Jwl by Jlm v. Ajp
This text of 672 N.E.2d 966 (Jwl by Jlm v. Ajp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
In re the Paternity of J.W.L., by her next friend J.L.M., Appellants-Petitioners,
v.
A.J.P., Appellee-Respondent.
Court of Appeals of Indiana.
Pamela Carter, Attorney General, Jon Laramore, Deputy Attorney General, Indianapolis, for Appellant.
Michael Cheerva, Gale M. Phelps, Phelps & Fara, Indianapolis, for Appellee.
KIRSCH, Judge.
J.W.L. (Child), by her next friend J.L.M. (Mother), appeals the dismissal of her paternity action brought against appellee-respondent, A.J.P. The issue presented is whether a child is barred by principles of full faith and credit or res judicata from bringing a paternity action in Indiana when a foreign divorce judgment lists the child as a child of the marriage between the child's mother and someone other than the person named in the Indiana paternity action.
We reverse.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Mother was married to J.A.L. (Ex-husband) on July 11, 1981 in Melbourne, Florida. Child was born on January 27, 1983. This marriage was dissolved by the Circuit Court of Brevard County, Florida on January 14, 1984. Mother alleged in her dissolution petition that Child was a "child born of this marriage" and confirmed that fact through her testimony at the dissolution hearing. Record at 248, 256. In its final judgment of dissolution, the Florida court referred to Child as "the parties' minor child," awarded *967 custody to Mother with reasonable visitation to Ex-husband, and ordered Ex-husband to pay child support. Record at 244.
Eleven years later, on March 7, 1995, Mother filed a petition in the Marion Superior Court (the trial court) to establish paternity of Child in A.J.P. Mother amended the petition on July 17, 1995, to join Child as a necessary party to the action. On A.J.P.'s motion, the trial court dismissed the paternity petition for the following reasons: 1) the Florida dissolution judgment determined the issue of paternity and was entitled to Full Faith and Credit in Indiana; and 2) principles of res judicata barred relitigation of the paternity issue.
DISCUSSION AND DECISION
I. Full Faith and Credit
Full faith and credit has its origin in Article 4, Section 1 of the United States Constitution which provides that "[f]ull faith and credit shall be given in each state to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other state." The full faith and credit clause "imposes an obligation on each state to enforce the rights and duties validly created under the laws of other states, and there is a constitutional presumption that the judgment of a state court should be afforded the same credit, validity and effect in every other court of the United States which it had in the state where it was pronounced." Lucas v. Estate of Stavos, 609 N.E.2d 1114, 1119 (Ind.Ct.App.1993), trans. denied.
In 1994, the Indiana General Assembly amended the paternity statute to add a full faith and credit provision:
"A court or Title IV-D agency shall give full faith and credit to a paternity determination made by any other state or foreign jurisdiction regardless of whether the determination is made through:
(1) a voluntary acknowledgment; or
(2) a judicial or an administrative process."
IC 31-6-6.1-20. The addition of this section simply codified full faith and credit principles in the paternity context; it did not create new or different principles to apply to paternity determinations. For this reason, the Florida dissolution judgment is subject to the pre-statute constitutional presumption that it be afforded the same credit, validity and effect in Indiana which it had in Florida. See Lucas, 609 N.E.2d at 1119.
The initial question, then, is whether a Florida court would give preclusive effect to the prior dissolution judgment in a subsequent paternity action. Florida case law on this subject falls into three categories. First, are those cases involving post-dissolution enforcement of support proceedings in which an ex-husband challenged paternity for the first time. In each case, the final divorce judgment precluded the ex-husband from relitigating the paternity issue. See Florida Dep't of Health & Rehabilitative Services v. Robison, 629 So.2d 1000 (Fla.Ct.App.1993); Vereen v. Vereen, 581 So.2d 1004 (Fla.Ct. App.1991); Florida Dep't of Health and Rehabilitative Services v. Wright, 498 So.2d 1008 (Fla.Ct.App.1986); Decker v. Hunter, 460 So.2d 1014 (Fla.Ct.App.1984); Johnson v. Johnson, 395 So.2d 640 (Fla.Ct.App.1981).
The second category of cases involves a putative father seeking to establish paternity of a child born during the marriage of the mother to another man, which marriage had been dissolved. In these cases, the putative father was not precluded from seeking to establish paternity because he was not a party to the prior dissolution. See Whitney v. Hall, 434 So.2d 40 (Fla.Ct.App.1983); Nostrand v. Olivieri, 427 So.2d 374 (Fla.Ct. App.1983).
The third category involves only one case, In re Estate of Robertson, 520 So.2d 99 (Fla. Ct.App.1988). In that case, the child was born during her mother's marriage to another man, and the dissolution decree stated that the child was born of the marriage. The court held that the child was not precluded from subsequently attempting to establish paternity in the putative father because the child was not a party to the dissolution action.
The present case falls into the third category. Child was not a party to the dissolution proceeding between Mother and Ex-husband. Under Robertson, Child would not *968 be precluded "by res judicata, collateral estoppel or estoppel by judgment from seeking an adjudication of the issue of paternity" in Florida. Robertson, 520 So.2d at 102. Giving the Florida dissolution judgment the same credit, validity and effect in Indiana, we conclude that full faith and credit principles do not preclude Child from pursuing the present paternity action.
II. Res Judicata
Next, we consider whether, under Indiana law, the Florida dissolution judgment is res judicata on the issue of paternity. Our analysis begins with In re S.R.I., 602 N.E.2d 1014 (Ind.1992), in which our supreme court considered the preclusive effect of an Indiana divorce judgment on a subsequent paternity action brought by a putative father who was not a party to the dissolution. The court stated that the doctrine of res judicata "cannot control in a case such as this where the petitioner was not a party to the dissolution action." Id. at 1016. The court observed that even if the dissolution decree found the child to be born of the marriage, the decree alone would not be res judicata on the issue of paternity because:
"`Such an order does not affect the child's status, especially when the child is not a party to the action.... The finding that the child "was born as the issue of this marriage" amounts to no more than a finding that he was born to the wife during the marriage .... (footnote omitted.)'
"In other words, dissolution findings are binding on the parties to the dissolution. [The child] was not a party to the dissolution.
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