Konon v. Konon, No. Fa87 0332956 (Jul. 27, 1994)

1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 6827-J, 9 Conn. L. Rptr. 1075
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1994
DocketNo. FA87 0332956
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 6827-J (Konon v. Konon, No. Fa87 0332956 (Jul. 27, 1994)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Konon v. Konon, No. Fa87 0332956 (Jul. 27, 1994), 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 6827-J, 9 Conn. L. Rptr. 1075 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION

Dwyer Sheridan Fitzgerald for plaintiff.

Keith W. Acker for defendant. The sole issue in question is the defendant father's objection to the plaintiff's demand for immediate wage withholding to secure the child support order.

There are two children, now age 13 and 10. The original judgment provided joint custody with shared physical custody. Support was ordered payable to the plaintiff. The most recent modification, in October, 1991, set the order at $95.00 per week per child, or a total of $190.00 per week. CT Page 6827-K

Since the inception of the dissolution action, there has been constant adversarial activity in this file. This was not abated by the entry of the dissolution judgment. The latest spate of motions include motions by each parent seeking sole custody.1 The matter was referred for a study by the Family Relations Division, which remains pending.

The plaintiff mother has applied for IV-D enforcement services. General Statutes § 17-578(h). She has requested immediate wage withholding. At her request, the Support Enforcement Division caused a delinquency notice to be served on the defendant. General Statutes §§ 52-362(c), 52-362g.

The defendant filed an objection to immediate wage withholding. He claims that the amount of the alleged delinquency is incorrect, that he is not more than thirty days delinquent in his support, that the children in fact live with him, that he is the custodial parent, and that he provides 100% of the support for the children through direct expenditures.

The record verifies that at this time, custody remains joint and shared, and that there is a support order running to the plaintiff mother. Both parents now seek sole custody of the children. Determination of the custody motions could trigger a radical change in the support orders. However, both parties indicate that the family relations custody study is months from completion. No change of legal custody will take place until the study is done.

The defendant claims that he is not more than 30 days delinquent in his support. In fact, he claims he is not behind at all. The support enforcement division shows an arrearage of $760.00. However, it concedes that Mr. Konon made six regular payments in the month of June, and that some payments may not have posted to his account. At the hearing, the court declined to take detailed testimony on the amount of the delinquency, if any. There is no contempt citation pending, and for the reasons hereinafter set forth, the court finds that the existence or amount of any delinquency is not a predicate to the request for immediate wage withholding, or the objection, under the procedure employed.

Our wage withholding statute provides that "[t]he superior court and any family support magistrate shall issue an order for withholding pursuant to this section against the earnings of an CT Page 6827-L obligor to enforce a support order when the support order is entered or modified or when the obligor is before the court in an enforcement proceeding. The court shall order the withholding to be effective immediately or may, for cause or pursuant to an agreement by the parties, order a contingent withholding. . . ." General Statutes § 52-362(b). When the last modification of the support order was determined in October, 1991, the parties both signed a waiver of immediate wage withholding. The court,Norko, J., ordered contingent wage withholding. Another signed waiver dated March 2, 1993 appears in the file.

The statute2 prescribes a procedure for demanding immediate wage withholding upon delinquency in support where a contingent wage withholding was previously ordered. A delinquency notice must be served on the obligor, which must provide specified information to the obligor. General Statutes § 52-362(c). The statute directs that the obligor be given notice that he may contest the claimed delinquency, seek modification of the withholding order, claim any lawful exemption, or "seek modification of the support order by a proper motion filed with the court or family support magistrate." The notice form must include a space wherein the obligor can state his defenses. Mr. Konan in fact utilized the response space on his form to state his defenses, and had a copy of his response served on the plaintiff.

Once a response is filed by the obligor, the statute requires a short calendar hearing, and that the court determine the claim within 45 days of the hearing. General Statutes § 52-362(e). Immediate withholding must be ordered "[u]nless the obligor successfully shows cause why the withholding order should not take effect. . . ." Such a showing may be based on mistake of fact, an exemption, or the obligor ". . . may file by motion a modification or defense to the support order to be enforced by the withholding." General Statutes § 52-362(e).

In December, 1992, the Office of Child Support Enforcement of the United States Department of Health Human Services (hereinafter OCSE) notified the Bureau of Child Support Enforcement of the Connecticut Department of Human Resources, which was then3 the IV-D agency of the state, that the Connecticut wage withholding statute was in apparent conflict with federal regulations. Letter of Gene R. Cavallero, Program Manager, Office of Child Support Enforcement, United States Department of Health Human Services, December 10, 1992 (hereinafter cited OCSE Letter) (The letter is set forth in CT Page 6827-M Appendix A). Although there is no federal preemption in child support law, compliance with federal regulations is necessary to obtain federal funding for the state support enforcement plan.45 C.F.R. § 301.10; see Collier v. Jennings, 1 S.M.D. 92, 97;3 CSCR 204 (1987).

Two apparent conflicts were identified. First, federal regulations provide that the custodial parent may demand immediate wage withholding at any time regardless of the amount of the arrearage and without establishing a delinquency. 45 C.F.R. § 301.100(c)(1)(ii).4 Secondly, federal regulations provide that the only allowable defense is mistake of fact, which is limited to an error in the amount of the support order or a mistake of identity of the obligor. 45 C.F.R. § 301.100(c)(3); OCSE Letter.

An opinion of the Attorney General was requested to determine whether or not the apparent conflict existed. In an opinion dated October 4, 1993, Attorney General Richard Blumenthal issued an opinion stating that "Connecticut's wage withholding laws, and related child support legislation, meet the federal requirements." Op. Atty. Gen. October 4, 1993, 2 (the opinion of the Attorney General, which as of this writing is not yet in the official compilation, and hereinafter cited "Op. Atty. Gen.," is set forth in Appendix B.)

The Attorney General's route to this conclusion is somewhat elliptical. He first noted that General Statutes § 17-578(a) created the Bureau of Child Support Enforcement and designated it as the IV-D agency for Connecticut. The Bureau is authorized to implement child support services "including the administration of withholding of earnings in accordance with the provisions of Title IV-D of the Social Security Act, as amended." General Statutes § 17-578(a); Op. Atty. Gen., 2.

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Bluebook (online)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 6827-J, 9 Conn. L. Rptr. 1075, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/konon-v-konon-no-fa87-0332956-jul-27-1994-connsuperct-1994.