State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Enforcement Division v. Wetherelt

931 P.2d 383, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 12
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1997
DocketS-7464
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 931 P.2d 383 (State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Enforcement Division v. Wetherelt) 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.

Bluebook
State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Enforcement Division v. Wetherelt, 931 P.2d 383, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 12 (Ala. 1997).

Opinion

RABINOWITZ, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

At issue in this appeal are arrearage payments made by Robert Wetherelt to the State of Alaska, Department of Revenue, Child Support Enforcement Division (CSED) for the support of a child who was ultimately proven not to be his. Wetherelt was named as father on Roberta Wetherelt’s birth certificate, thus establishing a legal presumption of paternity. CSED proceeded to collect reimbursement for child support based on the premise that Wetherelt was legally responsible for Roberta Wetherelt. Though Wetherelt asserted to CSED in April 1989 that he could not be Roberta’s father, he did not conclusively prove this by blood test until March 1994. He thereafter brought an action to recover the payments he made to CSED.

The superior court held that a 1983 dissolution decree which faded to mention Roberta disestablished Robert Wetherelt’s paternity as a matter of law and that CSED should not have collected support from him after this date. The superior court further determined that CSED was unjustly enriched by Wetherelt’s payments and ordered the State to reimburse Wetherelt the amount retained by CSED. The State now brings this appeal.

*385 II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Robert Wetherelt and Mary Lake were married in 1972. On December 14, 1974, Lake gave birth to a daughter, Roberta Wetherelt. On the birth certificate, Wether-elt was named as father. 1 Wetherelt and Lake separated soon after and in October 1977, Lake applied for Aid to Families with Dependent Children (AFDC) on behalf of Roberta. On the application for assistance, Lake stated that she was separated from Wetherelt and identified him as Roberta’s father. As required by statute, Lake assigned her rights to child support payments to the State for as long as she received AFDC benefits.

In 1983, Lake and Wetherelt filed a joint Petition for Dissolution of Marriage. Where the petition asked, “Are there minor children bom of the marriage or adopted?” the parties marked “no.” The petition nowhere mentions Roberta.

On August 18, 1983, a dissolution hearing was held before a master. The hearing was brief, and Wetherelt did not appear. Lake testified that there were no children of the marriage. No evidence of paternity was admitted, nor did the superior court make any findings or conclusions related to Roberta. The superior court proceeded to enter a decree of dissolution which incorporated the parties’ agreements as reflected in the petition. With respect to child custody and support, the superior court entered “N/A” on the standard form decree.

Since the State had been supporting Roberta through AFDC, CSED served Wether-elt with an administrative support order known as a Notice and Finding of Financial Responsibility (NFFR) in April 1989. Two forms provided by Lake to CSED indicated that Wetherelt was Róberta’s father. The NFFR stated that if the recipient had any objections, he had the right to request a conference at which the issue of liability would be decided; otherwise, the NFFR would be legal and binding.

In response, Wetherelt requested an informal telephonic conference, stating: “Roberta is not my child. Mary and I had separated and she had a baby by someone else. I had viseetomy [sic] over 22 years ago.” Based on this claim, CSED investigated the matter and obtained copies of the dissolution papers and Roberta’s birth certificate, indicating that the parties were indeed married when Roberta was bom. CSED concluded that a legal parent-child relationship between Wetherelt and Roberta was created at birth, and that the dissolution decree was not sufficient to disestablish paternity. In a letter addressed to Wetherelt dated June 29, 1989, CSED stated:

[T]he decree of dissolution of marriage stating that there are no children of the marriage does not constitute a court order sufficient to override the presumption of paternity as the court might not have been aware that there were any children and there was an issue of paternity or non-paternity and just accepted that there were no children. The Attorney General’s position is that CSED is entitled to rely upon the presumption of paternity for the following reasons: (1) The parties were married at the time of the birth of the child. (2) You are listed as the father on the birth certificate. (3) Mary Wetherelt named you as the father on 2 AFDC applications. Therefore CSED will pursue the proceedings for the establishment of a child support order and you will have to pursue your own legal action to determine non-paternity.

CSED began collecting support from Wetherelt in January 1990. In April 1992, Wetherelt wrote to CSED requesting that the sum of his wages garnished monthly in order to pay his support obligation be decreased. Wetherelt stated in the letter that “there is a dispute about the paternity of the child I am supporting and at this point I am trying to resolve it.” He further claimed that the financial burdens being inflicted by CSED made any such resolution impossible. *386 Attached to the letter was an affidavit asserting that Wetherelt had an “irreversible vasectomy” performed on March 16, 1964, and that he had fathered no children since that time. Wetherelt also enclosed medical records indicating that the vasectomy actually occurred and that his sperm count was zero as of June 1990.

In response, CSED sent Wetherelt a letter dated April 9, 1992, agreeing to modify its order withholding monthly wages. With respect to the issue of paternity, CSED stated:

As you are aware, you will have to obtain an attorney and prove paternity on your own. Because you and Mary were married at the time the child was conceived, the State of Alaska considers you to be the father of said child. Meanwhile, while you are working towards settling the paternity issue, your support order could be reviewed for modification if you would com-' píete and return the paperwork that was mailed in November 1991....

Wetherelt wrote to CSED again in April 1992, acknowledging receipt of notice that his garnishment had been lowered, and “asking for more help” in forgiving the interest on his arrears. He again asserted that he was not the father of Roberta, and stated that he was “seeking legal assistance to prove” this. Wetherelt requested an informal hearing with CSED and a blood test to prove non-paternity.

CSED responded on May 16,1992, informing Wetherelt that interest would not accrue on his debt, but that CSED would not assist him in setting up blood testing. The letter stated that because Wetherelt “signed the affidavit of paternity which put [his] name on the child’s birth certificate as the father,” 2 he would have to get a judge’s order removing his name from the birth certificate before CSED could help set up dates for blood testing.

In January 1993, Wetherelt filed motions to “reaffirm non-paternity” and to enjoin CSED from enforcing child support arrear-ages against him. The superior court denied these motions on April 22, 1993, but ordered CSED to coordinate blood testing at Wether-elt’s expense.

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931 P.2d 383, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-department-of-revenue-child-support-enforcement-division-v-alaska-1997.