Csp v. Ddc

842 P.2d 528, 1992 Wyo. LEXIS 171, 1992 WL 347262
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 30, 1992
DocketC-91-10
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 842 P.2d 528 (Csp v. Ddc) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Csp v. Ddc, 842 P.2d 528, 1992 Wyo. LEXIS 171, 1992 WL 347262 (Wyo. 1992).

Opinion

CARDINE, Justice.

CSP appeals from an order of the trial court which denied her petition to modify her decree of divorce to give her custody of her minor children, FP and MJP. She specifically challenges the court’s refusal to declare the non-existence of a father-child relationship between her ex-husband, DDC, and MJP. The trial court found that CSP was barred by res judicata and collateral

estoppel from challenging the provision of a previously-stipulated modification establishing DDC’s paternity of MJP.

We affirm the order of the trial court. CSP states the issues in this way:
I. Whether the failure to comply with the Wyoming Parentage Statutes renders a determination of paternity void?
II. Whether an order of dismissal may be based on a void judgment?
III. Whether a party with “unclean hands” may invoke the doctrines of res judicata or collateral estoppel?

Appellee’s statement of the issues perhaps better identifies the issues to be considered as they relate to the particular facts and circumstances of this case:

I. Whether the stipulation agreement entered into by [CSP] and [DDC] and the resulting modification order entered by the District Court violate the Wyoming Parentage Act?
II. Whether the doctrines of res judi-cata, collateral estoppel, and judicial es-toppel operate to prevent appellant from further litigating the issue of paternity of [MJP]?
III. Whether appellee is barred from asserting the equitable theories of res judicata, collateral estoppel and judicial estoppel by the unclean hands doctrine?
IV. Whether the district court committed reversible error in dismissing appellant’s Motion to Modify Divorce Decree?

No transcription of the proceedings in this case was made; instead, the essential facts are presented for our review by means of a “Settled and Approved Statement of Evidence and Proceedings.” See W.R.A.P. 4.03. CSP is the mother of three children: NP, born May 8, 1984; FP, born September 20, 1985; and MJP, born (one month prematurely) on December 5, 1986. CSP married DDC, the appellee, on March 1, 1985. DDC is not the biological father of NP, who was born before the marriage. He is, however, the father of FP, who was born during the marriage.

*530 The parties were divorced on July 11, 1986. The divorce decree recited that one child, FP, had been born as the result of the marriage. The court awarded custody of FP to CSP. Approximately five months after the entry of the decree, MJP was born. Because MJP was born within 300 days (148 days to be exact) of the end of the marriage, DDC is presumed to be her natural father. W.S. 14-2-102(a)(i) (July 1986 Repl.).

CSP underwent some hard times after the divorce. She began receiving welfare in September 1986. By January 1988, she found herself and the children in an unhealthy living arrangement. She and her boyfriend were both using drugs, and her boyfriend was selling them. CSP arranged for her children to be taken care of by relatives: NP went to live with CSP’s father in Oklahoma, FP went to live with DDC, and MJP went to live with CSP’s mother, SG.

CSP was later convicted of using marijuana. She also failed to appear on a felony forgery charge in Nebraska. Apparently, these crises convinced her to try to fix her life situation. She returned to Wyoming, got off the drugs, and started to collect her children back together. She got NP and FP back, but her mother did not want MJP to return living with CSP because CSP was living in the home of DDC’s mother.

CSP’s mother, SG, sent a letter to CSP threatening to start an adoption of MJP. When DDC and his mother learned of this, DDC took CSP to Mr. Pickett, the attorney who had represented him in the divorce from CSP. Mr. Pickett advised CSP that if she and DDC would stipulate to DDC being MJP’s father, that might stop the adoption proceedings. CSP knew that DDC was not MJP’s natural father, but she agreed to sign an acknowledgement of paternity which named DDC as the father. CSP claims Mr. Pickett was made aware that DDC was not MJP’s father prior to the filing of the acknowledgement with the court. This acknowledgement, along with a verified petition to establish paternity and a stipulation to modify the divorce decree, was filed with the court on November 10, 1988. That same date, the court signed an order adopting the stipulation to modify the divorce decree, which named MJP as a child of the marriage and granted physical custody of both children to DDC.

CSP then retrieved MJP from SG. SG went ahead with the adoption proceedings for MJP, but abandoned them after CSP was granted temporary custody of MJP at a temporary custody hearing in the adoption proceeding. CSP thought that, since she had won at the adoption proceedings, the modification was no longer necessary and would not be filed.

After reuniting all of CSP’s children, CSP and DDC lived together briefly in the same house. However, they were soon driven apart by disagreements about the treatment of MJP, and by DDC’s drinking. CSP became concerned when DDC, who had legal custody of MJP and FP because of the modification proceedings, said he might try to take them away from her. CSP claims this is the first notice she had that the modification had been filed with the court and custody was now with DDC. She shifted her alliance from DDC back to SG. SG took CSP to her attorney, Mr. Finn, who she had employed in the abandoned adoption proceeding.

Mr. Finn advised CSP that she had to return the children to DDC, and that her only means of keeping MJP would be to consent to adoption of MJP by SG. CSP signed the consent to adoption. However, she soon despaired of any action being taken by that route. Instead, she hired her trial counsel, Mr. Hjelmstad, to try to “straighten out the mess.” On March 15, 1990, CSP filed a motion to modify the divorce decree and previous modification alleging that her previous consent to modification declaring DDC the father and granting him custody had been obtained by duress and fraud.

Meanwhile, the State of Wyoming had filed a petition to establish paternity and support for MJP on November 15, 1989. With the petition, CSP filed an affidavit naming GM as the father of MJP and stating that she had had a sexual relationship with GM during her marriage to DDC. *531 GM filed an answer to the petition stating that he was not the father of MJP. The State of Wyoming filed a motion to dismiss the petition when it learned that DDC had been declared the father in the earlier divorce modification.

Mr. Hjelmstad filed an objection to the State’s motion to dismiss, contending that CSP’s signature on the stipulation to modify the divorce decree had been obtained by fraud, duress and undue influence. On CSP’s motion, the trial court consolidated the divorce and paternity cases, and ordered that paternity testing be performed. The tests showed that there was a 99.32% probability that GM was the father of MJP.

After a hearing and written submission of closing arguments, the trial court entered a decision letter on July 23, 1991.

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Bluebook (online)
842 P.2d 528, 1992 Wyo. LEXIS 171, 1992 WL 347262, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/csp-v-ddc-wyo-1992.