Harold v. Paradise

302 N.E.2d 902, 36 Ohio App. 2d 71, 65 Ohio Op. 2d 66, 1973 Ohio App. LEXIS 819
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 8, 1973
Docket7386
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 302 N.E.2d 902 (Harold v. Paradise) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harold v. Paradise, 302 N.E.2d 902, 36 Ohio App. 2d 71, 65 Ohio Op. 2d 66, 1973 Ohio App. LEXIS 819 (Ohio Ct. App. 1973).

Opinion

PotteR, P. J.

The plaintiff, appellant herein, on July 7, 1959, in the state of Missouri, secured an order for the aggregate monthly sum of $150 for the care, support and maintenance of the parties’ minor children. The defendant, appellee herein, had entered his appearance in that case. On January 7, 1972, plaintiff filed an action in Ohio to recover $22,275 allegedly due under the order.

The defendant’s answer admitted the order, but denied that there is any sum whatsoever owed for support or alimony. Defendant also alleged that he was denied the right of visitation and companionship with the children from *72 July, 1959, to the present and that during a large portion of this time the children were either in Canada or Thailand. The case was submitted to the court on the pleadings, interrogatories, stipulations of fact and briefs. The trial court found as a fact that neither party had filed any subsequent proceedings in the Missouri court, either in the form of a modification or fo.r lump sum judgment, and that the children were inaccessible to the father for visitation during most of the period for which support is asked.

The trial court found as a conclusion of law that the order of support is, under Missouri statutory law (Y.A.M. S. 452,070) subject to modification, and that such order is not a final judgment and, therefore, not subject to the Full Faith and Credit Clause.

From the order dismissing the complaint, plaintiff assigns three errors:

“ (1) The lower court erred in holding that the decree of the Circuit Court of Cooper County, Missouri, requiring the defendant to pay child support in monthly installments is not a final judgment upon which action can be brought in Ohio for accrued and unpaid payments.

“(2) The lower court erred in holding that the judgment entered by the Missouri Court requiring the defendant to pay monthly child support payments is not such a judgment as is entitled to enforcement in other States under the full faith and credit clause of the Constitution of the United States.

“'(3) The lower court erred in not entering judgment for the plaintiff for accrued and unpaid child support payments ordered in a divorce decree of a Missouri Court.”

V.A.M.S. 452.070 (now covered by Missouri Civil Rule 88.03) is as follows:

“Alimony and maintenance.

“"When a divorce shall be adjudged, the court shall make such order touching the alimony and maintenance of the wife, and the care, custody and maintenance of the children, or any of them, as, from the circumstances of the parties and the nature of the case, shall be reasonable, and when the wife is plaintiff, may order the defendant to give *73 security for such alimony and maintenance; and upon his neglect to give the security required of him, or upon default of himself and his sureties, if any there he, to pay or provide such alimony and maintenance, may award an execution for the collection thereof, or enforce the performance of the judgment or order by sequestration of property, or by such other lawful ways and means as is according to the practice of the court. Tie court, on the application of either party, may make such alteration, from time to time, as to the allowance of alimony and maintenance, as may be proper, and the court may decree alimony pending the suit for divorce in all cases where the same would be just, whether the wife be plaintiff or defendant, and enforce such order in the manner provided by law in other cases.”

It is the contention of plaintiff that the trial court necessarily held that the above section permits a modification of past due and accrued installments under the child maintenance order. The Supreme Court of Missouri has not apparently ruled on the precise question (see Child Support in Missouri: the Father’s Duty, the Child’s Right and the Mother’s Ability to Enforce, 36 Mo. L. Rev. 325 (1971) at 333). Intermediate appellate decisions have taken opposite positions, at least where the question of an emancipated child is concerned. See, for example, Swenson v. Swenson (1950), 241 Mo. App. 21, 227 S. W. 2d 103; and Schaffer v. Security Fire Door Co. (St. L. Mo. App. 1959), 326 S. W. 2d 376. The rationale of the more recent case of Jenkins v. Jenkins (St. L. Mo. App. 1970), 453 S. W. 2d 619, is that a modification must be prospective, not retrospective, and follows Schaffer v. Security Fire Door Co., supra; see also Hughes v. Wagner (St. L. Mo. App. 1957), 303 S. W. 2d 181; and relative to alimony, Nelson v. Nelson (1920), 282 Mo. 412, 221 S. W. 1066. .

The general holding is succinctly stated in 18 Ohio Jurisprudence 2d 669, Divorce and Separation, Section 338.

“The United States Supreme Court has held that a decree for alimony, maintenance, or support payable in the future is considered as to instalments past due and unpaid *74 a final judgment and is entitled to full faith and credit with respect thereto, provided no modification of the decree was made prior to the maturity of such instalment, unless, by the law of the state in which such decree was rendered, the enforcement thereof is so completely within the discretion of the court which granted it that it may modify or annul the decree even as to overdue and unsatisfied instalments, and this rule has been quoted by Ohio courts. Thus, an action may be brought in this state to recover alimony or support payments which have accrued under a sister state matrimonial decree, provided that the courts in the divorce-granting state lack the power to modify the amount of arrears retroactively, and the judgment procured is enforceable in accordance with the laws of this state applicable to money judgments.”

Ohio, in Armstrong v. Armstrong (1927), 117 Ohio St. 558, follows the general rule laid down by Sistare v. Sistare (1910), 218 U. S. 1. See also 47 American Jurisprudence 2d 261, Judgments, Section 1270, as follows:

u* # * jn any event, the mere fact that a judgment payable in instalments is subject, as to unmatured instal-ments, to modification by the court of its rendition, does not disentitle the judgment to full faith and credit as to unmodified, unpaid, past-due instalments.”

Giving to the Missouri decree every reasonable implication against the existence of a power to modify or revoke installments of alimony already accrued, we find that, as to accrued installments, the Missouri decree is a final order and within the ambit of the Full Faith and Credit Clause. (See 24 American Jurisprudence 2d 1118, 1119, Divorce and Separation, Sections 980, 981.) Assignment of error No. 1 is well taken but, for the reasons hereinafter set forth, is not prejudicial.

As to assignments of error Nos. 2 and 3 we must consider the denial of the defendant, in his answer, that there is any sum owed for support.

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Bluebook (online)
302 N.E.2d 902, 36 Ohio App. 2d 71, 65 Ohio Op. 2d 66, 1973 Ohio App. LEXIS 819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-v-paradise-ohioctapp-1973.