Robbins v. Robbins
This text of 647 P.2d 589 (Robbins v. Robbins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
OPINION
Roxy (Rocky) Robbins and his wife, Colleen, were divorced in a California court on August 19, 1966. The divorce judgment was interlocutory under California law with respect to the marital relation. 1 Rocky was ordered to pay Colleen for the support of their four children, $125 on the first and fifteenth days of each month. 2
On September 3, 1980, Colleen filed a petition to register the California judgment in the superior court at Sitka, Alaska, under the Uniform Enforcement of Foreign Judgments Act, AS 09.30.200-.270. 3 In the petition Colleen alleged that Rocky had not paid the child support installments, as provided for in the divorce judgment, from June 1, 1969, through and including August 15, 1980. 4 A notice of the filing of the foreign judgment was mailed on September 3. 1980, to Rocky at his then known address. 5 Thereafter, on September 25, 1980, the superior court issued a writ of execution and levy was sought on Rocky’s fishing vessel, the F/V VALRAY. The writ was returned unserved on October 20, 1980. 6
On October 13,1980, Rocky filed a motion for relief from the foreign judgment and to quash the writ of execution. On March 23, 1981, the superior court, after reviewing both supporting and opposing documents, denied Rocky’s motions. Rocky subsequently filed a motion for reconsideration, which was also denied. This appeal followed.
Rocky argues that the interlocutory judgment of the California court must first be reduced to a final judgment before it can be registered and executed upon under the Uniform Act. Colleen contends that the *591 interlocutory judgment may be acted upon because the obligation to support and amount of support were already litigated and resolved in the California action.
Foreign judgments that are eligible for registration under the Uniform Act are defined in AS 09.30.260 as follows:
“[Fjoreign judgment” means any judgment, decree, or order of a court of the United States or of any other court which is entitled to full faith and credit in this state. [Emphasis added.]
If the divorce court does not have the power to retrospectively modify the decree ordering a spouse to pay certain sums of money for the care and support of the children, each installment of child support becomes a vested right as it becomes due. The arrearages in monies for children, ordered to be paid by one spouse or the other, are therefore within the operation of the full faith and credit clause of the federal constitution. 7
In California, the forum of the divorce court in this case, modification of divorce decrees in respect to accumulated payments past due is not allowed. 8 Rocky’s claim that the interlocutory judgment of the California court is not a foreign judgment within the ambit of the Uniform Act is therefore without merit.
Rocky argues that the superior court erred in not affording him the opportunity of an evidentiary hearing. He claims that if a hearing was held he would present evidence that he supported one of his children for more than two years during the period for which arrearages are alleged; that he stopped support payments because Colleen breached the separation agreement by denying him visitation privileges; that Colleen knew his whereabouts for the past eleven years and her refusal to demand payment until now amounted to her approval of the suspension of payments; and finally, that Colleen’s claims predating September 3, 1970, are barred by the ten year statute of limitations of Alaska 9 and California. 10 These arguments were raised before the superior court in support of Rocky’s motion for relief from the foreign judgment and to quash the writ of execution. In a written memorandum of decision the superior court ruled adversely to Rocky on each point. There was no oral argument by the parties and no evidentiary hearing as Rocky contends there should have been.
When a foreign judgment is properly filed with the clerk of the superior court in Alaska it is essential that the amount of damages, or other monies claimed to be due, be liquidated. That was only done ex parte in this case. Attached to the California judgment that Colleen filed in Alaska were ten pages prepared by Colleen’s counsel showing the amounts claimed to be due and unpaid by Rocky for child support for the first and fifteenth day of each month, from June 1, 1969, to August 15,1980. Interest on the amounts due was also indicated, and the total arrearages in child support payments, together with *592 interest, is shown as $43,954.21. However, Rocky was given no opportunity to contest Colleen’s claim as to the amount due under the judgment prior to the issuance of the writ of execution and its levy on his fishing vessel. Such an opportunity ought to have been afforded him regardless of whether the judgment was rendered in California or in Alaska. This is especially true since it appears that more than five years had elapsed after entry of the judgment without execution being issued thereon. Under such circumstances our rules require that a writ of execution be preceded by notice and an opportunity to be heard to the judgment debtor with respect to, among other things, the amount claimed to be due on the judgment. Alaska R.Civ.P. 69(d).
In light of the foregoing we are remanding for a hearing — which may be an eviden-tiary hearing if the trial court determines that there are genuine issues of material fact — relating to the amount due under the California judgment. At the hearing the parties and the court should address, among other things, the statute of limitations issue and the question of abatement of support for one of the children during the period the child was staying with Rocky. In this way the court will be fully informed of the parties’ rights and obligations and a proper and appropriate judgment may be entered with all the requisites of due process being accorded both parties.
This case is REMANDED for further proceedings not in conflict with the views expressed in this opinion. We presume that the superior court will continue its stay of execution on the fishing vessel F/V VAL-RAY until final disposition of this case.
. The interlocutory decree was made final on September 11, 1980.
. The parties’ Property Settlement Agreement, which was incorporated into the interlocutory decree, provides in part:
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647 P.2d 589, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-robbins-alaska-1982.