Matter of Marriage of Crocker

971 P.2d 469, 157 Or. App. 651, 1998 Ore. App. LEXIS 2246
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 16, 1998
Docket8706-64201; CA A99888
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 971 P.2d 469 (Matter of Marriage of Crocker) 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
Matter of Marriage of Crocker, 971 P.2d 469, 157 Or. App. 651, 1998 Ore. App. LEXIS 2246 (Or. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

*653 ARMSTRONG, J.

Mother appeals from a judgment dismissing her motion to modify child support. The trial court concluded that the statute authorizing the modification, ORS 107.108, 1 was unconstitutional. We reverse.

Mother and father were divorced in 1987. At that time, the parties’ three daughters were ages 11, 8 and 5. The dissolution judgment awarded mother custody of the children and ordered father to pay $200 per month in child support for each child. On mother’s motion, the court modified father’s support obligation in 1995, ordering father to pay $239 per month in support for each of his minor daughters and $464 per month in support for the parties’ oldest daughter, who had turned 18 and was attending school.

In 1997, mother moved to modify father’s support obligation to account for the fact that the parties’ second *654 daughter had turned 18 and was planning to attend college in California. Father moved to dismiss her motion on the ground that ORS 107.108, the statute that authorizes a court to order a divorced parent to support the parent’s children while the children are attending school, is unconstitutional.

The trial court agreed with father. It concluded that “ORS 107.108 permits a child support obligation to be imposed” on “divorced or separated parents of qualifying children between ages 18 and 21” but not on married parents of children who have the same characteristics. The trial court also concluded that

“ORS 107.108 grants a privilege, i.e., the right to seek and obtain an order compelling the payment of child support, to one class of citizens — qualifying children between ages 18 and 21 whose parents are divorced or separated — that is not granted to children in like circumstances whose parents are married.”

Because it concluded that there was no rational basis for the distinction made by ORS 107.108, it concluded that the statute violated Article I, section 20, of the Oregon Constitution, and the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Accordingly, the trial court dismissed mother’s motion to modify father’s child support obligation. Mother appeals.

On appeal, mother, as well as the Oregon Attorney General and the Support Enforcement Division of the Department of Justice who appeared amici curiae, argue that ORS 107.108 does not violate either constitutional provision. Before turning to that issue, we need to address an issue that mother has raised about father’s ability to challenge ORS 107.108. In its decision, the trial court focused on the privilege that ORS 107.108 grants to children of divorced or separated parents to obtain court-ordered support while they attend school. The court held that the grant of that privilege violated Article I, section 20, because there was no rational basis for the legislature’s decision to give that privilege to children whose parents are divorced or separated while denying it to others. Mother argues that, because father is not a member of the disfavored class of children who are denied the *655 privilege of obtaining court-ordered support, he is not someone who can challenge the grant of the privilege to others. We disagree. Father is the divorced parent of children who are attending school, so he is subject to the requirement in ORS 107.108 that he provide court-ordered support to them. Because father is directly affected by the decision embodied in ORS 107.108 to grant a privilege to his children that is denied to others, he can challenge the grant of that privilege.

Moreover, the grant of the privilege of court-ordered support to children of divorced or separated parents embodies a corollary grant of an immunity from court-ordered support to parents who are not divorced or separated and who have children attending school. Father is a member of a disfavored class of parents who are denied that immunity, so he unquestionably is someone who can challenge the grant of that immunity. Based on the issues in this case, it does not matter whether we focus on whether ORS 107.108 violates Article I, section 20, or the Fourteenth Amendment, because it grants a privilege to some children that is denied to others or because it grants an immunity to some parents that is denied to others. Because the focus of father’s arguments on appeal is on the immunity from court-ordered support that is given to married parents but denied to divorced or separated parents, we will focus on that immunity as well.

Article I, section 20, provides that

“[n]o law shall be passed granting to any citizen or class of citizens privileges, or immunities, which, upon the same terms, shall not equally belong to all citizens.”

Father’s challenge to ORS 107.108 is based on a contention that the statute grants an immunity to a class of people rather than to specific people, and that there is no rational basis for the distinction that the statute makes among classes of people. 2 Given that focus, father must establish the following in order to prevail on his claim that ORS 107.108 violates Article I, section 20: (1) that ORS 107.108 grants to a class of people an immunity that is not granted to the class to *656 which father belongs; (2) that the class to which father belongs is a “true class,” i.e., one that is based on personal or social characteristics that exist independently of the distinctions created by the statute; and (3) that “ ‘the distinction between classes * * * has no rational foundation in light of the [statute’s] purposes.’ ” City of Lake Oswego, 121 Or App at 435-36 (quoting Northwest Advancement v. Bureau of Labor, 96 Or App 133, 142, 772 P2d 934,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
971 P.2d 469, 157 Or. App. 651, 1998 Ore. App. LEXIS 2246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-marriage-of-crocker-orctapp-1998.