Notah v. Francis

5 Navajo Rptr. 147
CourtNavajo Nation Supreme Court
DecidedJune 19, 1987
DocketNo. A-CV-03-87
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Navajo Rptr. 147 (Notah v. Francis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Navajo Nation Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Notah v. Francis, 5 Navajo Rptr. 147 (navajo 1987).

Opinion

OPINION

Opinion delivered by

Tso, Chief Justice.

This case raises the questions: (1) whether the statute of limitations can bar enforcement of an order awarding child support; (2) whether unsolicited in-kind contributions must be credited to reduce child support payments due; and (3) whether a party’s overall financial situation must be considered in determining the amount of child support payments.

The final judgment entered by the Chinle District Court on May 7, 1979, ordered the appellant, Danny Francis, to pay $150.00 per month to the appellee, Genevieve Notah, for the support of their child. Mr. Francis made one payment on August 20, 1979, despite Ms. Notah’s requests for payment in July, 1979, December, 1983, and January and February, 1984. Mr. Francis has remarried, and has three children by his present wife.

On June 16, 1986, Ms. Notah petitioned the Chinle District Court for an order to show cause why Mr. Francis should not be held in contempt for failure to comply with the May, 1979, judgment. On August 4,1986, the district court found Mr. Francis in contempt, and imposed a penalty which was suspended in lieu of his resumption of support payments. The district court took the issues now on appeal under advisement, and on December 16, 1986, the court entered its decision ordering Mr. Francis to pay $12,600.00 in delinquent support payments over three years. The court [148]*148further ordered that in-kind contributions made by Mr. Francis could not be credited to reduce the delinquent amount. Mr. Francis moved for reconsideration on January 7, 1987, which was denied, and this appeal followed.

I. Statute of Limitations

Mr. Francis argues that Ms. Notah’s claim for unpaid child support is an action on a debt, and that, because it was brought over seven years after the final judgment awarding child support, it is barred by the statute of limitations. 7 N.T.C. §6021 (1985). Further, Mr. Francis argues that the judgment can be enforced only by a writ of execution, which must be brought within five years of the original judgment. 7 N.T.C. §705 (1985). Although the statute of limitations is tolled if the person bringing the action is a minor, 7 N.T.C. §602(f) (1985), Ms. Notah brought this action in her own name and on her own behalf, and thus Mr. Francis contends that such an action is not tolled, but falls under the five year limitation.

The district court rejected this argument by deciding that child support is a continuing obligation which is not subject to the statute of limitations. The court based its decision in part on an Arizona Supreme Court decision, State v. Nerini, 61 Ariz. 503, 151 P. 2d 983 (1944). However, this Court has long recognized a father’s absolute obligation under Navajo tradition to provide support for his children. In Tom v. Tom, 4 Nav. R. 12 (1983), we held:

It is plain under the customary law of the Navajo people that a father of a child owes that child, or at least its mother, the duty of support. It is said that if a man has a child by a woman and fails to pay the woman money to support it, “He has stolen the child.” In other words, the man who receives the benefit and joy of having a child is a thief if he does not share in the worldly burdens of taking care of it. This Navajo custom lays the groundrule of support, and the conclusion to be drawn from the principle given is that a man must pay as much as is necessary for the child, given his abilities and resources at any given time.

Id. at 13. As this Court said in Arviso v. Dahozy, 3 Nav. R. 84, 85 (1982), the primary party to be considered in such cases is the child. Thus, child support is not a right of the mother to payments, which may be waived if the mother does not assert it within a given time, but an obligation of the father to his child, continuing for as long as the child needs that support.

[149]*149In Begay v. Brown, 3 Nav. R. 103 (1982), this Court considered the similar question of whether the statute of limitations barred the petitioner’s action for forcible entry and detainer to recover property rights awarded her under a final divorce judgment. We held that the original judgment obligated the respondent to respect the petitioner’s right to possession whenever she chose to assert it, because the respondent’s presence on the land was a continuing trespass, against which limitation did not run. Id. at 104.

In this case, Mr. Francis’s obligation is clear, because the duty to provide support imposed by the court joins with the natural duty a father owes his child under Navajo custom. Although support might be paid to the mother, it is a duty owed to the child, continuing for as long as it is needed or for the period indicated in the court order, and it cannot be waived by the mother’s failure to take legal action. Therefore, we hold that orders providing for child support payments, or for payment of arrearage resulting from delinquent support payments, cannot be barred by the statute of limitations, the doctrine of laches, or any reliance by the father on the mother’s previous failure to act to enforce the father’s obligation. We base this holding neither on state law nor on any tolling of the statute of limitations.2 Rather, our holding rests on the absolute obligation established by Navajo tradition to provide for the support of one’s children, and the public policy that, in such cases, the child’s welfare must take precedence over a technical analysis of the extent of the parents’ legal rights and duties.

Mr. Francis also argues that the child lives with her maternal grandmother, and not with Ms. Notah, and that he therefore should not have to make payments to Ms. Notah. This reasoning is unacceptable because the obligation is to the child, and not to the mother, and therefore it does not depend on the mother’s particular arrangements for caring for the child. If Mr. Francis’s support payments are not being used for the child’s benefit, he may bring this to the attention of the district court, but such arguments will not justify escaping the duty to make support payments to the child. The best interest of the child is always the overriding consideration, and the district courts must look at the parents’ arrangements with the aim of promoting the child’s welfare.

II. In-Kind Payments

Mr. Francis argues that the district court erred in denying credit against support arrearage for his in-kind contributions of clothing and a bedroom [150]*150set. However, he cites no precedent supporting this contention, nor can this Court find any. The district court’s judgment of May 7,1979, set support payments at $150.00 per month, without mentioning in-kind contributions. The court never modified that judgment, and Mr. Francis does not assert that Ms. Notah ever agreed to substitute in-kind contributions for the payments ordered under the final judgment.

This Court has no objection to in-kind contributions in lieu of money payments in complying with court-ordered child support. As a matter of policy, this method of payment might be very useful in cases where, for example, the father is unemployed, and would be better able to provide services or materials aside from money.

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Related

State of Arizona v. Nerini
151 P.2d 983 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
5 Navajo Rptr. 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/notah-v-francis-navajo-1987.