Phaire v. Phaire

17 V.I. 236, 1981 WL 704856, 1981 V.I. LEXIS 68
CourtSupreme Court of The Virgin Islands
DecidedMarch 20, 1981
DocketFam. No. 85/1979
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 V.I. 236 (Phaire v. Phaire) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of The Virgin Islands primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phaire v. Phaire, 17 V.I. 236, 1981 WL 704856, 1981 V.I. LEXIS 68 (virginislands 1981).

Opinion

SILVERLIGHT, Judge

MEMORANDUM OPINION

This matter is before the Court on defendant’s Motion to Modify Final Order and plaintiff’s cross motion in opposition thereto.

The parties were married in St. Croix, V.I. on October 7, 19771 separated in January, 1979, and have not cohabited since that time.2 A Final Decree of Divorce by default was entered on April 5, 1979, the defendant having failed to answer, appear or otherwise defend. Subsequently, on or about August 28, 1979, the pending motion for modification was filed, defendant asserting for the first time that Genevieve Phaire, a female child, was born of the marriage of the parties, on July 20, 1979. This motion seeks a determination of paternity and an award of child support for this child. Plaintiff denied paternity and a hearing on these issues was held on August 7, 1980.

[239]*239At the outset, this Court is constrained to note the failure of plaintiff to submit a memorandum of law, to assist the Court, although instructed to do so by the Court. A period of fifteen (15) days was granted for the submission of such memorandum because it was felt that the interests of the child demanded a reasonably speedy determination by the Court. On or about August 26, 1980, defendant submitted such a memorandum but to the date of this opinion, a period of over 200 days from the date of hearing no such memorandum has been submitted by plaintiff. Beyond the impropriety of counsel’s failure to comply with the Order of this Court, it is difficult to understand counsel’s indifference to the duty owed to his client.

In order to decide this case in an impartial and enlightened manner, this Court called upon counsel to assist it by submitting in writing, an exposition of the legal position each party urged the Court to adopt and citation of the authorities upon which each party relied as the foundation for such legal position. The very purpose of the order has been defeated by plaintiff’s failure to comply and the broad exposure of the law which is so necessary to judicial determination has been curtailed. I am now called upon to determine this case with only one side of the coin exposed. By my own research, I have endeavored to expose the other side of the coin and to restore the balance of presentation which is so necessary to enlightened decision. Let all counsel be warned, however, that failures of this nature will not, in the future, be condoned and that appropriate sanctions will be imposed when willful failure occurs.

The first issue presented is a determination of the extent to which the April 5, 1980 Findings of Fact constitute res judicata. The particular findings which appear to be relevant to the issue presented by these cross motions are:

4. That there is one child born of this marriage, to wit: Wallace Austin Phaire, age 1.
10. That the parties separated in January, 1979 and have not cohabited since that time.

While at first blush these findings might appear to be of some significance, upon deeper consideration their import is recognized as de minimis.

The finding relative to a cessation of cohabitation is of no consequence because the specified date, January, 1979, is well within the period of gestation. The finding that one child was born of the marriage is of no consequence because it is not here attacked by the [240]*240defendant. On the contrary, defendant’s position is that such finding was accurate on the date upon which it was made, but that it no longer reflects the true facts, the circumstances having been changed by the birth of the second child on July 10, 1979.

It must be remembered that the decree in this case was entered by default and that plaintiff in no way alluded to the pregnancy of the defendant. From this state of facts it is apparent that the issue of paternity of the second child was neither addressed nor decided by the Court upon the entry of the decree. In fact, it is apparent from the record in this case that, the Court was totally unaware of the impending birth of the second child at the time of the entry of the decree herein.

This Court’s authority to modify the decree in an appropriate case is unquestioned. 16 V.I.C. § 110. There can be no “estoppel by judgment” since the question of paternity of this child was never addressed by the Court.

The question of whether the divorce decree is res judicata under these circumstances appears to be a question of first impression in the Virgin Islands. The resolution of the problem, however, when presented to other courts has produced a uniform result.

A finding in a divorce decree that there were a specific number of children born of a marriage, or that no children were born of a marriage is not res judicata as to an after-born child. This proposition is supported under either of two modes of analysis.

First, where the divorce court did not have the issue of the paternity of the after-born child before it at the time it entered the decree, res judicata cannot be said to apply. “A decree becomes res judicata only regarding matters determined at the time the decree was rendered.” Austin v. Austin, 418 P.2d 347, 350 (Okla. 1966) citing, Wheeler v. Wheeler, 414 P.2d 1, 7 (Kan. 1966). It is axiomatic that a court cannot decide an issue which has not been presented to it. As the Supreme Court of Minnesota said in considering a question similar to the one at bar:

The only issue before the trial court in this case was whether or not grounds for divorce existed. The question of whether or not Beverly Ann was a child born of the marriage was not considered or passed upon.

Mund v. Mund, 90 N.W.2d 309, 313 (Minn. 1958).

Secondly, the findings are not res judicata because of the continuing power of the court to modify a divorce decree regarding [241]*241issues of child support, custody and maintenance. Alber v. Alber, 472 P.2d 321 (Idaho 1970) was a case of similar factual nature. There the appellant-father urged that the trial court not be permitted to exercise its jurisdiction in awarding child support. This contention was based on an Idaho statute which restricted a plaintiff to receiving, in a case where no answer was filed, relief no greater than that demanded in the complaint. IDAHO CODE § 10-704. Since the child support could not have been requested for the child subsequently born, the father contended that it was waived, and could not in a later motion, be granted. The Idaho Supreme Court, while cognizant of the requirements of IDAHO CODE § 10-704, held that the section of the Idaho Code giving the divorce court power to modify or vacate a judgment dealing with custody, care, and education of children of a marriage took precedence. IDAHO CODE § 32-705. In speaking on the matter, the court held that res judicata did not apply “where the specific issue drawn in question is that of child support.” Alber, supra at 324.

The fact that a default judgment was entered in this case does not change the result. In Mund v. Mund, supra, a default was entered against the defendant father. The complaint stated that there was one child of the marriage, but the findings of the trial judge failed to mention her existence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 V.I. 236, 1981 WL 704856, 1981 V.I. LEXIS 68, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phaire-v-phaire-virginislands-1981.