Opinion
REGAN, Acting P. J.
Plaintiff County of El Dorado (County) appeals from a judgment dismissing its action against defendant Estelle Louise Spence. County’s action sought reimbursement for public assistance paid to defendant and an order for continuing child support from defendant. Defendant’s demurrer was sustained without leave to amend.
On appeal from the ensuing judgment of dismissal, County contends the trial court erred in dismissing the action. It urges a county is entitled to seek reimbursement from a noncustodial mother for amounts paid in aid to families with dependent children (AFDC) despite an outstanding support award against the father in a different county. Further, County contends the
existing support order against the father under the Family Law Act does not bar a subsequent child support order against the mother. We agree with both contentions and reverse the judgment.
Facts
For purposes of the instant appeal, defendant’s demurrer admits the truthfulness of the properly pleaded factual allegations of the complaint.
(White
v.
Davis
(1975) 13 Cal.3d 757, 765 [120 Cal.Rptr. 94, 533 P.2d 222].) In addition, the trial court was permitted to consider any matters of which the court was required to or could take judicial notice. (Code Civ. Proc., § 430.30, subd. (a).) Accordingly, the record discloses the following facts:
Defendant and her husband Thomas L. Hayne, the father of plaintiff William Thomas Hayne (the minor), received an interlocutory judgment of dissolution from the San Mateo County Superior Court in 1972. Pursuant to that dissolution, defendant was awarded physical custody of the couple’s two minor children and the father was ordered to pay $100 per month child support for each child.
From April to September 1980 and June 1982 to June 1983, County paid the sum of $4,523 in public assistance for the support of the minor. At the time of the complaint, County was continuing to pay $248 per month in public assistance to support the minor, who was living separate and apart from defendant. At all times, defendant had the financial ability to pay a reasonable amount for the support of the minor. Based on these facts, County sought reimbursement from defendant for all amounts paid to support the child, and further sought a continuing support award of $248 per month, which defendant would be obligated to pay the minor through County.
Discussion
“The rule is, of course, that ‘a general demurrer should not be sustained if the pleading, liberally construed, states a cause of action on any theory.’ [Citation.]”
(Brousseau
v.
Jarrett
(1977) 73 Cal.App.3d 864, 870-871 [141 Cal.Rptr. 200].) County’s complaint, while framed as a single cause of action, sought two distinct forms of relief: reimbursement for aid already paid, and an order for ongoing support from defendant. Defendant demurred to the entire complaint on the ground the relief sought was precluded by the existing Family Law Act judgment giving defendant custody of the minor and ordering the father to pay support. In support of the demurrer, defendant cited
County of Los Angeles
v.
Ferguson
(1979) 94 Cal.App.3d 549 [156 Cal.Rptr. 565], and appended a certified copy of the judgment of dissolution from San Mateo County. The trial court
apparently found the argument persuasive, as it ruled that the family law court in San Mateo had original and continuing jurisdiction over the issue of support. The trial court reasoned that an independent proceeding in El Dorado County could only introduce confusion and engender conflicting orders. It therefore found County’s remedy was to intervene in the San Mateo County proceedings and it sustained the demurrer without leave to amend. However, as we discuss
infra,
the trial court improperly relied on dicta in
Ferguson
to bar County from seeking reimbursement and a new support order.
Ferguson
does not control this case. Consequently, since the County’s complaint stated a cause of action for reimbursement and support, the demurrer should have been overruled.
In
County of Los Angeles
v.
Ferguson, supra,
94 Cal.App.3d 549, the county brought a civil action against a father pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 11350.1 to collect ongoing child support.
The Court of Appeal upheld a judgment on the pleadings where the county’s pleading was plainly defective. However, the Second District Court went further and held a county could not enter a support award against a father under the Welfare and Institutions Code where there was a preexisting support award from a different county against the same father based on the Family Law Act. In so holding, the
Ferguson
court construed the provisions of the Welfare and Institutions Code which permit a court to enter and enforce a support award against a noncustodial parent. (§§ 11350, 11350.1.)
