Shadwick v. Byrd

867 S.W.2d 231, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 1897, 1993 WL 498734
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1993
DocketWD 47272
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 867 S.W.2d 231 (Shadwick v. Byrd) 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
Shadwick v. Byrd, 867 S.W.2d 231, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 1897, 1993 WL 498734 (Mo. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

FENNER, Judge.

Appellant, Donald R. Byrd, appeals the order of the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri, finding appellant to be the natural father of the minor child, Breanna D. Shadwick, and entering judgment against appellant in the amount of $8550.00 for past support and expenses incurred in behalf of the minor child.

Respondent, Jennifer L. Shadwick, the mother of Breanna, had married Timothy Anderson on July 3, 1982. The couple separated in February of 1986 and got divorced on September 22, 1986. Breanna was born five months later, on February 27,1987. According to Shadwiek’s testimony, the child was neither premature nor overdue.

Shadwick believed Byrd to be Breanna’s natural father. She met Byrd at the end of May in 1986 and dated him for three to four months. The first time Shadwick and Byrd had sexual intercourse was at the end of May. Thereafter, they had sexual intercourse three to four times per month and used no contraceptives. Shadwick apparently had no sexual relations with Anderson between April 15,1986 and July 15,1986, the possible period of conception. Anderson testified that he did not even see his wife during this period of time.

Shadwick testified that she knew she was pregnant at the end of June in 1986. She did not mention that she was pregnant at the time of her divorce because she knew the child was not Anderson’s. Shadwick testified that Byrd admitted to being Breanna’s father. However, Byrd himself denies paternity-

This action commenced on November 6, 1991 when Shadwick filed a Petition for Declaration of Paternity and for an Order of Support pursuant to the Uniform Parentage Act. The petition was filed by the State of Missouri as assignee and by Jennifer Shad-wick, individually and as next friend for her minor child, Breanna. The named respondents were Byrd and Anderson.

A default judgment was entered against Byrd on March 23, 1992, finding Byrd to be the natural father of the minor child and ordering that he pay $400.00 per month in child support. Byrd filed an application to set aside the default judgment which was sustained on April 24, 1992. Byrd was ordered to appear for blood testing. The blood test results revealed that the relative chance of paternity, assuming a 50% prior chance, was 99.09%.

Shadwick filed an amended petition on October 29,1992, including, as a third count, an action seeking reimbursement and recovery of expenses incurred on behalf of herself and the minor child. The amended petition did not name the State of Missouri as assignee. Shadwick, in her amended petition, specifically asked the court to enter judgment against the natural father for the sum of the reasonable value of the expenditures necessarily made for the food, lodging, clothing, educational expenses, and medical attention for the minor child and for the reasonable value of the expenses incurred during Shadwick’s pregnancy and the birth of the minor child.

On November 16, 1992, a bench trial took place and the trial court entered its order finding Byrd to be the natural father of Breanna. The court ordered Byrd to pay $400.00 per month in child support and also ordered Byrd to pay $8550.00 for past support and expenses in behalf of the minor child. This appeal followed.

In his first point on appeal, appellant argues that the trial court erred in permitting the prosecutor to proceed on Shadwick’s claim for past due support, Count III of the amended petition, because the prosecutor was representing her in a private cause of action.

Appellant contends that the authority of the prosecutor to collect past due child support is set forth in section 454.420, RSMo *233 1986, 1 and is restricted to matters wherein the State is an assignee. Because the State is not an assignee here, appellant argues, there is no public purpose involved in the claim for past due child support as set forth in Count III of the amended petition and the prosecutor is therefore barred from proceeding with that claim.

Section 454.420, however, applies to situations where there has been an assignment of rights to collect support to the State of Missouri, and it sets out the procedures to be followed when there is a support obligation owed to the State. In the case at bar, there has been no assignment of rights to the State of Missouri. Thus, section 454.420 is not the appropriate statutory section in which to refer.

Section 454.425 provides, in relevant part, “[t]he division of child support enforcement shall render support enforcement services to persons who are not recipients of public assistance as well as to such recipients.” Section 454.435.1, RSMo Supp.1992, provides, in pertinent part:

Each prosecuting attorney may enter into a cooperative agreement ... to litigate or prosecute any action necessary to secure support for any person referred to such office by the division of child support enforcement including, but not limited to, ... actions to establish, modify and enforce support obligations, ... and actions to establish the paternity of a child for whom support is sought.

In State ex rel. Leet v. Leet, 624 S.W.2d 21 (Mo.1981), the Missouri Supreme Court held that a prosecutor’s representation of the mother in proceedings against her former spouse to obtain child support did not constitute an improper granting of public money to a private person in violation of the State Constitution. At the time of filing her action, the mother was not receiving Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) and apparently had never done so. Id. at 22. The trial court dismissed the proceedings for the reason that the representation of the mother by the prosecuting attorney constituted an improper granting of public money to a private person in violation of the State Constitution. Id. at 22. The Supreme Court reversed. Id. at 23.

In Leet, the Missouri Supreme Court stated that the statutory provision analogous to section 454.435.1 in the case at bar (section 207.025.5, RSMo 1978) was passed by the General Assembly “to meet federal requirements which tied Federal-State welfare aid to the enactment by the State of strict child support enforcement laws, including the provision that the State provide child support enforcement services to non-AFDC as well as AFDC families.” Id. at 23. This requirement was a recognition by Congress, and the statutory provision an acknowledgement by the General Assembly, that in view of the increasing cost of welfare payments to families of abandoned children it is in the public interest not only to get and keep families off the welfare rolls, but also to assist families in not becoming members of those rolls. Id. at 23. The General Assembly determined as a matter of public policy that this should be accomplished by having the prosecuting attorneys assist in obtaining child support from a parent who is able to do so but is not providing support. Id. at 23. While such assistance constitutes a secondary private benefit to those receiving the support, “ ‘[t]he concensus of modern legislative and judicial thinking is to broaden the scope of activities which may be classed as involving a public purpose.’ ” Id. at 23 (quoting

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Bluebook (online)
867 S.W.2d 231, 1993 Mo. App. LEXIS 1897, 1993 WL 498734, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shadwick-v-byrd-moctapp-1993.