Foster v. Foster

655 S.E.2d 172, 221 W. Va. 426, 2007 W. Va. LEXIS 104
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 20, 2007
Docket33301
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 655 S.E.2d 172 (Foster v. Foster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Foster v. Foster, 655 S.E.2d 172, 221 W. Va. 426, 2007 W. Va. LEXIS 104 (W. Va. 2007).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This action is before this Court upon the appeal of Sandra Lynn Lilly [hereinafter “Appellant”] from the Circuit Court of Raleigh County’s May 22, 2006, order affirming the Family Court of Raleigh County’s December 9, 2005, order granting James Tyrone Foster’s [hereinafter “Appellee”] Petition for Recovery of Overpayment of Child Support. The Appellant contends that the circuit court erred in holding that the Appel-lee’s Petition for Recovery of Overpayment of Child Support was not barred by the statute of limitations, when it was filed more than three years after the Appellee became aware of his right to petition for recovery of the alleged overpayment. This Court has before it the petition for appeal, all matters of record and the briefs and argument of counsel. Upon the applicable de novo standard of review and for the reasons expressed below, the May 22, 2006, order of the Circuit Court of Raleigh County is reversed and remanded with directions to dismiss Appel-lee’s Petition for Recovery of Overpayment of Child Support.

I.

Factual and Procedural History

The child support obligation at issue in this matter arose, initially, from a Final Order of Divorce that was entered in the Circuit Court of Raleigh County, West Virginia on December 23, 1982, terminating the parties’ marriage. Under the terms of the final order, Appellee was ordered to pay child support to Appellant for the benefit of the parties’ son in the monthly amount of two hundred fifty dollar's ($250.00). This child support obligation continued in effect, subject to modification of the amount of the support obligation, until it was terminated on June 1, 1997, based upon the child’s emancipation.

Between the time of the parties’ divorce and the time that their child was emancipated in 1997, Appellee failed to make a number of monthly child support payments. Decre-tal judgments accrued to the Appellant, but no action was taken upon some of those judgments until 1997, when Appellant and the West Virginia Bureau of Child Support Enforcement [hereinafter “BCSE”] sought to collect the unpaid child suppoi't in response to Appellee’s petition to have his support obligation terminated. 1

During the family court proceedings which began in 1997, the BCSE continued to withhold money from Appellee’s income toward the collection of unpaid child support. On September 28, 1998, Appellee filed a Memorandum of Law arguing that Appellant was barred from collecting on those decretal judgments which were more than ten (10) years old, due to Appellant’s failure to timely pursue such decretal judgments for unpaid child support. After substantial litigation, including two separate circuit court appeals, the circuit court concluded, by an order of April 7, 2000, that attempts to collect more than thirty thousand dollars ($30,000) in child support obligations due and owing prior to April 22, 1987, were barred by the statute of limitations. 2 In that order, the circuit court fixed the amount of child support arrearages that were owed by and which could be collected from Appellee at two-thousand twenty-seven dollars and sixteen cents ($2,027.16) and granted Appellant a decretal judgment against Appellee for unpaid medical expenses incurred for the benefit of the parties’ child in the amount of four thousand four hundred fifteen dollars and seventy-eight cents ($4,415.78), less credit for all payments or money received from the Appellee since January 31,1999. The circuit court directed the BCSE to compile an accounting to reflect Appellee’s payment history between the date *429 and time of entry of the Order Establishing Child Support Arrearages to determine the status of the parties’ child support account with the BCSE.

The BCSE conducted an accounting on April 18, 2000, which showed that the Appel-lee had paid to the Appellant, through income withholdings, more child support than she was legally entitled to collect. A copy of this accounting was mailed to the parties on April 25, 2000. Appellee admitted, during the proceedings below, that he was aware of the overpayment no later than June 2000, and that he had called the BCSE regarding the same. Appellee, however, waited until September 29, 2003, more than three years later, to file a petition seeking to collect the overpayment.

In response to Appellee’s Petition for Recovery of Overpayment of Child Support, Appellant asserted below 3 that any recovery was barred by the statute of limitations because Appellee had waited for more than three years after his right to collect the overpayment had accrued before filing his petition. By order of April 8, 2005, the Raleigh County Family Court held that Ap-pellee’s petition was time barred. On May 9, 2005, Appellee appealed this order to the Circuit Court of Raleigh County.

By order of July 27, 2005, the Circuit Court of Raleigh County reversed the family court ruling. The circuit court reasoned that the filing of the Petition for Modification and the relief granted by order of April 7, 2000, was sufficient to toll the running of the statute of limitations against Appellee. The circuit court found that the Appellee’s Petition for Recovery of Overpayment of Child Support, filed in September 2003, related back to the Appellee’s original Petition for Modification filed in March of 1997, and was an effort to secure the relief that was granted by the order of April 7, 2000. The circuit court also held that the April 7, 2000, order directed that an audit be conducted, which was completed, but that no order was entered to accept or reject the result of the audit.

Based on its reasoning, the circuit court concluded that the statute of limitations that might otherwise apply to Appellee’s petition was indefinitely tolled until he filed the Petition for Recovery of Overpayment of Child Support in September 2003, and that Appel-lee had done that which was necessary to assert his claim for the repayment of an arrearage. The circuit court remanded the matter for further proceedings to review and evaluate the audit, to determine whether Ap-pellee had overpaid child support, and if so, to calculate the arrearage and enter such orders as were necessary.

On remand, the Family Court of Raleigh County concluded, by order of December 9, 2005, that Appellee had overpaid child support in the amount of three thousand four hundred sixty-six dollars and sixty-five cents ($3,466.65), and entered judgment against Appellant and the BCSE in that amount. The family court went on to hold that Appel-lee could collect this payment from either Appellant or from the BCSE, but that no such collection could be made until the parties had an opportunity to exhaust their opportunities for appeal. The family court also denied Appellee’s request for attorney’s fees and litigation expenses and his request that Appellant be required to post an appeal bond.

On January 6, 2006, Appellee filed a second Petition for Appeal to the circuit court, alleging that the family court erred by failing to grant his request for attorney fees, and by failing to award him pre-judgment interest on the overpayment.

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655 S.E.2d 172, 221 W. Va. 426, 2007 W. Va. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/foster-v-foster-wva-2007.