Fowler v. State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Services Division

168 P.3d 870, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 129, 2007 WL 2965783
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 12, 2007
DocketS-12314
StatusPublished

This text of 168 P.3d 870 (Fowler v. State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Services Division) 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
Fowler v. State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Services Division, 168 P.3d 870, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 129, 2007 WL 2965783 (Ala. 2007).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The Idaho Department of Health and Welfare served David Fowler with notice of a paternity suit, Fowler filed an answer without a filing fee in the Idaho court, and the court entered a default judgment against him for failure to pay the fee. Fowler received notice of the department's intent to seek a default judgment and the default judgment itself. He filed pleadings with the court challenging its entry of default, which the department moved to strike. The Idaho court set a hearing on the department's motion, which Fowler did not attend.

Sometime after the proceedings ended in Idaho, Fowler relocated to Alaska. The Alaska Child Support Services Division sought to register and enforce the Idaho judgment against Fowler under Alaska's Uniform Interstate Family Support Act 1 and the Federal Full Faith and Credit for Child Support Orders Act. 2 Fowler appeared in court in Alaska to challenge registration of the order, asserting that he was denied due process in the Idaho proceedings. The superior court rejected Fowler's challenge and registered the order without issuing a written decision. After Fowler moved for reconsideration, the court issued a written decision explaining its reasons for rejecting Fowler's due process argument.

Fowler appeals, renewing his due process claim. Having reviewed the parties' briefing, the superior court's order, and the record, we conclude that the superior court's order on reconsideration accurately describes the relevant facts and correctly applies the governing law. Accordingly, we set out the court's order below and adopt it as the basis for our resolution of Fowler's appeals. 3

*871 ORDER ON MOTION TO RECONSIDER

David Fowler moves the court to reconsider the order allowing an Idaho child support order to .be registered in this state. He argues that the Idaho court violated his due process rights by entering the support order. Mr. Fowler made a very similar argument at a hearing held on March 8, 2006. This court denies his motion to reconsider for the same reason that the court rejected his due process argument at the hearing.

I. FACTS

On January 19, 2006, the Alaska Child Support Services Division petitioned the court under AS 25.25.602 to register a child support order from the Idaho District Court. Mr. Fowler objected to the registration because he claimed the Idaho court did not provide him with due process before the court entered the order. He argued that Alaska could not register the order and he requested a hearing.

At the hearing, Mr. Fowler testified that he was served with a summons and complaint in 2002 and that he filed an answer. According to Mr. Fowler the clerk accepted the answer for filing and did not tell him there was a filing fee.

But on May 6, 2002, the Idaho court entered default against Mr. Fowler because he did not pay the filing fee. Mr. Fowler said he received a copy of the default child support order. He also testified, when shown a document that included a notice of intent to enter default for failure to file an answer, that he did not recall receiving this notice, but added that if he did receive such a notice, he would have ignored it because he already filed an answer.

In response to the default order, Mr. Fowler said he filed an opposition to the order and asserted what appear to be claims against the clerk of court. He filed those pleadings on May 13, 2002 and paid an $8.00 filing fee.

After he filed his response, the Plaintiff, the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare, moved the court for an order striking the pleadings. Mr. Fowler admitted that he received the Department's motion to strike. He also said it included a notice that there would be a hearing. Mr. Fowler testified that he did not attend the hearing because he did not think the hearing required his attendance. He felt this way, he said, because he filed his response already, and because "if they were going to just strike [his] pleadings, that was one thing, but [his] defense was in there, too, and that was the important thing; they didn't say they were going to strike [his] defense."

Finally Mr. Fowler admitted that he received the order striking his pleadings. That order stated in part that Mr. Fowler received prior notice of the hearing but did not attend.

At the conclusion of the evidence, Mr. Fowler argued that the Idaho court violated his due process rights by not considering his answer. He argued that the Idaho court did not notify him that it would not consider the answer nor did it notify him that he had to pay a filing fee. Mr. Fowler maintained that the Idaho court violated his due process rights when it rejected his answer because he did not pay a filing fee. And he argued that the hearing held after the default judgment did not cure the violation because the hearing did not address his answer, and in any case, be asserted that in Alaska an order entered by a court in violation of a party's procedural due process rights is void.

The Division responded that Mr. Fowler received a copy of the default judgment against him, so he knew the court did -not consider his answer, and that is why he filed the responsive pleadings on May 13th. Therefore, according to the Division, a reasonable person would have attended the hearing scheduled by the court.

This court held that it may or may not have been a due process violation to refuse a pro se litigant's pleadings for failure to pay a filing fee, but in looking at the full picture of what happened in Idaho, no due process vio-, lation occurred. Mr. Fowler had notice of the claim and he learned that his answer was not considered. He filed a responsive pleading and was given a hearing. He knew when the hearing was but chose not to attend. After the hearing, and after Mr. Fowler did not appear, the Idaho court granted the mo *872 tion to strike and the default judgment remained in effect. Mr. Fowler did not appeal the judgment or file a motion to set aside the ° judgment. Instead he did nothing.

II, MR. FOWLER'S ARGUMENT THAT THE POST-DEFAULT HEARING DID NOT CURE THE DUE PROCESS VIOLATION

Mr. Fowler argues that the Idaho hearing scheduled after the default is not a remedy because "neither his subsequent acts nor his omissions to act can revive a void judgment." In support of his statement, Mr. Fowler relies on State, Department of Revenue, CSED v. Maxwell. 1

In Maxwell, the Alaska Supreme Court held that "a void judgment cannot gain validity simply by the passage of time." 2 Also Mr. Fowler correctly points out that he can attack a void judgment at any time. 3 But, of course, the question here is whether the Idaho judgment is void. ‘

Mr. Fowler contends that the Idaho judgment is void based on the reasoning he found in two Washington state cases. But the first case stands for a proposition that is not in dispute. In Allstate Insurance Co. v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 P.3d 870, 2007 Alas. LEXIS 129, 2007 WL 2965783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fowler-v-state-department-of-revenue-child-support-services-division-alaska-2007.