Crabtree v. Crabtree

435 S.E.2d 883, 17 Va. App. 81
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 21, 1993
DocketRecord No. 0314-92-3
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 435 S.E.2d 883 (Crabtree v. Crabtree) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crabtree v. Crabtree, 435 S.E.2d 883, 17 Va. App. 81 (Va. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinions

[83]*83Opinion

COLEMAN, J.

Clara E. Crabtree (mother) appeals from the circuit court’s decree denying her motion for an increase in child support and modifying the child visitation schedule for Billy Jack Crabtree (father), her former husband. She contends that (1) the circuit court could not reinstate the case on its docket after it had transferred the matters of child support and custody to the juvenile and domestic relations district court, and (2) the circuit court erred by not specifying in writing, as required by Code § 20-108.1, why the amount of child support should continue to deviate from the presumptively correct amount according to the guidelines. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the decisions of the trial court.

The parties were divorced by an April 15, 1991, divorce decree entered by the Circuit Court of Tazewell County. The mother was granted custody of their two children and, based on a verbal agreement between the parents, the court awarded her $400 per month child support. The father was granted “reasonable,” as well as specified, child visitation rights. According to the mother, the support that the father presumptively would have been required to pay according to the guidelines at the time of the award and now, based on the parents’ combined gross income, is $514.70. The trial judge did not make a written finding as to the presumptive amount of child support according to the guidelines and did not explain in writing why the amount of child support ordered to be paid by the father should deviate from the guidelines. See Code § 20-108.1(B). The divorce decree also transferred “all matters . . . pertaining to child support, visitation rights [and] custody ... to the Juvenile and Domestic Relations [District] Court of appropriate jurisdiction, for enforcement or modification or revision thereof as the circumstances may require, as provided by [Code §] 20-79.” Neither party appealed that decree.

Five months after entry of the divorce decree, the Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court of Tazewell County, over the father’s objection, transferred the case to the Juvenile and Domestic Relations District Court of Chesterfield County, the jurisdiction where the mother and children resided. The mother filed a motion in the Chesterfield juvenile court for an increase in child support. Several days later, the father filed a motion in the Tazewell County Circuit Court, pursuant to Code § 20-121.1, to reinstate the case on its docket and to enforce his visitation rights. After a hearing, the Tazewell County Circuit Court reinstated the case on its docket “to fully and [84]*84completely define the visitation granted” to the father. Over the mother’s objection, a hearing was conducted on November 4, 1991, in the Tazewell County Circuit Court. The court considered the father’s motion to modify his visitation with the children and the mother’s motion filed in the matter in the Chesterfield juvenile court to increase child support. The circuit court judge denied the mother’s motion to increase child support and, on the father’s motion, modified the father’s child visitation schedule. In the decree denying the mother an increase in child support, the trial judge made no written findings as to the presumptive amount of child support, nor did he explain in writing why the amount of child support should continue to deviate from the presumptive amount under the guidelines.

I.

We first consider whether the circuit court had authority to reinstate the case on its docket and to entertain the parties’ motions to enforce visitation rights and to modify child support after having transferred “all matters ... pertaining to child support, visitation rights [and] custody of the minor children” to the juvenile and domestic relations district court pursuant to Code § 20-79(c). The mother contends that once the circuit court transferred those matters to the juvenile and domestic relations court, it divested itself of any continuing jurisdiction and that it could not thereafter entertain the motions to increase child support or enforce its visitation order, except by appeal as provided in Code § 20-79(c).

We hold that a “transfer” of “any other matters pertaining to support and maintenance . . . and custody” to the juvenile and domestic relations district court pursuant to Code § 20-79(c) conveys concurrent jurisdiction on the juvenile and domestic relations district court to hear those matters, but the transfer does not divest the circuit court of its continuing jurisdiction to consider those issues, should it exercise its discretion to do so. Accordingly, the circuit court had authority to reinstate the case on its docket and to consider the motions to modify child support and visitation.

The resolution of the question of what effect a “transfer” under Code § 29-79(c) has upon the jurisdiction of the circuit court to consider those “matters” depends upon the effect of several statutes which define the powers and jurisdictions of the two courts. Although this is a question which repeatedly confronts the circuit and juvenile and domestic relations district courts, we address the question for the first [85]*85time. The resolution of the question depends upon whether a “transfer” of “matters” under Code § 20-79(c) divests a court of record of its continuing jurisdiction as provided by Code § 20-108 to also address those issues “transferred to the juvenile and domestic relations district court.”

Code § 16.1-244 provides that circuit courts and juvenile and domestic relations district courts have concurrent jurisdiction over “custody, guardianship, visitation or support of children when such [an issue] is incidental to the determination of causes pending in such courts.” See Peple v. Peple, 5 Va. App. 414, 418, 364 S.E.2d 232, 235 (1988). Code § 20-79(c) provides in pertinent part:

After the entry of a decree of divorce a vinculo matrimonii the court may transfer to the juvenile and domestic relations district court any other matters pertaining to support and maintenance for the spouse, maintenance, support, care and custody of the child or children on motion by either party, and may so transfer such matters before the entry of such decree on motion joined in by both parties. In the transfer of any matters referred to herein, the court may, upon the motion of any party, or on its own motion, and for good cause shown, transfer any matters covered by said decree or decrees to any juvenile and domestic relations district court within the Commonwealth that constitutes a more appropriate forum. An appeal of an order by such juvenile and domestic relations district court which is to enforce or modify the decree in the divorce suit shall be as provided in § 16.1-296.

Nevertheless, Code § 20-121.1 authorizes a circuit court to reinstate a suit that has been stricken from the docket in order to grant complete relief. Code § 20-108 provides that a circuit court, after entry of a final decree of divorce, has continuing jurisdiction to change or modify its decree as to matters affecting custody, support, and visitation of minor children. Thus, although a final divorce decree had been entered, when the case was reinstated on the docket of the circuit court, the case was “pending” for consideration of those matters over which the circuit court had continuing jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
435 S.E.2d 883, 17 Va. App. 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crabtree-v-crabtree-vactapp-1993.