Rist v. Missouri State Division of Family Services

595 S.W.2d 783, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2502
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 3, 1980
DocketNo. WD 30777
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 595 S.W.2d 783 (Rist v. Missouri State Division of Family Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rist v. Missouri State Division of Family Services, 595 S.W.2d 783, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2502 (Mo. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

CLARK, Presiding Judge.

Geneva Rist appeals after judgment by the circuit court affirmed the decision of the Missouri Division of Family Services terminating a grant in aid for dependent children formerly paid to Geneva on account of her thirteen-year-old daughter, Sandra. The sole question is whether such termination of benefits is valid when imposed because the dependent child has changed living arrangements to attend a school outside her district.

Essential facts are not in dispute. Geneva’s home is located within the boundaries of the Kansas City School District and, because of such residence, Sandra was obligated to attend and was enrolled at Northeast Junior High School. In Geneva’s opinion, however, the conditions at the school were not conducive to her daughter’s education and some hazards were encountered in Sandra’s daily walks to and from school. Geneva therefore resolved to transfer her daughter to another school.

Janelle Spangler, another of Geneva’s daughters, lives with her husband in Clay County in the district of Northgate Junior High School and Geneva enlisted her help in negotiating a change in Sandra’s school. By representing to the school authorities that Sandra lived at the Spangler home rather than with Geneva, enrollment of the child at Northgate was accomplished. For convenience and because daily transportation from Geneva’s home to school or to the Spangler home is not available, Sandra stays with the Spanglers during the week and returns to be with her mother on weekends.

As will be hereafter noted, eligibility for continued payment of aid to dependent children benefits is not impaired by temporary absence from the home by the child or parent if the parent remains responsible for [785]*785the care and control of the child. On this aspect of the case the evidence was that Geneva’s name was listed on the records at Northgate as the person to notify in case of emergency and her telephone number was given. Geneva supplied all of Sandra’s clothing, does her laundry, furnishes spending money and makes decisions on discipline. The Spanglers are both employed, are away from home during working hours and it is from Geneva that Sandra must obtain permission for out of school activities.

On these facts, the Division of Family Services expressly found after hearing “that the claimant [Geneva] continues to exercise responsibility for the care and control of the child.” The record adequately supports this finding as well as the conclusion that Sandra is temporarily absent from Geneva’s home in order that she may attend high school in another district rather than the school she would be obligated to attend were she to continue living with Geneva. Supported as it was by competent and substantial evidence, the agency decision as to Geneva’s continuing responsibility for care and control of Sandra while living weekdays in the Spangler home is binding on this court. Farmer’s Bank of Antonia v. Kostman, 577 S.W.2d 915, 921 (Mo.App.1979); Stein v. State Tax Commission, 379 S.W.2d 495, 498 (Mo.1964).

Although a claimant relative must, as a condition of eligibility to receive aid to dependent children, maintain a place of residence occupied as a home both by himself and the child (Section 208.0401), temporary absence of the child from the customary family setting does not, under 13 C.S.R. 40-2.060(3), disqualify the claimant if and as long as he takes responsibility for the care and control of the child. After finding as it did that Sandra was absent from Geneva’s home for the purpose of attending Northgate Junior High School and that Geneva continued to exercise responsibility for Sandra’s care and control, the Division of Family Services nonetheless terminated benefits on the ground that a change in living arrangements to permit attendance at a school outside the child’s district accomplished a forfeiture of benefits.

The decision by the Division of Family Services relies on provisions in the agency’s Income Maintenance Manual, extracts from which are quoted in the record as controlling in cases where children attend school outside their residence district. The manual is a publication apparently distributed to caseworkers and to claimants for guidance in presenting and processing claims. No provision similar to that quoted from the Income Maintenance Manual restricting benefits where a change in living arrangements avoids school district boundary lines has been found in the Code of State Regulations. The statute imposes no such limitation. The restrictive provision therefore appears to be recorded only in the manual, a document which is not a part of the record in this case.

For the purpose of reaching and deciding the substantive issue in the case, we assume that the extract from the Income Maintenance Manual as quoted in the agency’s decision reflects the content of a regulation adopted by the Division of Family Services. Paraphrased, the regulation in question creates an exception to the class of eligible AFDC beneficiaries exercising responsibility for care and control of children temporarily absent from the home to attend school. Such claimants are disqualified if a change in the child’s living arrangements (and, hence, his temporary absence from the home) is to permit the child to attend a school outside his district. The record suggests that this limitation is applicable only to elementary and high school students whose compulsory school attendance is in accordance with their residence in particular school districts.

The assumption made here as to the regulation applied from the Income Maintenance Manual conforms to the acceptance by the parties in their briefs and argument of the rule and its effect in this case. While the parties adopt this assumption ig[786]*786noring procedural defects, comment must be made as to infirmities in the record recognized but not ruled in this opinion. The Income Maintenance Manual relied on by the Division of Family Services for its decision is not, as above noted, a part of the record in the case. Although Section 536.-031(2) requires that rules promulgated by state agencies be published in the Code of State Regulations, that portion of the Income Maintenance Manual contended to be applicable in this case is not found in the Code. The existence and content of the rule applied by the agency to deny benefits to the claimant therefore depends entirely upon the statement by the agency in its decision that such is the applicable and controlling rule. This obstacle to judicial review of an administrative decision, while significant, is not of jurisdictional dimension. Absent postulation of the question by the parties, we decline to consider it sua sponte, but turn to consideration of the point of error presented by the parties on this appeal.

Appellant accepts, as noted above, the controlling effect of the Income Maintenance Manual regulation in circumstances where a child changes living arrangements to attend school “outside the district.” She charges, however, that the regulation creates an ineligible class of aid beneficiaries who are eligible under federal statutes and regulations and that the state limitation must be declared invalid under Article VI of the Constitution of the United States.

The Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) program administered in Missouri by the Division of Family Services is financed by the federal government on a matching fund basis.

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Related

Pummill v. Missouri Division of Family Services
674 S.W.2d 647 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1984)

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Bluebook (online)
595 S.W.2d 783, 1980 Mo. App. LEXIS 2502, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rist-v-missouri-state-division-of-family-services-moctapp-1980.