Devan Aranga Ramanujam v. Anusha Aiyaloo Kannan

CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedAugust 7, 2025
Docket24-P-658
StatusPublished

This text of Devan Aranga Ramanujam v. Anusha Aiyaloo Kannan (Devan Aranga Ramanujam v. Anusha Aiyaloo Kannan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Devan Aranga Ramanujam v. Anusha Aiyaloo Kannan, (Mass. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

APPEALS COURT

DEVAN ARANGA RAMANUJAM vs. ANUSHA AIYALOO KANNAN

Docket: 24-P-658
Dates: May 14, 2025 – August 7, 2025
Present: Sacks, Englander, & Walsh, JJ.
County: Essex
Keywords: Divorce and Separation, Appeal, Child support, Judgment, Jurisdiction. Probate Court, Divorce, Jurisdiction. Jurisdiction, Child support, Divorce proceedings, Probate Court. Uniform Interstate Family Support Act. Judicial Estoppel.
 Complaint for divorce filed in the Essex Division of the Probate and Family Court Department on March 16, 2018.

      The case was heard by Elizabeth Teixeira, J.

Matthew P. Barach (Francesca M. Blazina also present) for the husband.

Jennifer M. Lamanna for the wife.

ENGLANDER, J.  In this appeal from a judgment of divorce nisi, the husband's principal complaint is that the judgment's award of child support must be reversed because the Probate and Family Court allegedly lacked subject matter jurisdiction over that particular issue.  The husband argues that the wife initially sought child support in New York, where she and the children reside, and accordingly that under G. L. c. 209D, § 2-204 (§ 2-204), applicable to simultaneous child support proceedings, the Massachusetts court lacked "jurisdiction."

      Applying § 2-204 in this case, however, we conclude that the Massachusetts judge properly exercised jurisdiction over the child support issue.  Most fundamentally, this is because the husband's first-in-time complaint for divorce was filed in Massachusetts, where the husband resides and the family resided together until 2017; that complaint established subject matter jurisdiction in Massachusetts over child support issues, and no subsequent actions of the wife had the effect of shifting jurisdiction to New York under § 2-204.  We note, in addition, our skepticism that the husband can raise this § 2-204 issue for the first time on appeal (as purportedly involving "subject matter jurisdiction") -- particularly where the husband succeeded in having competing child support proceedings in New York dismissed, after arguing that the New York courts lacked personal jurisdiction over him.

      The husband challenges two other provisions in the judgment.  These two provisions required the husband to make additional payments to the wife -- in numbered paragraph 3 (paragraph 3), based on a percentage of the husband's potential future income from bonuses, and in numbered paragraph 4 (paragraph 4), based on a percentage of future income from the husband's business ventures.  Notably, the wife agrees that the provision in paragraph 4 of the judgment regarding payments based upon the husband's business ventures must be vacated, as do we.  For the reasons discussed below, the judgment is otherwise affirmed.

      Background.  The husband and the wife married in 2002, and last lived together, in Massachusetts, in July of 2017.  They have two children, born in 2007 and 2012.  In 2017, the wife and the children went to live in New York.  The husband filed this Massachusetts divorce case in March 2018.

      As to child support, the history is a bit convoluted.  The wife filed the first express request for an order of child support in a counterclaim in this Massachusetts divorce case, on April 1, 2019.  Shortly thereafter, on April 22, 2019, the wife filed a petition for child support in New York, and on June 24, 2019, the wife dismissed her Massachusetts request for child support.  Although the husband filed for divorce in 2018, it appears that the husband's first specific request to adjudicate child support in Massachusetts was a motion for a temporary order as to child support, filed on or about June 27, 2019.

      Subsequently, in August of 2019 the husband filed a motion to amend his divorce complaint to seek "court ordered . . . child support," as well as court-ordered custody and parenting time.  The wife opposed the motion, citing G. L. c. 209D, § 2-204, among other authority.  In September of 2019, the wife moved to have the Massachusetts judge decline to exercise jurisdiction over all issues as to the children -- custody, parenting time, and child support -- in favor of the courts in New York, where the children reside.  The wife specifically argued that as a result of § 2-204 the Massachusetts courts could not exercise jurisdiction over child support; the husband opposed the wife's motion.  In November of 2019, a Massachusetts judge issued an order declining jurisdiction over the issues of custody and parenting time; as to child support, however, the court retained jurisdiction.

      By November of 2019, the wife had filed two requests for child support in New York, including her original April 2019 petition, and a subsequent petition filed in October 2019.  Following the November 8, 2019 order of the Massachusetts judge retaining jurisdiction over child support, on November 18, 2019 the New York court dismissed the wife's April 2019 child support petition.  Evidently, however, another of the wife's child support petitions remained pending in New York.  Thereafter, the husband filed a motion to dismiss the remaining New York child support petition on the ground, among others, that the New York courts lacked personal jurisdiction over him.  Thus, a New York filing by the husband in August of 2020 averred and argued that Massachusetts "certainly has jurisdiction to address the issue of child support," that the husband "does not consent to New York jurisdiction over child support," and that "New York lacks jurisdiction over the [husband]."  In September of 2020, the New York court dismissed the wife's extant petition for child support "due to lack of jurisdiction," noting that "the Essex Probate [and] Family Court . . . has continued to have jurisdiction over support issues." 

      The divorce trial occurred in Massachusetts on January 4, 2022.  At that time there was no pending proceeding for child support in New York, as the remaining New York child support petition had been dismissed in September of 2020.  In the January 2024 divorce judgment, the judge (1) awarded the wife child support of $540 per week, beginning January 4, 2022; (2) ordered payment by the husband of child support arrears of $74,431; (3) ordered the husband to pay "twenty-three percent of any gross bonus in the future as additional child support"; and (4) ordered the husband to pay to the wife "twenty-three percent of any gross receipts from [his consulting company] or any other business venture."  This appeal followed.

      Discussion.  Jurisdiction under G. L. c. 209D, § 2-204.

The husband argues that pursuant to § 2-204, the judge lacked "subject matter jurisdiction" to award child support.  Notably, the husband never made this argument in the trial court -- either at trial, or in a motion for relief from judgment under Mass. R. Dom. Rel. P. 60.  In fact, the husband took the contrary position in the Massachusetts court.  The husband points out, however, that the court's subject matter jurisdiction may be challenged at any time.  See Commonwealth v. Nick N., 486 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
Devan Aranga Ramanujam v. Anusha Aiyaloo Kannan, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/devan-aranga-ramanujam-v-anusha-aiyaloo-kannan-massappct-2025.