Government of the Virgin Islands ex rel. Simanca v. Proctor

39 V.I. 28, 1998 WL 453666, 1998 V.I. LEXIS 13
CourtSupreme Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedJuly 10, 1998
DocketFamily No. S3/1998
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 39 V.I. 28 (Government of the Virgin Islands ex rel. Simanca v. Proctor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Government of the Virgin Islands ex rel. Simanca v. Proctor, 39 V.I. 28, 1998 WL 453666, 1998 V.I. LEXIS 13 (virginislands 1998).

Opinion

STEELE, Judge

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before the Court is a challenge to its jurisdiction to modify a child support order. Petitioner, Maria Simanca, seeks to utilize the Virgin Islands as a forum in her quest to either increase the amount of child support paid, or in the alternative, have the Court reconsider the Administrative Hearing Officer's February 12,1997 decision to reduce support payments. Respondent, Gilbert Proctor, [29]*29maintains that pursuant to 16 V.I.C. § 394 of the Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act, hereinafter URESA, the Territory lacks the jurisdiction to decide this matter. In the midst of these proceedings, a new uniform support law, entitled the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act, hereinafter UIFSA, was enacted in the Virgin Islands, effectively replacing the URESA statutes.

The Court is therefore confronted with three issues: (1) should UIFSA be applied retroactively, (2) does the controlling uniform support act grant jurisdiction to the Territorial Court, and (3) if jurisdiction is proper in the Virgin Islands, should an interim increase in child support be granted until this matter is heard before the Court.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Petitioner and Respondent are the birth parents of Christina Simanca-Proctor, a child born out of wedlock on January 11,1978.1 Although support had to be pursed against the Respondent, paternity was never questioned.

Petitioner, as a resident of New York State, initially instituted child support proceedings against the Respondent in the Family Court of New York in August of 1978. At that time, the Respondent was residing in the Virgin Islands. This eventually led Petitioner to file a petition in the Territory on December 6, 1978. Subsequent to this filing, an order was issued in the Virgin Islands on March 26, 1979 requiring monthly child support payments to be made by the Respondent. This order was to be the beginning of an ongoing dispute between Christina's parents concerning the amount of support the Respondent was capable of providing for his daughter. The years which followed, saw numerous modification requests brought by both parties in the Courts of the Virgin Islands, resulting in several alterations in the amount of support required to be paid by the Respondent.

[30]*30It is the most recent child support modification which ignited the fuel behind this present controversy. In an order dated February 12, 1997, an Administrative Flearing Officer found sufficient evidence to reduce Respondent's support obligation to $100.00 a month.2 It is not entirely clear from the record before this Court when the Petitioner first contested this decision. However, the file does reveal that a continuance motion submitted by the Petitioner was granted by the Administrative Hearing Officer on July 18, 1997. This continuance referred to Petitioner's motion requesting either modification of child support, or in the alternative, reconsideration of the February decision issued by the Administrative Court. It is these motions which directly led to this instant action.

This matter was transferred by the Administrative Hearing Officer to the Territorial Court due to the existence of complex issues requiring judicial resolution. Upon the motion of the Petitioner, an immediate hearing was held on May 18, 1998 based on the assertion that the Respondent was preparing to leave the Territory in order to avoid possible retroactive child support payments. Although it was suggested at this hearing that another forum, New York, would be better suited to hear this action, the only order issued was that Respondent was to notify the offices of Paternity and Support with his new address once he leaves the Island.

As of May 20,1998, Respondent no longer resides in the Virgin Islands, nor is he domiciled there. While still owning real property in the Territory, Respondent has proclaimed the State of Tennessee to be his new permanent domicile. With the departure of the Respondent from the Territory, no party of interest currently resides or is domiciled in the Virgin Islands.

II. DISCUSSION

In order to rule on this jurisdictional question, it is imperative that the Court first determine which uniform child support act is applicable to this case. Once this initial issue is resolved, the Court will be able to conclude whether the Territory may decide this [31]*31matter. Finally, the Petitioner's request for an interim increase in child support will only be responded to by the Court if the Territory is found to have jurisdiction.

A. Retroactive application of UIFSA

After some initial confusion, both parties are in agreement that the original support action was brought under and enforced through the Virgin Islands' statutes which compose URESA. However, in the course of the proceedings leading up to this current decision, counsel for the Petitioner began citing statutes from the newly enacted Virgin Islands uniform child support act entitled UIFSA. It is undisputed that the last modification of child support, as well as Petitioner's request for either reconsideration or modification of this order, began prior to UIFSA's effective date.

An examination into UIFSA reveals a brief history, with the origin of this uniform act tracing back to its incorporation into Bill No. 22-0176, which was passed by the Twenty-Second Legislature of the Virgin Islands. With the inception of this act, the Legislature simultaneously deleted sections 392 through 429 of Title 16 of the Virgin Islands Code, thus repealing the previous law as it stood under URESA. The Governor approved Bill No. 22-0176 on May 5, 1998, thus granting UIFSA the power of law in the Virgin Islands on that date. However, the act is silent as to whether UIFSA is to be applied retroactively or is to be given only prospective effect.

Petitioner does not address the retroactive application issue which accompanies UIFSA. It is merely sufficient to the Petitioner that Respondent owns property in the Territory, and was still a resident of the Virgin Islands on the date that UIFSA was enacted into law. The Respondent on the other hand, asserts that it is the Petitioner's burden to rebut the presumption against retroactive application of UIFSA. As the Petitioner hasn't even attempted to rebut this presumption, Respondent maintains that the Court should not give retroactive effect to this act. Nonetheless, Respondent proceeds to present arguments which assert that UIFSA is a complete overhaul and changing of the law dealing with the reciprocal enforcement of support, and therefore should only be applied prospectively.

Although the Petitioner has asserted no authority for the utilization of the UIFSA statutes in this action, the Court recognizes the [32]*32Territory's extreme need for clarification concerning the proper application of this new uniform act to prior child support matters. Therefore, the Court shall determine the retroactive effect of UIFSA so that confusion can be avoided in the Virgin Islands regarding which uniform child support act should control.

As this is a question of first impression in the Virgin Islands, the Court will need to inspect analogous decisions of the Territory, as well as persuasive precedent from other non-controlling jurisdictions, in order to arrive at a decision.

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39 V.I. 28, 1998 WL 453666, 1998 V.I. LEXIS 13, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/government-of-the-virgin-islands-ex-rel-simanca-v-proctor-virginislands-1998.