The
Ferguson
court focused on that portion of section 11350.1 which permits the family law court to make “an independent determination on the issue of support which shall
supersede the order made pursuant to this
section.” (Italics added.) Considering this provision in conjunction with section 11484, which allows a county to intervene in pending family law proceedings,
the court held that where there is an order for support in a Family Law Act proceeding an independent support order under the Welfare and Institutions Code is superfluous.
(Ferguson, supra,
94 Cal.App.3d at p. 559.) The
Ferguson
court concluded the appropriate action in such a case is an application for an order to show cause in the family law proceedings.
(Id.,
at p. 560.) Based on this reasoning, the trial court in the instant case relegated the county to seeking relief in the San Mateo County proceedings.
A.
The Reimbursement Issue
In discussing the court’s reasoning, we address first the reimbursement issue. In
Ferguson,
the court dealt only with the question of different courts entering independent support orders for the same purpose. In this case, County is seeking to recover welfare funds that have already been distributed. County alleges that it paid public assistance to support the minor at a time when defendant was living separate and apart from the minor. The obligation to reimburse County for such payments arises from section 11350, subdivision (b), which states in part: “In any case of separation ... of a parent . . . from a child . . . which results in aid under the chapter being granted to such family, the noncustodial parent . . . shall be obligated to the County for an amount equal to: [11] . . . (b) The amount of aid paid to the family during such period of separation . . . .”
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Opinion
REGAN, Acting P. J.
Plaintiff County of El Dorado (County) appeals from a judgment dismissing its action against defendant Estelle Louise Spence. County’s action sought reimbursement for public assistance paid to defendant and an order for continuing child support from defendant. Defendant’s demurrer was sustained without leave to amend.
On appeal from the ensuing judgment of dismissal, County contends the trial court erred in dismissing the action. It urges a county is entitled to seek reimbursement from a noncustodial mother for amounts paid in aid to families with dependent children (AFDC) despite an outstanding support award against the father in a different county. Further, County contends the
existing support order against the father under the Family Law Act does not bar a subsequent child support order against the mother. We agree with both contentions and reverse the judgment.
Facts
For purposes of the instant appeal, defendant’s demurrer admits the truthfulness of the properly pleaded factual allegations of the complaint.
(White
v.
Davis
(1975) 13 Cal.3d 757, 765 [120 Cal.Rptr. 94, 533 P.2d 222].) In addition, the trial court was permitted to consider any matters of which the court was required to or could take judicial notice. (Code Civ. Proc., § 430.30, subd. (a).) Accordingly, the record discloses the following facts:
Defendant and her husband Thomas L. Hayne, the father of plaintiff William Thomas Hayne (the minor), received an interlocutory judgment of dissolution from the San Mateo County Superior Court in 1972. Pursuant to that dissolution, defendant was awarded physical custody of the couple’s two minor children and the father was ordered to pay $100 per month child support for each child.
From April to September 1980 and June 1982 to June 1983, County paid the sum of $4,523 in public assistance for the support of the minor. At the time of the complaint, County was continuing to pay $248 per month in public assistance to support the minor, who was living separate and apart from defendant. At all times, defendant had the financial ability to pay a reasonable amount for the support of the minor. Based on these facts, County sought reimbursement from defendant for all amounts paid to support the child, and further sought a continuing support award of $248 per month, which defendant would be obligated to pay the minor through County.
Discussion
“The rule is, of course, that ‘a general demurrer should not be sustained if the pleading, liberally construed, states a cause of action on any theory.’ [Citation.]”
(Brousseau
v.
Jarrett
(1977) 73 Cal.App.3d 864, 870-871 [141 Cal.Rptr. 200].) County’s complaint, while framed as a single cause of action, sought two distinct forms of relief: reimbursement for aid already paid, and an order for ongoing support from defendant. Defendant demurred to the entire complaint on the ground the relief sought was precluded by the existing Family Law Act judgment giving defendant custody of the minor and ordering the father to pay support. In support of the demurrer, defendant cited
County of Los Angeles
v.
