Cnty. of San Diego Dep't of Child Support Servs. v. C.P.

245 Cal. Rptr. 3d 748, 34 Cal. App. 5th 1
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedApril 8, 2019
DocketD073403
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 245 Cal. Rptr. 3d 748 (Cnty. of San Diego Dep't of Child Support Servs. v. C.P.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cnty. of San Diego Dep't of Child Support Servs. v. C.P., 245 Cal. Rptr. 3d 748, 34 Cal. App. 5th 1 (Cal. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IRION, J.

*4In January 2013, the family court ordered respondent C.P. to pay monthly child support. From September 12, 2013, through August 22, 2017, C.P. was incarcerated in federal prison. Less than a month after his release, C.P. promptly filed a request for the court to adjust the child support arrears that accrued during his incarceration-which the parties and the family court handled under current Family Code1 section 4007.5. (Stats. 2015, ch. 629, § 2, eff. Oct. 8, 2015; subsequent references to current § 4007.5 are to this section of the legislation.) The court granted C.P.'s request over the objection of appellant San Diego County Department of Child Support Services (Department) (§ 17406), which is the appellant and is represented by the Attorney General in this appeal (§ 17407).2

The family court erred as a matter of law in granting C.P.'s request. Given the unambiguous language in current section 4007.5 and the timing of C.P.'s child support order, incarceration, and request for adjustment of *5arrears, the statutory relief awarded is unavailable to C.P. under current section 4007.5. As we explain, subdivision (f) expressly provides that the statute applies only to child support orders issued on or after October 8, 2015, and C.P.'s child support order under consideration was issued in January 2013. As we further explain, contrary to the family court's stated reasons, at the time of the repeal of *750former section 4007.5 (Stats. 2010, ch. 495, § 1; subsequent references to former § 4007.5 are to this section of the legislation), C.P. did not have a vested statutory right to have his support order adjusted, and current section 4007.5 does not contain a saving clause pursuant to which former section 4007.5 could have provided statutory protection for incarcerated child support obligors like C.P.3

However, C.P.'s request can be read to have sought the adjustment in child support arrears under former section 4007.5, which was repealed as of July 1, 2015 (id. , subd. (i) ); but the parties did not brief and the trial court did not consider whether former section 4007.5 contains a saving clause that provides C.P. with a statutory basis on which to have obtained the requested relief.

Accordingly, we will reverse the order granting C.P.'s request and remand with directions to consider, as appropriate based on briefing to be requested, whether former section 4007.5 includes a saving clause that allows its application to C.P.'s request and, if so, whether C.P. has made a sufficient showing for the relief he seeks.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

On January 23, 2013, at the request of the Department (§§ 17400,4 17406 (see fn. 2, ante ) ), the family court filed a section 17430 Judgment Regarding Parental Obligations (Judgment) that required C.P. to pay monthly child support of $ 308. C.P. was incarcerated out of state from September 12, 2013, until August 22, 2017, during which time he did not have the ability to pay support.

*6During C.P.'s incarceration, the Department requested and in May 2016 received from the family court an order temporarily modifying C.P.'s monthly child support obligation to $ 0 as of April 1, 2016. Although the Department's motion is not in the record on appeal, the Attorney General tells us that the Department did not know of, and thus did not base its request on, C.P.'s incarceration; rather, the Department sought the child support modification order solely "because [the Department] had not received any payments [from C.P.] for more than 12 months."

Within weeks of being released from prison, in September 2017 C.P. filed a "Request for Adjustment of Child Support Arrears Due to Incarceration or Involuntary Institutionalization" (Request). C.P. presented his Request on Judicial Council form FL-676-a mandatory form that is required for use under current section 4007.5. (See current § 4007.5, subd. (g) ["The Department of Child Support Services shall, by January 1, 2016, and in consultation with the Judicial Council, develop forms to implement this section."].) In his Request, C.P. sought the adjustment of his child support arrears based on the following showing: C.P. was incarcerated *751for more than 90 consecutive days during the time period from September 12, 2013, through August 22, 2017; C.P. did not have the financial ability to pay child support during this time period; C.P.'s incarceration did not result from a conviction for failure to pay child support or for domestic violence against the supported person or the child; and "[the] child support order was made or changed on or after October 8, 2015."

The Department opposed C.P.'s Request. The Department argued as follows: Because current section 4007.5 applies only to child support orders issued or modified on or after October 8, 2015, the current May 2016 order suspending support was the only order at issue; and since, under the May 2016 order, ongoing monthly child support was set at $ 0, there are no "account balances" (i.e., arrears) to adjust under the order.5

The family court heard oral argument in October 2017. The court granted C.P.'s Request and adjusted child support to $ 0 for the time of C.P.'s incarceration, resulting in no arrears for the time period from September 12, 2013, through March 31, 2016. At the hearing, the court orally explained that obligors like C.P. who were incarcerated at the time former section 4007.5 was repealed did not lose their "vested rights" by failing to seek relief prior to the repeal. On the following grounds, the court also ruled that current section 4007.5 contains an implied saving clause, extending the protections of former section 4007.5 : The "entire purpose" of the current legislation is "to continue protecting the people who are incarcerated from having arrears *7accrued against them while they are incarcerated and clearly don't have the ability to pay"; and the Legislature enacted current section 4007.5 as urgency legislation "to immediately get this relief back in place."

The Department timely appealed from the October 2017 order granting C.P.'s Request.6

II. DISCUSSION7

As we explain, because, by its express terms, current section 4007.5 does not apply to C.P.'s Request, the family court erred in granting relief. As we further explain, at the time of the repeal of former section 4007.5, C.P. did not have a vested right to the statutory relief he sought, and the Legislature did not include a saving clause when it enacted current section 4007.5. However, as we finally explain, because C.P.'s Request can be read to seek the adjustment in child support arrears under former

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Bluebook (online)
245 Cal. Rptr. 3d 748, 34 Cal. App. 5th 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cnty-of-san-diego-dept-of-child-support-servs-v-cp-calctapp5d-2019.