Marriage of Sawyer

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 20, 2020
DocketH046558
StatusPublished

This text of Marriage of Sawyer (Marriage of Sawyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marriage of Sawyer, (Cal. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

Filed 11/20/20

CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

SIXTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

In re the Marriage of ROSEMARY and H046558 JAMES SAWYER. (Santa Cruz County Super. Ct. No. FL007773) ROSEMARY SAWYER,

Respondent,

v.

JAMES SAWYER,

Appellant;

SANTA CRUZ COUNTY DEPARTMENT OF CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES,

Appellant.

In 2001, a Minnesota state court ordered appellant James Sawyer to pay $89,582.15 in child support arrears to his ex-wife, respondent Rosemary Sawyer,1 for their two children. James was by then living in California, and in 2005 the Minnesota order was registered for enforcement purposes in Santa Cruz County Superior Court pursuant to the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act.

1 The trial court order at issue here refers to James’s ex-wife as Rosemary Sawyer. In some places, the record references her as Rosemary Hildebrandt. For clarity, we refer to James and Rosemary by their first names. Rosemary has not participated in these appeals. In 2018, in connection with registration in California of a renewed judgment from Minnesota, the trial court in Santa Cruz County stayed enforcement of a portion of James’s child support arrears determined by the 2001 Minnesota order because the children had intermittently lived with James between 1993 and 2002. The trial court found the remainder of the arrears enforceable against James. Both James and appellant Santa Cruz County Department of Child Support Services (the Department), which has assisted in the enforcement and collection of James’s child support arrears, have appealed the trial court’s 2018 order. The Department contends that the trial court lacked authority under the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act to stay the arrears owed by James because the 2001 Minnesota order at issue was registered and confirmed in California in 2005, and James did not timely challenge its registration. We agree and reverse the portion of the 2018 order staying enforcement of $28,890 of the arrears. James appeals the portion of the trial court’s order finding that the remainder of the arrears ($60,692.15) was enforceable. We reject his claims of error and affirm that portion of the 2018 order. I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND A. Background2 James and Rosemary were married from 1978 to 1989 and have two (now adult) sons together: the elder born in 1977 (older son) and the younger in 1984 (younger son). James and Rosemary divorced in Minnesota, and a judgment and decree of dissolution ending their marriage was entered in that state in January 1989. James was ordered by the Minnesota court to pay $1,000 per month in child support to Rosemary. Shortly following the divorce, James moved to Santa Clara County, California. Thereafter, Rosemary requested assistance from the State of California in enforcing the

2 We take these undisputed background facts from James’s sworn testimony at the October 23, 2018 hearing, which preceded the December 18, 2018 order at issue in these appeals. 2 Minnesota child support order. In January 1991, child support enforcement proceedings began in Santa Clara County. As a result of those proceedings, James was either ordered to or stipulated to pay $12,000 in child support arrears and was ordered to pay $100 per month in fulfillment of that obligation. A few years later, in June 1993, older son, then about 16 years old, moved from Minnesota to California and lived with James until July 1994. James did not seek a modification of the ongoing child support order after older son moved in with him. James testified that modifying the support order “wasn’t on [his] radar” at that point and “it seemed to [him] that the whole accounting of child support would be more sensibly done at the end rather than in the middle.” Around 1997, James moved to Santa Cruz County, and the enforcement proceeding against him was transferred to the Santa Cruz County Superior Court.3 In 1999, younger son moved to California and lived with James for several years. Apparently around this 1999 time period, James asked his Minnesota attorney to notify the Minnesota court that younger son was living with him and was no longer living with Rosemary. However, James did not then seek a modification of the ongoing child support order in the Minnesota court. James testified that his attorney asked or tried to get Rosemary to sign a stipulation to the effect that younger son was in his primary custody, but that effort was unsuccessful. B. Procedural History 1. 2001 Court Proceedings in Minnesota On February 13, 2001, a Minnesota district court issued the child support order that underlies the appeals before us (the Minnesota 2001 order). Prior to the issuance of that order, the parties appeared at a hearing in Minnesota in January 2001. Rosemary,

3 We take judicial notice of the 1997 notice of receipt filed in Santa Cruz County and 1997 motion and order transferring cause. 3 Rosemary’s attorney, and James’s attorney Robert Hajek appeared. James was not personally present. The Minnesota 2001 order amended the 1989 judgment and decree of dissolution, awarded physical custody of younger son to James, and ordered Rosemary going forward to pay James child support for younger son. The order also addressed the amount of child support arrears that James owed Rosemary. The order stated that Rosemary had “alleged child support arrears owing by [James] to [Rosemary] in the amount of $89,582.15” and declared that “judgment shall be entered on said arrears unless, within sixty (60) days from the date of this Order, the parties agree that a different amount is owing, or [James] proceeds before this Court by Notice of Motion and Motion within that sixty (60) day period.” This arrears amount was apparently not challenged by either party within the 60 days and, in April 2001, the Minnesota district court entered judgment against James for child support arrears in the amount of $89,582.15. 2. 2005 Proceedings in California In 2005, the Minnesota 2001 order was registered in California.4 The notice of registration reflects that the Santa Cruz County Superior Court clerk sent James a copy of the order on March 18, 2005. The notice advised James that he had 25 days from the mailing date to request a hearing to contest the validity or enforcement of the registered order. There is no evidence in the record that James contested or took any court action in connection with the 2005 registration in California of the Minnesota 2001 order requiring him to pay $89,582.15 in child support arrears to Rosemary.

4 The Minnesota order that was registered in California was the February 2001 conditional order and not the judgment entered in April 2001. It is not clear on this record why the April 2001 judgment was not registered in California, but neither party has raised this issue in the trial court or in this court on appeal. We will therefore assume, as do the parties, that the February 2001 order was the appropriate order to register in California. 4 3. 2007-2009 Court Proceedings in Minnesota and 2009 Registration in California In 2007, James appeared before a Minnesota child support magistrate to challenge the 2001 Minnesota order issued by the district court. James sought in the Minnesota court a determination that he owed no arrears to Rosemary. After various continuances, James withdrew his motion. Approximately one year later, in late 2008, James again moved for a determination that he owed no arrears to Rosemary. In early January 2009, the Minnesota child support magistrate determined that James’s motion amounted to a motion to vacate the 2001 judgment, decided that it did not have jurisdiction to vacate a final judgment entered in Minnesota district court, and dismissed James’s motion.

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Marriage of Sawyer, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marriage-of-sawyer-calctapp-2020.