Ferguson
(1979) 94 Cal.App.3d 549 [156 Cal.Rptr. 565], and appended a certified copy of the judgment of dissolution from San Mateo County. The trial court
apparently found the argument persuasive, as it ruled that the family law court in San Mateo had original and continuing jurisdiction over the issue of support. The trial court reasoned that an independent proceeding in El Dorado County could only introduce confusion and engender conflicting orders. It therefore found County’s remedy was to intervene in the San Mateo County proceedings and it sustained the demurrer without leave to amend. However, as we discuss
infra,
the trial court improperly relied on dicta in
Ferguson
to bar County from seeking reimbursement and a new support order.
Ferguson
does not control this case. Consequently, since the County’s complaint stated a cause of action for reimbursement and support, the demurrer should have been overruled.
In
County of Los Angeles
v.
Ferguson, supra,
94 Cal.App.3d 549, the county brought a civil action against a father pursuant to Welfare and Institutions Code section 11350.1 to collect ongoing child support.
The Court of Appeal upheld a judgment on the pleadings where the county’s pleading was plainly defective. However, the Second District Court went further and held a county could not enter a support award against a father under the Welfare and Institutions Code where there was a preexisting support award from a different county against the same father based on the Family Law Act. In so holding, the
Ferguson
court construed the provisions of the Welfare and Institutions Code which permit a court to enter and enforce a support award against a noncustodial parent. (§§ 11350, 11350.1.)
The
Ferguson
court focused on that portion of section 11350.1 which permits the family law court to make “an independent determination on the issue of support which shall
supersede the order made pursuant to this
section.” (Italics added.) Considering this provision in conjunction with section 11484, which allows a county to intervene in pending family law proceedings,
the court held that where there is an order for support in a Family Law Act proceeding an independent support order under the Welfare and Institutions Code is superfluous.
(Ferguson, supra,
94 Cal.App.3d at p. 559.) The
Ferguson
court concluded the appropriate action in such a case is an application for an order to show cause in the family law proceedings.
(Id.,
at p. 560.) Based on this reasoning, the trial court in the instant case relegated the county to seeking relief in the San Mateo County proceedings.
A.
The Reimbursement Issue
In discussing the court’s reasoning, we address first the reimbursement issue. In
Ferguson,
the court dealt only with the question of different courts entering independent support orders for the same purpose. In this case, County is seeking to recover welfare funds that have already been distributed. County alleges that it paid public assistance to support the minor at a time when defendant was living separate and apart from the minor. The obligation to reimburse County for such payments arises from section 11350, subdivision (b), which states in part: “In any case of separation ... of a parent . . . from a child . . . which results in aid under the chapter being granted to such family, the noncustodial parent . . . shall be obligated to the County for an amount equal to: [11] . . . (b) The amount of aid paid to the family during such period of separation . . . .”
This reimbursement obligation is separate and independent from any support award in Family Law Act proceedings. (Cf. §§ 11350, subd. (a); 11350.1.) It is only an independent determination by a family law court
“
on the issue of support
which shall supersede the order made pursuant to this section.” (§ 11350.1, italics added.) (As we discuss
infra,
it is only a
subsequent
independent determination which shall supersede the support order entered under the Welfare and Institutions Code.) The propriety of an independent action for reimbursement is affirmed in
County of Ventura
v.
George
(1983) 149 Cal.App.3d 1012 [197 Cal.Rptr. 245].
George
is a case strikingly similar on the facts to the case at bar. There the mother and father were divorced in Los Angeles County in 1974. The mother was awarded legal custody of their child and the father ordered to pay $50 per month in child support. Thereafter, the mother received AFDC from the County of Ventura at a time when the minor resided principally with the father. The county sought reimbursement pursuant to sections 11350 and 11350.1 for the AFDC funds retained by the mother during the time her child lived outside her home. Judgment was entered for the county.
(Id.,
at pp. 1013-1014.) The mother appealed, contending her designation as the custodial parent in the divorce decree shielded her from an action pursuant to section 11350 because that section applies only to the
“noncustodial
parents.”
