In Re Marriage of Huss

888 N.E.2d 1238, 2008 Ind. LEXIS 488, 2008 WL 2531125
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 2008
Docket01S04-0711-CV-514
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 888 N.E.2d 1238 (In Re Marriage of Huss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Marriage of Huss, 888 N.E.2d 1238, 2008 Ind. LEXIS 488, 2008 WL 2531125 (Ind. 2008).

Opinion

DICKSON, Justice.

In seeking dissolution of their marriage, the husband and wife each declared that there were four children born of their marriage, and each requested both temporary and permanent custody of all four children from the dissolution court. But while the dissolution case was pending in Adams Circuit Court, the wife initiated a separate paternity action in Wells Circuit Court and obtained a final order establishing that another man was the biological father of one of these children and granting her custody of that child. The wife then sought to use the paternity judgment as a basis to dismiss in the dissolution case all custody proceedings regarding said child. Following a contested final hearing, the Adams Circuit Court ordered the marriage dissolved, divided the marital property, awarded the husband custody of all four children, and ordered child support. The Court of Appeals, in a memorandum decision, vacated the portions of the dissolution decree pertaining to the said child but affirmed the award of custody of the three other children to the husband. Huss v. Huss, 01C01-0504-DR-37, 2007 WL 2120504 (July 25, 2007). We granted transfer and now affirm the dissolution court’s custody determination.

During the first nine years of their marriage, David and Nicole Huss had three children, after which the wife separated from the husband and children for eight *1240 months, but returned to the marital home four to five months pregnant with another man’s child, and the parties reconciled. Upon the birth of this child, the wife listed the husband as the father on the birth certificate and gave the child the husband’s last name. Four years later, when the parties subsequently sought a dissolution of their marriage in the Adams Circuit Court, both the husband’s petition for dissolution and the wife’s counter-petition declared that there were four children of the marriage and identified the names and birthdates of each child. Both parties sought both temporary and permanent custody of all four children. Following a contested hearing, the dissolution court entered a provisional order that the husband have temporary custody of the children and that the wife pay child support. The wife next filed an emergency motion to modify the provisional order, again seeking custody of all the children. Upon the denial of her motion, the wife sought and received a final hearing date in the dissolution action, August 14, 2006. Throughout these proceedings, the wife did not raise any issue regarding the paternity of any of the children.

On August 8, 2006, less than one week before the hearing, the wife filed a motion to dismiss one of the children from the dissolution proceedings, alleging that this child was not a child of the marriage and attaching a copy of a July 26, 2006, paternity order from the Wells Circuit Court that reflects a final hearing on July 24. Filed “long after this dissolution proceeding was started,” Tr. at 7-8, the paternity action had been brought in the name of the child “[b]y her next friend and Mother Nicole L. Huss,” the wife herein. Appellant’s App’x at 106. The one-page paternity order noted the appearance of the wife, her attorney, and the pro se respondent putative father; summarily found the child to be the biological child of the respondent; awarded “sole legal and physical custody” of the child to the child’s mother, the wife herein; ordered child support; and prohibited the biological father from “any contact or parenting time with the minor child” until he obtains professional counseling services. Id. After further briefing and a hearing, the dissolution court took under advisement the wife’s motion to dismiss.

Following a contested final hearing, the dissolution court denied the wife’s motion to dismiss, dissolved the marriage, divided the marital property, and provided for child support and parenting time. The decree, entered October 18, 2006, found the husband and wife to be the biological parents of three children, the custody of whom it awarded to the husband; that during their marriage a fourth child was born, whose biological father was determined in a separate paternity proceeding to be a person other than the husband; and that, as to the paternity decree’s purported award of custody to the wife, it “is of no binding force” due to procedural irregularities including the failure to make the husband a party and to notify him of the custody claim in the paternity case. Appellant’s App’x at 330-31. The dissolution decree also separately addressed and granted custody of this fourth child to the husband, addressing the best interests of the child and concluding that “[t]he evidence before the Court is compelling and is such that the presumption favoring an award of custody of [the child] to Wife, is overcome and that it would be in [the childj’s best interest that [the child] be placed in the custody of Husband.” Id. at 333. This child was more than five years of age at the time of the final dissolution decree.

In her appeal from the judgment of the dissolution court, the wife claims error in the following: (1) the failure of the Adams Circuit Court to recognize and follow the *1241 Wells Circuit Court paternity judgment; (2) the award of custody to a non-parent third party; (3) the denial of her Trial Rule 53.1 request to withdraw submission from the judge; and (4) the fundamental unfairness of the final dissolution hearing and the resulting custody decisions as a violation of her due process rights. The Court of Appeals addressed and rejected the last two of these claims. Declining to review these two issues on transfer, we summarily affirm these determinations. Ind. Appellate Rule 58(A).

1. Effect of Paternity Judgment in Dissolution Proceeding

To support her contention that the dissolution court improperly failed to recognize and follow the judgment of the paternity court, the wife argues that: (a) the Adams Circuit Court lacked authority to reject the Wells Circuit Court paternity judgment in favor it its own custody order; (b) the Adams Circuit Court dissolution action lacked personal jurisdiction as to the child who is the subject of this custody dispute; and (c) the wife, as the biological mother of a child born out of wedlock, has a statutory right to sole legal custody.

(a) Authority of Dissolution Court to Determine Custody

Urging that the Adams Circuit Court, in adjudicating the parties’ dissolution proceeding, lacked the legal authority to reject the custody determination included in the paternity judgment of the Wells Circuit Court, the wife argues that the dissolution court could not “refuse to honor a judgment otherwise valid on its face issued by another Circuit court of this state.” Appellant’s Br. at 26. She urges that the final paternity judgment and its award of custody cannot be invalidated by the dissolution decree.

The determinative issue, however, is not whether the dissolution court failed to honor a judgment of a sister court, but whether the paternity court was authorized to adjudicate a custody issue that was already pending before another court. Because the subject of child custody was first properly before the Adams Circuit Court in the dissolution proceeding, we conclude that the Wells Circuit Court was precluded from making a custody determination regarding the same child in the subsequently filed paternity action.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
888 N.E.2d 1238, 2008 Ind. LEXIS 488, 2008 WL 2531125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-marriage-of-huss-ind-2008.