In re Parentage of A.H.

2023 IL App (1st) 190572
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedAugust 17, 2023
Docket1-19-0572
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2023 IL App (1st) 190572 (In re Parentage of A.H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Parentage of A.H., 2023 IL App (1st) 190572 (Ill. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

2023 IL App (1st) 190572 Opinion filed: August 17, 2023

FIRST DISTRICT FOURTH DIVISION

Nos. 1-19-0572, 1-19-0783, 1-21-0017, & 1-21-0185 (Cons.)

In re PARENTAGE OF A.H., A.H., and A.H., Minors, ) Appeal from the ) Circuit Court of (Wipaporn T., Individually and as Parent and ) Cook County Next Friend on Behalf of Minors A.H., A.H., and A.H., ) ) No. 11 D 6475 Petitioner-Appellee, ) ) v. ) ) Harlow H., ) Honorable ) Jeanne Cleveland Bernstein, Respondent-Appellant). ) Judge, presiding.

JUSTICE ROCHFORD ∗ delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Justice Hoffman concurred in the judgment and opinion. Presiding Justice Lampkin specially concurred in part and dissented in part, with opinion.

OPINION ¶1 In this action, petitioner-appellee Wipaporn T., individually and as parent of her triplet sons

who were born in Thailand, sought enforcement and modification of a child support order entered

by a court in Thailand against respondent-appellant Harlow H., the biological father of the triplets

(Thai judgment). Petitioner and the triplets now reside in the United Kingdom, with petitioner’s

husband. Respondent resides in Illinois. The circuit court entered orders requiring respondent to

pay (1) over $76,000 in past due child support under the Thai judgment, (2) $4.5 million into trusts

for prospective modified child support, (3) $2 million in retroactive modified child support,

∗This case was transferred to Justice Rochford’s docket at the end of July 2023. Nos. 1-19-0572, 1-19-0783, 1-21-0017 & 1-21-0185 (Cons.)

(4) over $2 million in attorney fees and costs, and (5) $50,000 in sanctions under Illinois Supreme

Court Rule 137 (eff. Jan. 1, 2018).

¶2 On appeal, respondent argues that the circuit court (1) lacked statutory authority to modify

the Thai judgment, (2) erred by applying pre-July 1, 2017, Illinois child support laws, (3) abused

its discretion by barring the testimony of respondent’s immigration expert, (4) abused its discretion

by modifying the child support award in the Thai judgment and making the modified child support

retroactive with interest and creating child support trusts, (5) abused its discretion by adopting the

terms of the trust agreements, (6) failed to give respondent credit for child support payments and

overfunded the child support trusts, (7) erred in awarding attorney fees and costs, and (8) abused

its discretion by ordering him to pay $50,000 in sanctions for violating Rule 137.

¶3 We affirm in part, reverse in part, vacate in part, and remand for further proceedings.

¶4 Respondent is well educated and has had a long and successful career in business. He is

married to Susan H. Respondent visited Thailand several times each year between 2001 and 2009

and met petitioner. Petitioner studied marketing in college and, when she lived in Thailand,

operated two beauty salons and a spa.

¶5 The parties began a romantic relationship in Thailand in 2001, when petitioner was 23 and

respondent was 53. Over the course of several years, they would meet when respondent visited

Thailand. In 2008, petitioner gave birth in Thailand to the triplets via in vitro fertilization using

respondent’s sperm and petitioner’s eggs. Respondent financially supported petitioner and the

triplets until September 2009, when he told Susan about the triplets.

¶6 As a result, petitioner filed suit against respondent in Thailand. In December 2010, the Thai

court adjudicated him to be the father of the triplets based on DNA test results and ordered him to

pay $500 per month for the support of each of the triplets. This judgment was affirmed by

2 Nos. 1-19-0572, 1-19-0783, 1-21-0017 & 1-21-0185 (Cons.)

Thailand’s intermediate appellate and supreme courts. Respondent, however, failed to pay any

child support.

¶7 Petitioner and the triplets left Thailand in May 2012 and currently reside in the United

Kingdom with petitioner’s husband, Winton, a British citizen.

¶8 In June 2011, petitioner filed the petition that gave rise to this action and sought

recognition, enforcement, and modification of the Thai judgment. The circuit court, in August

2013, enrolled the Thai judgment under the principles of comity, determined that respondent owed

$76,242.46 in past due child support under that judgment, and ordered him to pay that sum within

30 days. In July 2015, the circuit court stayed all matters while the Thai judgment was under review

in the Supreme Court of Thailand. The stay was lifted in May 2016 after the Supreme Court of

Thailand issued a certificate of case finality. In January 2017, this court affirmed the August 2013

judgment of the circuit court. In re Parentage of A.H., 2017 IL App (1st) 133703.

¶9 Meanwhile, in December 2016, respondent sued petitioner in the United Kingdom,

claiming that she had violated an agreement to keep their relationship private. In October 2017,

the court struck the suit, holding that it was an abuse of process. Respondent unsuccessfully

appealed that decision to two courts of review in the United Kingdom.

¶ 10 In April 2017, petitioner filed a three-count petition in the circuit court of Cook County.

Count I sought a modification of the Thai judgment so as to increase child support. Count II sought

an injunction directing respondent to execute the requisite paperwork for the triplets to be

recognized as United States citizens and an order requiring respondent to pay petitioner’s attorney

fees and costs. Count III sought an order registering the Thai judgment.

3 Nos. 1-19-0572, 1-19-0783, 1-21-0017 & 1-21-0185 (Cons.)

¶ 11 Respondent moved to dismiss the petition, arguing that the circuit court lacked statutory

authority to modify the Thai judgment under section 615 of the Uniform Interstate Family Support

Act (Support Act) (750 ILCS 22/615 (West 2016)).

¶ 12 In October 2017, the circuit court appointed a representative for the children and later

converted that representative to their guardian ad litem (GAL). In March 2018, the court approved

the GAL’s costs to travel to the United Kingdom to meet with the triplets, petitioner, and her

husband. The GAL later filed a report of his findings.

¶ 13 On May 2, 2018, petitioner filed an emergency motion for a hearing on her request for

injunctive relief against respondent, alleging that she and the triplets were facing potential

deportation from the United Kingdom to Thailand because they did not have proof of sufficient

means and financial support. Petitioner asked that respondent be required to establish a trust on

behalf of the triplets with a minimum of £80,000 to cover the costs of private health insurance and

schooling.

¶ 14 During argument on the emergency motion, petitioner informed the court that she did not

have the financial resources to meet the triplets’ medical and academic needs. She could not bring

an action in the United Kingdom courts because of her immigration issues, and they had no

passports and could not travel to seek relief in the courts of Thailand. The circuit court found that

respondent’s failure to comply with the Thai judgment and strategy of litigating this matter “to

death” resulted in the emergency situation the triplets now faced. The court denied respondent’s

motion to dismiss the petition and ordered him to complete the documentation concerning the

triplets’ United States citizenship. Additionally, the court set deadlines for respondent to respond

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In re Parentage of A.H., A.H., & A.H.
2023 IL App (1st) 190572 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2023)

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2023 IL App (1st) 190572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-parentage-of-ah-illappct-2023.