(Id.,
at p. 1014.) The court rejected her argument. It reasoned that both the father and the mother have independent obligations to support their minor children.
This obligation for actual financial support could not be avoided by the mere technical form of a dissolution decree.
(Id.,
at pp. 1015-1016.)
The
George
court distinguished
Ferguson
on two grounds. It first noted
Ferguson
involved a request for ongoing support while reimbursement was at issue in
George.
Further,
George
noted the
Ferguson
court did not consider the meaning of a “noncustodial” parent as used in section 11350. The
George
court concluded “in the context of this section of the Welfare and Institutions Code a person’s status as a custodial parent is directly related to one’s
actual possession and physical custody of the dependent child.
”
(Id.,
at p. 1018; italics added.) Since the child in
George
was not residing with the mother at the time of the AFDC payments, she was a “noncustodial” parent for purposes of the reimbursement statute, regardless of the terms of the dissolution decree.
(Ibid.)
It is clear that
George
is on all fours with the present case insofar as County’s entitlement to reimbursement is concerned. The question of reimbursement from a noncustodial parent under section 11350, subdivision (b) is separate from the issue of support under section 11350.1. Where reim
bursement is concerned, defendant’s previously established support obligation is irrelevant. Reimbursement is premised on the parents’ statutory duty to support their children, which is independent of any Family Law Act order. (Civ. Code, § 196.) In fact, the family law court would be unable to award County reimbursement in the dissolution proceedings because the interlocutory decree did not order defendant to make child support payments and could not be modified retroactively.
(In re Marriage of Acosta
(1977) 67 Cal.App.3d 899, 902 [137 Cal.Rptr. 33];
Sanford
v.
Sanford
(1969) 273 Cal.App.2d 535, 537 [78 Cal.Rptr. 144].) Thus, County’s only avenue for recovery of aid already dispersed was section 11350, subdivision (b). The only prerequisite to reimbursement under that section is a separation of the parent or parents from a child which results in aid being granted to the family under the code. Such a reimbursement award does not contravene a support order against a noncustodial parent because it involves past payments unrelated to the support order.
(County of Ventura
v.
George, supra,
149 Cal.App.3d at p. 1017.)
County’s complaint in this case alleged public assistance had been paid to support the minor as a result of the separation of defendant from the minor at a time when defendant had a duty to support him. A cause of action was adequately stated for reimbursement of such assistance pursuant to section 11350, subdivision (b).
(George, supra,
149 Cal.App.3d 1012.) Accordingly, the trial court erred in sustaining defendant’s demurrer without leave to amend.
B.
The Ongoing Support Order Issue
We next turn to County’s contention the trial court erred in dismissing the action for continuing child support. County contends
County of Los Angeles
v.
Ferguson, supra,
94 Cal.App.3d 549, is factually inapposite because it involved an existing support award against
the father,
while in this case the County is seeking an award against the
mother.
While County’s point is correct, a more compelling argument is found directly in the language of section 11350.1. That section does not, as
Ferguson
suggests, deprive a county of standing to pursue a support order for a minor merely because there is a previous, outstanding Family Law Act support order.
A portion of section 11350.1 reads: “Nothing herein contained shall be construed to prevent the parties from bringing an independent action under the Family Law Act or otherwise, and litigating the issue of support. In such event, the court in such proceedings shall make an
independent determination
on the issue of support which shall
supersede
the order made pursuant to this section.” (Italics added.) As we noted earlier, the
Ferguson
court interpreted the quoted language to mean, where there exists an order
for child support issued by a family law court, that order renders any independent action by the district attorney “superfluous.”
(Ferguson, supra,
94 Cal.App.3d at p. 559.) First, we note that determination was gratuitous and not essential to the determination of that case; the
Ferguson
court held the judgment on the pleadings was proper where the pleadings were plainly defective.
