Duffus v. Duffus

72 P.3d 313, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 56, 2003 WL 21419029
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 2003
DocketS-10206
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 72 P.3d 313 (Duffus v. Duffus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duffus v. Duffus, 72 P.3d 313, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 56, 2003 WL 21419029 (Ala. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Juliann Duffus divorced Kenneth Duffus in 1990, receiving primary custody of the parties' two children. Nine years later, no support order having yet been entered, Juliann moved to establish Kenneth's child support obligation. She now appeals, contesting several aspects of the method used to calculate Kenneth's 1990 support obligation, as well as the superior court's refusal to increase Kenneth's support in later years to reflect his increased annual earnings. We hold that Juliann's failure to object to the trial court master's recommended support calculation for 1990 precludes review of support for that year except on one point reflecting plain error. We reverse the support determination for subsequent years, holding that, because no child support order had been entered when Juliann filed her 1999 motion, the rule against retroactively modifying support did not prevent the court from adjusting Kenneth's 1990 support obligation to reflect his increased earnings over the following years.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Juliann and Kenneth Duffus were married in 1978. Two children were born from their marriage-Elizabeth, born in January 1983, and Michelle, born in June 1987. In January 1989 the couple permanently separated.

Prior to their divoree trial, the parties reached an agreement regarding child custody, visitation, and division of the marital estate. Juliann received legal custody and primary physical custody of the children. With respect to child support, the agreement provided that "the child support obligation [should] be established pursuant to Civil Rule 90.8 and that a Civil Rule 90.8 affidavit [should] be completed and filed with the Court. The Court will then enter a separate order regarding the child support obligation." On August 7, 1990, the trial court granted the parents' request for divorce, incorporating their settlement agreement into its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law.

Over the following months, the parents exchanged correspondence concerning the Civil Rule 90.3 affidavit, but apparently never filed the affidavit. Consequently, the court never entered a child support order.

In May 1999, approximately nine years after the divorce, Juliann filed a motion to establish child support under the settlement agreement. The motion sought an award of back child support from the date of separation to the present. In February 2000 the superior court ordered that "[Juliann's] Motion to Establish Child Support shall be dealt with on a year-by-year basis in separate hearings for each year, or as the court otherwise directs."

In June 2000 Standing Master Andrew Brown heard evidence and argument concerning the calculation of child support for 1990, and in July issued a report calculating child support for that year. Based on his calculation of both parties' incomes for 1990 and the amount of time each party had physical custody of the children during that year, Master Brown "recommended that the court enter a child support order for 1990 as to [Kenneth] ... for $86.63 per month."

Master Brown further recommended that the court reconsider its decision to "hold[ ] subsequent hearings for each of the post-1990 years as to incomes and support obligations." Master Brown thought that it would be fair to leave his calculation of support for 1990 in effect until Juliann filed her motion to establish child support in 1999 because the parties were at fault for failing *316 to secure a timely support order after their divorcee. Further, he maintained, allowing yearly modifications "would go against Civil Rule 90.3(h)(2)'s prohibition against retroactive modifications of child support."

Juliann objected to Master Brown's report. Her objection focused solely on the master's recommendation that the amount of support calculated for 1990 continue in effect until May 6, 1999-the date Juliann filed her motion to establish child support. Juliann did not object to Master Brown's calculation of support for 1990.

In October 2000 the superior court approved the master's calculation of child support for 1990. With respect to the master's recommendation to leave the 1990 calculation in effect until 1999, the court initially ordered the parties to "mediate their dispute regarding calculation of child support for periods after 1990." When the parties were unable to agree on the issue, the court ordered each party to "file a brief indicating their position on the issue of whether the 1990 child support calculations should apply through 1999 and, if not, at what intervals caleulations should be done." Both parties filed briefs addressing this issue.

On April 16, 2001, the superior court ruled that "for the reasons set forth in Master Brown's July 17, 2000 report ... modification of the now existing child support order, which establishes support as of 1990, will not be allowed for any period prior to the time [Juliann] filed her motion to [elstablish [eJhild support on May 6, 1999."

Juliann appeals.

III. DISCUSSION

Juliann challenges both the superi- or court's caleulation of child support for 1990 and its order providing that, to avoid violating the rule against retroactive modification, this amount could not be modified for the period before Juliann's 1999 motion to establish child support. We usually review awards of child support for abuse of discretion. 1 But issues concerning the proper method of calculating child support present questions of law, which we review de novo. 2 We similarly review de novo the superior court's interpretation of civil rules. 3

A. Juliann's Failure To Object to the Master's Recommended Calculation of Kenneth's 1990 Child Support Obligation Precludes All But Plain-Error Review of the Court's Order Adopting that Calculation.

Juliann first challenges the superior court's calculation of Kenneth's child support obligation for 1990. In particular, she contends that the superior court erred in caleu-lating both parents' adjusted incomes for child support purposes.

But as Kenneth points out, although Ju-liann objected to the master's recommendation that the child support obligation should remain unchanged from 1990 until Juliann filed her motion to establish child support in 1999, she "did not object to any part of the Master's factual findings or his calculation of child support based on 1990 income." Kenneth urges this court to follow the lead of a majority of other courts and "adopt a rule requiring a party to raise objections [to the master's report] to the superior court in order to preserve them, as this rule promotes efficient use of judicial resources and promotes the proper development of a record as to whether the findings are clearly erroneous." Juliann responds that if this court adopts such a rule, we should do so only prospectively because she had no "specific notice that the failure to file objections would constitute a waiver of the right to raise on appeal issues not presented in the form of objections to the superior court."

Alaska Civil Rule 53(d)(2) governs the superior court's adoption of a master's report:

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Bluebook (online)
72 P.3d 313, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 56, 2003 WL 21419029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duffus-v-duffus-alaska-2003.