under Appellate Rule 204(d) 3 to grant Hughes’ motion which sought an order requiring appellant to post an $80,000 supersedeas bond as a precondition to maintaining this appeal. The supersedeas bond provisions of Appellate Rule 204(d) come into play only if the appellant desires a stay pending appeal. In the instant case, Cameron did not request a stay on appeal and therefore, under the provisions of Rule 204(d), he cannot be compelled to post a supersedeas bond. Accordingly, we reverse and vacate the superior court’s order requiring Cameron to post an $80,000 supersedeas bond.

III. EXEMPTIONS

Cameron’s primary contention in this appeal is that the superior court erred in not applying the exemptions from execution available in California, his present state of residence, as provided for in AS 09.38.120. 4

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
825 P.2d 882, 1992 Alas. LEXIS 13, 1992 WL 19712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-v-hughes-alaska-1992.