Gerkin v. Gerkin

161 Cal. App. 4th 604, 74 Cal. Rptr. 3d 188
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 28, 2008
DocketNo. G038172
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 161 Cal. App. 4th 604 (Gerkin v. Gerkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gerkin v. Gerkin, 161 Cal. App. 4th 604, 74 Cal. Rptr. 3d 188 (Cal. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

Opinion

FYBEL, J.—

Introduction

The Orange County Department of Child Support Services (DCSS) appeals from an order of the Orange County Superior Court, which found a child support provision in a California judgment of dissolution had been nullified by an order of the Sedgwick County District Court in Kansas. We reverse.

[608]*608Under the provisions of the Revised Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act (RURESA) (9C West’s U. Laws Ann. (2001) RURESA, § 1 et seq.; Code Civ. Proc., former § 1650 et seq.), DCSS filed a petition in the Kansas court to obtain a support order enforceable against Charles Randall Gerkin in the State of Kansas. The order issued by the Kansas court set a lower amount of support than had been provided for in Charles and Louise E. Gerkin’s dissolution judgment entered in California.1 Because the Kansas court’s order did not specifically state it was modifying or nullifying the existing support provision in the California dissolution judgment, under RURESA, it could not set a lower amount of support than as provided in the earlier California judgment. (9C West’s U. Laws Ann., supra, RURESA, § 31; Code Civ. Proc., former § 1689.) Although Charles apparently made payments pursuant to the Kansas court’s support order, his support obligation in California continued, subject to offset for the amounts paid in Kansas.

Statement of Facts and Procedural History

A judgment dissolving Louise and Charles’s marriage was entered by the Orange County Superior Court in December 1988. Louise and Charles had three daughters, then ages 10, seven, and four. The judgment of dissolution established child support payments from Charles to Louise in the total amount of $484 per month. (Charles was ordered to pay $161 per month for each child; the support payments “shall continue until the child reaches the age of nineteen, or eighteen and is not a full-time high school student residing with a parent, or until the child marries, dies, is emancipated, or until further order of the court, whichever occurs first.”) In late 1989, Charles moved to Wichita, Kansas.

In September 1990, DCSS sent to the State of Kansas a uniform support petition and general testimony, pursuant to RURESA, to enforce Charles’s child support obligations, including accrued arrearages. In the uniform support petition, DCSS requested an order for “fair & reasonable” child support, medical coverage, plus arrearages in the amount of $3,227.50. On November 13, 1991, the District Court of Sedgwick County, Kansas, entered a support order in the total amount of $251 per month, and established arrearages at $1,811. The November order was later modified by the Kansas court to change the amount of the arrearages to $3,311.

[609]*609The Kansas court trustee, which is Kansas’s child support enforcement agency, reduced the amount of child support owed by Charles in July 1996 and again in July 2000, when Charles and Louise’s two eldest children turned 18 years old.

In July 2004, Charles filed a motion in Kansas to determine arrearages and stay the issuance of an income withholding order, claiming he had overpaid child support by $7,430.49. DCSS’s records at the time reflected arrearages in the amount of $33,908.49. On August 9, the Kansas district court ordered income withholding to cease. A hearing was conducted on January 3, 2005, on Charles’s motion to determine arrearages. Louise never received notice of the hearing; neither Louise nor DCSS appeared. The Kansas court trustee and Charles’s counsel advised the court they had agreed with each other that Kansas had overcollected $7,430.49. The Kansas court then entered an order against Louise and in favor of Charles in the amount of $7,430.49.

In May 2006, Charles filed an order to show cause in the Orange County Superior Court to determine arrears or overpayment and reimbursement. Charles demanded reimbursement of the $7,430.49 provided by the January 2005 Kansas court order, as well as reimbursement of any sums collected by DCSS since that order was entered.

Following a hearing, the trial court provided a detailed statement of decision. In relevant part, the statement of decision reads as follows:

“. . . Within page 3 of the URESA [Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act] petition signed by petitioner, petitioner did not ask the Kansas Court to register and enforce the current (California) support order, a choice at hand. Instead, the petitioner specifically petitioned the Kansas court to set support according to its discretion and in a ‘fair and reasonable way’ notwithstanding that California had already ordered respondent to pay a sum certain for child support. This record leads to one conclusion—that petitioner/DCSS asked the Kansas court to establish a new support order, in lieu of the California judgment. The Kansas court also ordered an ‘abatement’ of the support amount up to one half, for periods of time the [noncustodial parent]/respondent had extended visitation with the children—a term the California judgment did not address. The latter order is, on its face, a new and different order. On this record, it is very difficult to characterize the Kansas order as a mere successive/cumulative order while considering the California extant. [][]... [][]
“. . . This court concludes the Kansas support orders were not just second in time. Instead, petitioner engaged the Kansas court to establish a new child support order, or in other words, to in fact modify the California judgment [610]*610(juxtapose to enforcement). . . . The California child support order within the California judgment was nullified when Kansas established a new support order at the request of petitioner and DCSS—arrears can not follow from a non-extant California order.

“Findings: The court makes the following findings:

“1. While the petitioner and the minor children always resided in California, nonetheless petitioner signed the URESA petition and thereby consented to Kansas jurisdiction to modify the California judgment regarding child support.
“2. The Kansas order dated November 13, 1991 nullified and superseded the California Judgment insofar as child support.
“3. The petitioner was fully aware of the issues before the Kansas court and acted by and through DCSS who filed the URESA petition, notwithstanding she was not present during the Kansas hearings. The court finds no due process violation.
“4. After the Kansas court specifically modified the California judgment, that part of the California judgment pertaining to child support was no longer enforceable.
“5. Because Kansas modified the California judgment with regard to support, Kansas acquired continuing exclusive jurisdiction so that Kansas law applied prospectively as to the accrual of interest.
“6. The state of Kansas has already determined arrears and its order is controlling and entitled to full faith and credit.

“Order:

“The court orders DCSS to enforce the Kansas order, which is controlling.”

DCSS timely appealed from the court’s ruling.

DISCUSSION

I.

Standard of Review

We review the trial court’s interpretation of law de novo.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 Cal. App. 4th 604, 74 Cal. Rptr. 3d 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerkin-v-gerkin-calctapp-2008.