In re the Marriage of Mannix

932 P.2d 70, 146 Or. App. 36, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedJanuary 29, 1997
Docket94C-33546; CA A88828
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 932 P.2d 70 (In re the Marriage of Mannix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of Mannix, 932 P.2d 70, 146 Or. App. 36, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 65 (Or. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinions

DEITS, J.

This appeal by father involves several judgments and the proceedings regarding them that occurred in Marion County Circuit Court arising out of Jackson County support judgments.

The facts underlying the judgments are somewhat complicated. In April 1985, a judgment dissolving the marriage of the parties was entered in Jackson County. It required father to pay child support for the parties’ two children of $175 per month per child. In June 1985, the Jackson County Circuit Court granted mother an additional money judgment against father for unpaid spousal and child support in the amount of $5,849. That judgment represented sums payable under a pendente lite order of the court that existed before the parties’ marriage was dissolved. In April 1994, the State of Oregon, on behalf of mother, notified father that unless he objected to a claimed support delinquency of $33,000, that amount would be certified to the court and the Department of Human Resources and that legal process would issue for its collection. When father was served with the notice, his trial counsel requested that the dissolution case file be transferred from Jackson County to Marion County, where mother now lives. Father resides outside of Oregon. Pursuant to father’s request, in May 1994, the state moved to transfer the record and files to Marion County under ORS 25.100. The Jackson County Circuit Court granted the state’s motion and ordered that certified copies of the records, files and transcripts of testimony in the original proceedings be transmitted to the clerk of Marion County.

In June 1994, father filed an objection to the notice in the Marion County Circuit Court. In November 1994, mother filed a motion in Marion County to renew the J ackson County judgments pursuant to ORS 18.360. Thereafter, the Marion County Circuit Court entered an order granting mother’s motion “renewing” the Jackson County judgment on November 15, 1994. Subsequently, the court held a hearing on father’s objection to the notice of the delinquency. The result of that hearing was the following judgments entered May 1995:

[39]*39“1) [Mother] is awarded a judgment against [father] in the amount of $5,177.57 representing accrued interest, through April 5, 1995, on the prior $5,849 support arrearage judgment in Jackson County dated June 5,1985 which was renewed on by this Court on November 15,1994.
“2) The Court recites [mother’s] Jackson County support judgment against [father] dated June 5, 1985, in the amount of $5,849.00, which is still owing and was renewed by this Court on November 15, 1994. In view of paragraph one, any additional interest on the $5,849 judgment shall begin on April 6,1995.
“3) [Mother] is awarded a judgment against [father] in the amount of $14,825.00 representing unpaid child support through December 31, 1994.
“4) [Mother] is awarded a judgment against [father] in the amount of $7,909.00 representing interest on said unpaid child support described in paragraph three.” (Emphasis in the original.)

Father appeals from these judgments.

Father first assigns error to the judgment in which the court awarded mother $5,177 in accrued interest on the support judgment for $5,849 entered in 1985 in Jackson County. Father argues that Marion County did not have jurisdiction to renew the Jackson County judgment and, therefore, it was improper to award a judgment for interest on that judgment. The state and mother argue that because father did not appeal in a timely manner (within 30 days after its entry in November 1994) from the renewed judgment, that judgment became final and is not subject to collateral attack through an appeal from the May 1995 judgment.

Once a judgment has been entered and the time for appeal has expired, “procedural errors” are submerged in the judgment and are ordinarily beyond remedy, whereas jurisdictional defects in some situations can be a basis for future avoidance of the judgment. Ketcham v. Selles, 304 Or 529, 534, 748 P2d 67 (1987). Here, we hold that because father did not appeal directly from the order renewing the 1985 judgment, he can prevail on his collateral attack only if he can demonstrate that the Marion County Circuit Court lacked jurisdiction to renew the judgment in that county.

[40]*40ORS 18.360 grants authority to the circuit or district court for the county in which the judgment originally was entered to renew a judgment. Specifically it provides, in pertinent part:

“(1) Whenever, after the entry of a judgment, a period of 10 years elapses, the judgment and any docketed or recorded lien thereof shall expire. However, before the expiration of 10 years the circuit or district court for the county in which the judgment originally was entered, on motion, may renew the judgment and cause a notation in the register and the judgment docket indicating the renewal of the judgment to be made.”

Marion County was not the county in which the $5,177 judgment was originally entered. Nonetheless, the Jackson County court file containing the judgments was transferred to Marion County pursuant to ORS 25.100 and ORS 25.110. The question is whether those statutes gave the Marion County Circuit Court subject matter jurisdiction over the support obligations imposed by the Jackson County court.

ORS 25.100(l)(a) provides:

‘With respect to any order or decree entered or docketed * * * the court may, upon motion of the party entitled to such support payments, order that certified copies of the files, records and prepared transcripts of testimony in the original proceeding be transmitted to the clerk of the circuit court of the county in which the moving party or the defaulting party resides or in which property of the defaulting party is located!.]”

ORS 25.110(1) provides:

“Upon receipt of such certified copies referred to in ORS 25.100, the circuit court of the county to which such certified copies have been transmitted shall have jurisdiction to compel compliance with such order or decree the same as if it were the court which made and entered the original order or decree for the payment of support. The only court having jurisdiction to modify any provision of the original order or decree is the court having original jurisdiction of the cause in which such order or decree was entered or the circuit court of the county in which either party resides if that court has received the certified copies referred to in ORS 25.100. ” (Emphasis supplied.)

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
932 P.2d 70, 146 Or. App. 36, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-mannix-orctapp-1997.