Singh v. Singh

CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedSeptember 8, 2021
Docket2020-000457
StatusPublished

This text of Singh v. Singh (Singh v. Singh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singh v. Singh, (S.C. 2021).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Supreme Court

Gunjit Rick Singh, Petitioner,

v.

Simran P. Singh, Respondent.

Appellate Case No. 2020-000457

ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI TO THE COURT OF APPEALS

Appeal from Charleston County Gordon B. Jenkinson, Family Court Judge Judy L. McMahon, Family Court Judge Jocelyn B. Cate, Family Court Judge Jack A. Landis, Family Court Judge Daniel E. Martin, Jr., Family Court Judge

Opinion No. 28057 Heard June 17, 2021 – Filed September 8, 2021

AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED

Robert N. Rosen, of Rosen Law Firm, LLC, of Charleston, Sheila McNair Robinson, of Moore Taylor Law Firm, P.A., of West Columbia, and Katherine Carruth Goode, of Winnsboro, for Petitioner.

O. Grady Query, Michael W. Sautter, Michael Holland Ellis, Jr., and Alexander Woods Tesoriero, all of Query Sautter & Associates, LLC, of Charleston, for Respondent. JUSTICE HEARN: The question presented in this case is whether South Carolina law permits issues relating to child custody and visitation to be submitted to binding arbitration with no oversight by the family court and no right of review by an appellate tribunal. We believe the answer is clearly and unequivocally no.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

After nearly seventeen years of marriage, Respondent Simran Singh (Mother) and Petitioner Gunjit Singh (Father) separated in January of 2012. They subsequently entered into a settlement agreement later that year which resolved all issues arising from their marriage, including custody and visitation matters involving their two children, then aged eleven and two.1 Pursuant to that agreement, Mother received primary custody, and the parties consented to submit any future disputes regarding child support or visitation to a mutually agreed-upon arbitrator, specifically providing that his or her decision would "be binding and non- appealable." The family court approved the agreement and granted the parties a divorce in February of 2013.

Approximately nine months later, Father filed an action in family court seeking modification of custody, visitation, and child support, alleging Mother had violated a provision of the agreement when she failed to return to South Carolina with the children after embarking on a cross-country tour as a motivational speaker. From January through August of 2014, four family court judges issued decisions— one dismissing Father’s complaint due to the parties' decision to arbitrate; a second issuing a consent order to arbitrate; and two approving amended agreements to arbitrate. The agreements contained the following provision: "The parties fully understand that the decision of the Arbitrator is final and binding upon them and that they do not have the right to apply to this Court or to any other Court for relief if either is unsatisfied with the Arbitrator's decision."2

1 The parties' older child is now emancipated. 2 Our review of the settlement agreement and the subsequent agreements to arbitrate reveals that each amended version strengthened the arbitration provisions. For example, the settlement agreement approved by the family court in February 2013 provided for arbitration of future disputes pertaining to child support, relocation, and visitation, but it did not specifically address custody. Further, the family court judge stated this on the record during the hearing on the approval of the settlement agreement: The two judges who ruled on the amended agreements found them to be "fair and equitable" as well as enforceable by the court. The arbitrator—a well-respected Charleston family law attorney and mediator—issued a "partial" arbitration award in August, finding a substantial and material change of circumstance affecting the welfare and custody of the minor children, and awarding Father temporary custody. A thirty-two-page final arbitration award was issued the next month, awarding custody to Father. A fifth family court judge issued an order in January of 2015 confirming both the partial and final arbitration awards.

However, within days of the arbitrator's final award and months before the family court approved it, Mother—represented by new counsel—filed a motion for emergency relief, asking the court to vacate the arbitration awards and the prior court orders approving the parties' agreements to arbitrate. Following a hearing on that motion, the court issued an order confirming both the partial and final arbitration awards "with finality" and denied the motion seeking to vacate the awards as premature. It thus appears that four different family court judges approved—at times apparently without a hearing—the parties' agreements to arbitrate the issues

[A]s to that part of your agreement which deals with your two children, I want you to understand that even if I approve this agreement, if there happens to be some change in circumstances in the future, either of you may be able to come back before me, or another judge, and ask the court to make changes in that part of the agreement.

In January of 2014, following the Father's request for modification of custody, the family court approved an agreement to arbitrate the issues—including custody—and additionally stated that the arbitrator's decision was final and not appealable. In March, the parties amended their agreement to arbitrate, which was approved by the family court, by reiterating the finality of the arbitrator's decision and adding a $10,000 monetary penalty as a consequence of challenging that decision. In August, the family court approved a supplemental amended agreement to arbitrate, which retained the aspects above in addition to a new provision acknowledging the arbitration rules do not expressly authorize arbitration of children's issues, but releasing any potential claims against the arbitrator or the parties' attorneys for exceeding "their authorization and/or the authorization of the applicable ADR rule of the Family Court." Thus, both the scope of the issues subject to arbitration and the parties' implicit recognition of the uncharted legal territory of arbitrating children's issues expanded from the time of the settlement agreement to the supplemental amended agreement to arbitrate. involving the children, and a fifth judge confirmed the validity of the arbitration award.

Thereafter, Mother filed five separate Rule 60(b)(4), SCRCP, motions to vacate all the orders approving the parties' agreements to arbitrate. Although Mother requested the motions be consolidated for a hearing before a single judge in the interest of judicial economy, that motion was denied. Five separate hearings ensued, all of which ultimately resulted in orders denying mother’s motions. Mother thereafter filed five notices of appeal from orders denying her motions, and the court of appeals consolidated them. The court of appeals issued its unanimous decision in December of 2019, holding that the parties could not divest the family court of jurisdiction to determine issues relating to custody, visitation, and child support. Singh v. Singh, 429 S.C. 10, 30, 837 S.E.2d 651, 662 (Ct. App. 2019).3 One month prior thereto, another panel of the court of appeals issued a decision in Kosciusko v. Parham, 428 S.C. 481, 505, 836 S.E.2d 362, 375 (Ct. App. 2019), holding the family court did not have subject-matter jurisdiction to approve the binding arbitration of children's issues.4 We granted certiorari in this case because the court of appeals based its decisions on slightly different grounds, and affirm as modified.

ISSUE

Did the court of appeals err in concluding the family court could not delegate its exclusive jurisdiction to determine the best interest of the child?

STANDARD OF REVIEW

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Bluebook (online)
Singh v. Singh, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singh-v-singh-sc-2021.