(Id.,
at p. 558.) More importantly, we believe the gratuitous holding was wrong. Consequently, we reject the
Ferguson
court’s conclusion concerning the county’s lack of standing to initiate a proceeding when there is an existing support order.
Secondly, in spite of the
Ferguson
analysis of the word “supersede” (94 Cal.App.3d at p. 559), the language of section 11350.1 contemplates a Family Law Act support order which
postdates
the order made under the Welfare and Institutions Code. Indeed, the section permits a court to
make
an independent determination which shall supersede the order
made
under section 11350.1. This language implies the family law court makes its order
subsequent
to the one
made
under section 11350.1. Further, it permits the court to make an
independent
determination, clearly implying such determination is made
subsequent
to the one already made under section 11350.1. Consequently, we hold the pertinent language interpreted by
Ferguson
compels the opposite conclusion; namely, it is only a Family Law Act support order made
subsequent
to an order made pursuant to section 11350.1 which supersedes the 11350.1 order. The language of the section does not suggest that the district attorney is precluded from seeking the order for support if there is a prior family law court support order.
The purpose of the language whereby the subsequent independent determination of support supersedes an earlier order made under section 11350.1 is clear. The language prevents conflicting determinations regarding support made by superior courts in different counties. (See
Ferguson, supra,
94 Cal.App.3d at p. 560.) Nothing in our decision here imperils that policy. A district attorney may bring an action under section 11350.1 for support of a child in that county only when the support is either not forthcoming from a noncustodial parent under a previous support order or not otherwise provided for.
In such cases, any support established thereby will undoubt
edly be the only support for the child. Once such an order is made, the section permits the parties to pursue an independent action in order to litigate the issue of support under the Family Law Act
or otherwise,
which may result in an order which properly supersedes the order made under section 11350.1. In these cases, there is no danger of conflicting support orders from different superior courts.
County’s argument in the instant case is also well taken. Defendant is the once custodial, now noncustodial parent. The San Mateo County Superior Court support order did not order defendant (who was to take custody of the minor) to pay child support, but ordered the father to pay such support. Defendant argues the order did in fact order her to support the minor, and thus, she was already the subject of the support order. She relies on our decision in
In re Marriage of Rasmussen
(1984) 155 Cal.App.3d 805 [202 Cal.Rptr. 343], where we held an interlocutory decree of dissolution which awarded custody to the mother and ordered the father to pay child support was an order directed at the mother as well as the father.
In
Rasmussen,
we said: “It was unnecessary for the trial court, at the time of the interlocutory judgment, to enter a specific order that wife pay child support as her obligation to support [the minor] was met by her care for him
while he was in her custody.
Wife’s support obligations under the original interlocutory judgment were perfectly clear: she was given custody of the minor children and hence the duty of their care and maintenance. Under California law, both the custodial and the noncustodial parent have ‘an equal responsibility to support and educate their child.’ ...” (Italics added;
Rasmussen, supra,
155 Cal.App.3d at p. 812, citing Civ. Code, § 196.)
Rasmussen
is inapposite to the instant case. In this case, defendant was living separate and apart from the minor during the pertinent periods. Unlike Rasmussen, this defendant did not meet her obligation to support the minor when the minor was not in her custody. The earlier Family Law Act did not require defendant to pay a cash support award for the minor child in the event she became a noncustodial parent. County is entitled to pursue such a support order under section 11350.1 on behalf of the child. There is obviously no danger of conflicting determinations of support in different superior courts, because in this case
no previous support order
has ever been entered against defendant. Even if there were such an order, our reading of Welfare and Institutions Code section 11350.1 permits County to pursue an action for support on behalf of the child. If the parties are dissatisfied with the order resulting from such an action, they are entitled to litigate the matter independently, and any subsequent order on the issue of support supersedes the order made pursuant to section 11350.1. As County properly
pled a cause of action for both ongoing child support from defendant as well as for reimbursement, it was error for the trial court to sustain defendant’s demurrer. The error requires reversal of the judgment dismissing County’s properly framed action.
The judgment is reversed.
Evans, J., and Keeley, J.,
concurred.