Holmes v. Wooley

792 A.2d 1018, 2001 Del. Super. LEXIS 505, 2001 WL 1782867
CourtSuperior Court of Delaware
DecidedNovember 2, 2001
Docket01J-08-192
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 792 A.2d 1018 (Holmes v. Wooley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. Wooley, 792 A.2d 1018, 2001 Del. Super. LEXIS 505, 2001 WL 1782867 (Del. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

SLIGHTS, J.

I. INTRODUCTION

The issue before the Court is one of first impression in this State: whether a judg *1020 ment creditor, who happens to be a child support obligor, has the right to attach child support payments in order to satisfy a judgment entered against a judgment debtor, who is the child support obligee. Defendant, David F. Wooley (“Mr.Woo-ley”), has filed a Motion to Quash Attachment against Plaintiff, Vera M. Holmes (“Ms.Holmes”). For the reasons discussed below, Mr. Wooley’s Motion is GRANTED.

II. FACTS

Mr. Wooley and Ms. Holmes are the parents of two minor children, ages four and three. Both children reside with Mr. Wooley by Order of the Family Court of the State of Delaware dated February 12, 2001. Ms. Holmes is obligated by a Family Court order to pay monthly child support in the amount of $1905. A wage attachment in that amount has been issued to Ms. Holmes’ employer, Hercules, Inc. ("Hercules”).

Hercules has been forwarding the monthly child support payment directly to the Division of Child Support Enforcement (“DCSE”) in accordance with the Court-ordered wage attachment. DCSE, designated by statute as the State Income Withholding Agency, distributes the child support funds to Mr. Wooley, who is the residential parent. 1

On August 30, 2001, Ms. Holmes obtained a judgment in the Court of Chancery against Mr. Wooley in the amount of $38,014. The judgment has been recorded in this Court. Ms. Holmes has attempted to avail herself of various execution procedures found in Title 10 of the Delaware Code including efforts to garnish Mr. Woo-ley’s wages and levy upon certain of his personal property. These attempts to collect funds duly owed to her have been unsuccessful. So, in an effort to “shake the tree,” Ms. Holmes has caused this Court to issue a writ of attachment which names DCSE as garnishee.

The children’s support funds now travel a circuitous route. Hercules garnishes Ms. Holmes’ wages and forwards the funds to DCSE. In accordance with the writ of attachment, DCSE returns to Ms. Holmes all funds it receives from Hercules. Ms. Holmes, in turn, applies the funds she receives from DCSE against the balance owed to her by Mr. Wooley on the Chancery judgment.

Mr. Wooley has filed the instant Motion to Quash Attachment arguing that the child support received by DCSE and forwarded to him is not his property, but the property of the parties’ minor children. He argues that he receives the funds as a fiduciary for the children. Mr. Wooley contends, therefore, that the funds are not subject to attachment in satisfaction of a debt owed by him. DCSE supports Mr. Wooley’s Motion to Quash.

Ms. Holmes argues that because no Delaware statute expressly exempts child support from execution processes, the attachment is lawful. She urges the Court not to interfere with her efforts to collect a valid judgment from a recalcitrant debtor.

III. DISCUSSION

A. Standard for a Motion to Quash Attachment

Mr. Wooley has moved the Court to quash a writ previously issued by this Court in accordance with a lawful process. Accordingly, he carries the burden of establishing that the writ if (or as) executed will produce an unlawful result or otherwise offend the interests of justice.

*1021 B. A Child Support Obligee’s Interest in Child Support is Not Subject to Execution

1. Children Have an Equitable Interest in Child Support Payments

Mr. Wooley argues that the monies he receives as child support are for the benefit of his minor children, for whom he acts as a fiduciary. He asserts that he has no individual ownership interest in the funds. In support of his assertion, Mr. Wooley relies upon 13 Del.C. § 518 (“§ 518”), which states in pertinent part:

A person who receives funds from another person for the support of a child in his or her care is a fiduciary with respect to such funds and may be ordered by the Court to account for the expenditure and management of such funds on application by any payer of such funds for good cause shown.

The language of § 518 imposes a duty on the child support obligee to use child support monies for the benefit of the minor children. Explicit in this obligation is the understanding that the child support obligee acts as a fiduciary on behalf of the children. And clearly implicit in this fiduciary obligation is the notion that, although the child support obligee may have a legal interest in the child support funds, his or her interest in such funds is subordinate to the children’s interest. It is an interest akin to a trustee’s interest in the corpus of a trust. 2 Accordingly, the child support obligee does not have an unfettered right to use the child support money in any manner or for any purpose. The funds are meant to be used only for the support and benefit of the minor children. 3 As the intended beneficiaries of such funds, the minor children have an equitable interest in them. 4

The Court cannot conceive of a scenario where a judgment debtor voluntarily could use child support funds to satisfy a judgment entered against him in his individual *1022 capacity and still remain true to his fiduciary duty to his children. 5 If the judgment debtor could not voluntarily apply child support funds to satisfy his debt, the Court is hard-pressed to conclude that a judgment creditor can compel the judgment debtor to do so.

Apparently, the Internal Revenue Service agrees with the Court’s conclusion that child support payments are not the property of the parent-obligee. In support of the proposition that the custodial parent does not have an unencumbered ownership interest in child support payments, courts have been persuaded by the fact that child support payments are not treated as income for the custodial parent and cannot be deducted by the non-custodial parent for tax purposes. 6 Alimony payments, on the other hand, are treated as income for the obligee and are tax deductible for the obligor. 7

Based on the foregoing, the Court concludes that child support funds are not the property of the child support obligee, but rather are held by the obligee for the benefit of the children for whom the funds are designated.

2. Child Support Payments Cannot Be Attached

Attachment is a statutory action at law that enables a creditor to levy on the property of his debtor to satisfy a debt. 8 The right of attachment is not absolute, however.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
792 A.2d 1018, 2001 Del. Super. LEXIS 505, 2001 WL 1782867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-wooley-delsuperct-2001.