Hurlbut v. Scarbrough

957 P.2d 839, 1998 Wyo. LEXIS 68, 1998 WL 195478
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1998
Docket97-213
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 957 P.2d 839 (Hurlbut v. Scarbrough) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurlbut v. Scarbrough, 957 P.2d 839, 1998 Wyo. LEXIS 68, 1998 WL 195478 (Wyo. 1998).

Opinion

MACY, Justice.

Appellant Samuel Hurlbut, Jr. (the father) appeals from the judgment which was entered in favor of Appellee Doris Scarbrough (the mother) for unpaid child support and accumulated interest.

We affirm as modified and remand.

ISSUES

The father presents these issues for our analysis:

1. Whether the trial court had in 'per-sonam jurisdiction over [the father]?
2. Whether [the mother’s] failure to list her claim for past due child support as an asset on the schedules in her 1985 bankruptcy estops her from now seeking to collect the sums due?
*841 3. Whether [the mother’s] breach of the 1984 agreement coupled with her delay in bringing the proceedings estops her from seeking to collect the sums due?
4. Whether the Court erred in adding pre-judgment interest to the amounts claimed?

FACTS

The parties married on July 16, 1976, and lived in Platte County during their marriage. The mother had three children whom the father subsequently adopted, and a fourth child was born to the parties. The parties were granted a divorce on June 17, 1982, in Platte County. The district court gave the mother custody of the four children and ordered the father to pay child support in the amount of $116.80 per month per child. Both parties later moved away from the state. On June 2, 1984, a Utah court terminated the father’s parental rights to his adopted children, and on April 24, 1985, the father’s parental rights to his biological child were terminated.

The mother filed a petition on August 30, 1995, in the Platte County district court, requesting that a judgment be entered against the father for the child support which he owed when his parental rights were terminated. The father was personally served in Nebraska with a copy of the petition. He filed a motion to dismiss, and the trial court denied his motion. The case proceeded to trial, and a judgment was entered in favor of the mother. A corrected judgment nunc pro tunc followed. The father appeals to this Court.

DISCUSSION

A. In Personam Jurisdiction

The father contends that personal service made outside Wyoming is not sufficient to give Wyoming courts personal jurisdiction over him. He also claims that Wyoming courts lost continuing and exclusive jurisdiction when the Utah court exercised its jurisdiction in terminating his parental rights.

We considered this jurisdictional issue in Graham v. Fenno, 734 P.2d 983 (Wyo.1987). In that case, the parties were granted a divorce on November 3, 1971, in Wyoming. 734 P.2d at 984. The divorce decree required the husband to pay child support for the parties’ three children. Id. In 1986, the wife petitioned a Wyoming district court for an order to show causé why' the husband should not be held in contempt for fading to pay child support. Id. The district court issued an order to show cause, and the order was personally served on the husband in Fort Collins, Colorado. Id. The husband filed a motion to dismiss the district court’s order, claiming that the district court lacked in personam jurisdiction over him. Id.

This Court acknowledged that the existence of personal jurisdiction “ ‘depends upon the presence of reasonable notice to the defendant that an action has been brought, and a sufficient connection between the defendant and the forum State to make it fair to require defense of the action in the forum.’” 734 P.2d at 984 (quoting Kulko v. Superior Court of California in and for City and County of San Francisco, 436 U.S. 84, 91, 98 S.Ct. 1690, 1696, 56 L.Ed.2d 132 (1978) (citation omitted)). We explained that, if this contempt proceeding had been an original action, the minimum contacts precedent might have applied, but, because the order to show cause stemmed from an earlier proceeding, the jurisdictional principle that a defendant must have minimum contacts with the forum state so that maintaining a suit would not offend the traditional notions of fair play and substantial justice was not applicable. Id. That principle applied only to the district court’s jurisdiction in the original divorce proceeding. 734 P.2d at 985.

We have the same situation in the case at bar. We reiterate our rule of law that a court which obtains proper jurisdiction over a divorce action retains jurisdiction to modify or enforce the support provisions of the decree. Id. “Once jurisdiction attaches, the district court’s power over [the father’s] person continues until all matters arising out of that litigation are resolved.” 734 P.2d at 985-86. The father, therefore, is still subject *842 to this state’s jurisdiction in matters which pertain to the original divorce action.

B. Failure to List Support as Asset in Bankruptcy

The mother filed a bankruptcy petition in 1985 in Utah and did not list past-due child support as an asset. The father contends that the mother’s failure to list the past-due child support as an asset judicially estops her from asserting a claim to the arrearages in Wyoming.

The father relies on Zwemer v. Production Credit Association of Midlands, 792 P.2d 245 (Wyo.1990), to support his argument. The father’s reliance on this case is misplaced. Although a person who is filing for bankruptcy must list all her assets, she is not required to include child support arrear-ages. 792 P.2d at 247; Cranston v. Cranston, 879 P.2d 345, 349 (Wyo.1994). Unpaid child support is not an asset of the parent but is the children’s money which the parent administers in trust for the children’s benefit. Cranston, 879 P.2d at 349.

The mother’s decision not to list this claim as an asset in her bankruptcy proceeding was appropriate given that it was not an asset of her estate. She is, therefore, not judicially estopped from asserting her current claim for the child support arrearages.

C. 1984 Agreement

The father claims that the mother violated the terms of an agreement which they entered into in 1984 and that the mother, therefore, cannot now assert a claim for unpaid child support. The father also complains that, because the mother waited so long to advance this claim, he was unable to locate witnesses who could prove that she harassed him and absolve him of any responsibility for unpaid child support under the 1984 agreement. He insists that this delay prejudiced him and that the mother should, therefore, be estopped from trying to collect the arrearages.

The parties entered into a stipulation agreement in Utah on October 19, 1984, which provided in part:

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Bluebook (online)
957 P.2d 839, 1998 Wyo. LEXIS 68, 1998 WL 195478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hurlbut-v-scarbrough-wyo-1998.