Haton v. Haton

672 N.E.2d 962, 1996 Ind. App. LEXIS 1510, 1996 WL 640835
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 7, 1996
Docket49A02-9606-CV-330
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 672 N.E.2d 962 (Haton v. Haton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haton v. Haton, 672 N.E.2d 962, 1996 Ind. App. LEXIS 1510, 1996 WL 640835 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

OPINION

FRIEDLANDER, Judge

Janis Latrelle Haton (Parsons) [Latrelle] appeals from an order of the Marion Superi- or Court denying her petition to determine and reduce delinquent child support to judgment on the basis that the claim was brought outside the period of limitations.

We affirm.

The facts most favorable to the judgment are that the parties were divorced on July 8, 1970 by decree entered by the Marion Superior Court. The parties had one child, Amy Suzette Haton, born August 11, 1969, during the course of the marriage. Steven Lester Haton was ordered to pay $20.00 per week for Amy's support.

Sometime after the divorce, Steven stopped making child support payments, moved out of state, and maintained no contact with Latrelle or Amy. Latrelle subsequently married Robert Parsons, and, in 1979, Parsons sought to adopt Amy. Notice of the adoption proceedings was effected by publication. On October 14, 1979, Parsons adopted Amy. Latrelle made no effort to contact Steven or to collect the child support arrearage from the time of the adoption until 1995, when she met someone who was employed by Child Support Services of Indiana, *963 Inc., an agency which collects child support on a contingency-fee basis. Latrelle filed her petition in this case on July 13, 1995, more than fifteen years after the last child support payment became due.

At the hearing held before the trial court, the parties stipulated that the child support arrearage was $9600.00. Latrelle also sought interest on that amount and attorney fees.

Latrelle testified at the hearing that Steven had consistently made his child support payments until the payments suddenly stopped. She claimed that, at that point, she tried unsuccessfully to locate Steven by calling his previous employers, his parents, and mutual friends. When asked if she made any effort to contact Steven at the time of the adoption, Latrelle testified that she was not in touch with any of Steven's relatives and that service was effected by publication.

Steven testified that, at one point after the divorce, he fell one week behind on his child support obligation, and Latrelle sent a sheriff to his house. According to Steven, he and Latrelle met to discuss the situation, and Latrelle told him that she did not need nor want him or his money and that she and Amy could do quite well without him. Latrelle also told Steven that, as long as he remained in their lives, if he was ever late with support payments, she would make life miserable for him. - He claimed that Latrelle made it clear that she did not want him involved in either her life or Amy's and told him that, if he stayed out of their lives, she would stay out of his life. Steven testified that it was at that point that he decided, because of the animosity between himself and Latrelle, that Amy would be psychologically better off growing up without a father. Steven thereafter made no effort to contact Amy, and for twenty-five years, Latrelle did not contact him to collect support.

Steven testified that he left Indiana in the early part of 1970 and moved to St. Louis, Missouri, where he lived until he moved to California in 1977. Although Steven did not maintain an agent for service of process in Indiana and never notified Latrelle of his address, he did not hide his whereabouts and always had a listed telephone number. In addition, Latrelle was acquainted with and knew how to reach a number of Steven's relatives, including his parents, who lived in the Indianapolis area.

Although both of Steven's parents were deceased at the time of the hearing, Maxine Kaiser, Steven's aunt, testified that she had lived in Indianapolis all her life and that Latrelle never contacted her in an attempt to reach Steven.

After the hearing, the trial court entered an order, which stated:

This matter having come before the Court upon the Petition to Determine and Reduce Delinquent Child Support to Judgment, and for Award of Interest Thereon filed by Mother, and the matter having been taken under advisement, and the Court having heard the evidence and considered the arguments of counsel, hereby FINDS that the Mother's Petition should be and is hereby denied, inasmuch as Mother's claim is outside the statute of limitations for child support, which is fifteen (15) years from the date each installment becomes due and is unpaid, under T.C. 34-1-2-8.

Record at 42.

On appeal, Latrelle presents the following restated issue:

Did the trial court err as a matter of law in denying the petition to reduce delinquent child support to judgment on the basis that the claim was brought outside the period of limitations?

Ind.Code Ann. § 34-1-2-8 (West 1983) applies to actions to recover acerued court-ordered child support payments. Kuhn v. Kuhn, 273 Ind. 67, 402 N.E.2d 989 (1980). It provides:

All actions not limited by any other statute shall be brought within ten (10) years unless the cause of that action arose before September 1, 1982, in which case the action must be brought within fifteen (15) years. In special cases, where a different limitation is prescribed by statute, the provisions of this section shall not apply.

The period of limitations begins to run on each installment of child support as it be *964 comes due and unpaid. Kuhn, 273 Ind. 67, 402 N.E.2d 989. Therefore, unless tolled by an exception to the general rule, the period of limitations began to run on the final installment of child support in October 1979, when Parsons adopted Amy.

An exception to the general rule applicable to actions involving non-resident defendants is contained in IC § 34-1-2-6 and provides in pertinent part: -

(a) The time during which the defendant is a nonresident of the state shall not be computed in any of the periods of limitation except during such time as the defendant by law maintains in the state of Indiana an agent for service of process or other person, who, under the laws of the state of Indiana, may be served with process as agent for the defendant.

IC § 84-1-2-6.

Steven argues that this tolling statute applies only to new causes of action and, because the Marion Superior Court retained personal and subject matter jurisdiction in this case by virtue of the July 8, 1970 divorce decree, the fact that Steven was a non-resident is of no consequence. He claims that Latrelle's petition to reduce delinquent child support to judgment is time-barred.

Latrelle argues that Steven's voluntary absence from Indiana triggered the application of the non-resident exception found in IC § 34-1-2-6, thereby tolling the running of the period of limitations found in IC § 34-1-2-3. She claims that, because Steven did not maintain an agent for service of process within the state, the period of limitations was tolled during the entire period Steven was absent from Indiana.

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Bluebook (online)
672 N.E.2d 962, 1996 Ind. App. LEXIS 1510, 1996 WL 640835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haton-v-haton-indctapp-1996.