Commissioner of Soc. Serv. v. Ortega, No. Fa 97 0622835 S (Jul. 10, 2000)
This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 8233 (Commissioner of Soc. Serv. v. Ortega, No. Fa 97 0622835 S (Jul. 10, 2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The state commenced this action on February 7, 1997, alleging that Yolanda Ortega was legally liable pursuant to §§
The magistrate found that Annette Villegas, the defendant's minor daughter, had voluntarily moved out of her mother's home when Ms. Ortega attempted to exercise some control over the girl to prevent her from again becoming pregnant. The girl moved to the home of Ms. Robertson, the mother of the girl's boyfriend, and Ms. Robertson applied for and received benefits under the Aid for Families with Dependent Children program pursuant to an assignment of her support rights to the State of Connecticut. The magistrate found that Ms. Ortega had no obligation to pay support to Ms. Robertson, that Ms. Robertson could not, therefore, assign her right to receive support to the state, and that the state could not pursue Ms. Ortega for the amount.
The Commissioner appealed the magistrate's decision asserting that his decision was affected by an error of law, clearly erroneous, and arbitrary or capricious. The Commissioner contends that, despite the substantial evidence that had been provided, the magistrate found that there were no assignable support rights under §
The appeal was timely commenced, and this court has jurisdiction to hear it. Connecticut General Statutes §
The statute upon which the magistrate based his decision provides, in pertiment part:
Application for aid under the state supplemental CT Page 8235 program, medical assistance program, temporary family assistance program, and food stamps program, shall be made to the Commissioner of Social Services . . . Such application, in the case of temporary family assistance, shall be made by the supervising relative, his authorized representative . . . By such application, the applicant shall assign to the commissioner the right of Support, past, present, and future, due all persons seeking assistance and shall assist the commissioner in pursuing support obligations due from the absent parent.
Connecticut General Statutes §
The Commissioner relies on § 2515.35 of the State of Connecticut Department of Income Maintenance Uniform Policy Manual ("Policy Manual") to support her contention that the state was authorized to permit Ms. Villegas to reside with Ms. Robertson and to furnish support to Ms. Robertson. That section of the policy manual does not apply to situations similar to those presented here. Rather, it addresses whether a minor parent must live with an adult in order to be eligible to receive Aid to Families with Dependent Children assistance for his or her own child. Ms. Villegas would have been eligible for such support for her child, but her mother would not have had the obligation to contribute to that support. That obligation would have fallen to the child's father.
The magistrate erred in dismissing the petition because the child was not living with a "legally liable relative or caretaker." The state has an independent right to seek reimbursement for support in appropriate cases where public assistance is furnished to a child, even where that child is not residing with a "supervising relative." State of Connecticut(Betty Jennings v. Nancy Hairston, Doe. No. FA 98-626107,
The magistrate's decision is correct under §
The magistrate is within his authority to dismiss a petition for support where the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction. See. Sasso v.Aleshin,
This case represents one of those rare circumstances in which the court would be remiss not to commend the skilled and thorough research undertaken by both lawyers.
The decision of the magistrate is affirmed.
BY THE COURT, GRUENDEL, J.
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