State Ex Rel. Adult & Family Services Division v. Lester
This text of 608 P.2d 588 (State Ex Rel. Adult & Family Services Division v. Lester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
This is an action for support under ORS 23.789(2), 1 brought on behalf of the state by the Adult and Family Services Division (AFSD) as assignee of the mother against respondent, the father of a minor child. AFSD seeks to require respondent to make child support payments to the Department of Human Resources. The trial court denied AFSD’s petition and it appeals.
A previous decree of dissolution awarded custody of the child to the father. No child support payments were required by the decree. For reasons not material here, the child, age 16, now resides with her mother, who receives public assistance from the State of Oregon on her behalf.
Public assistance was provided for the child while she was living with her mother. As a prerequisite to the receipt of such assistance, the mother was required by ORS 481.042(1) 2 to assign her support rights to the *392 Department of Human In Gibson v. Johnson, 35 Or App 493, 499-500, 582 P2d 452, rev den 284 Or 521 (1978), this court explained the statutes relating to such an assignment of support rights:
"* * * The general statutory plan is that the recipient must assign support rights to the state, and the state, with the required cooperation of the recipient-assignor, collects the support from the obligor. The support is collected on behalf of the state as assignee and not on behalf of the recipient. See Warlick v. Pub. Wel. Div., 29 Or App 21, 562 P2d 223, rev den (1977); Whallon and Whallon, 23 Or App 307, 42 P2d 155 (1975). The essence of this statutorily created relationship is that of assignor-assignee. * * * The contact between the recipient and the SED [Support Enforcement Division] attorneys is for the benefit of the state in recouping some of the funds paid out for aid to dependent children. * * *”
An assignee stands in the shoes of his assignor. Plaintiff, as assignee of the mother’s support rights, could acquire no greater interest in those rights than she possessed. Weyerhaeuser Co. v. First Nat. Bank, 150 Or 172, 38 P2d 48, 43 P2d 1078 (1935); Hill v. Wood, 142 Or 143, 19 P2d 89 (1933).
The only means the mother has to collect child support from the father is to seek modification of the dissolution decree to provide for payment of child support. ORS 107.135(1)(a). AFSD has the right under ORS 23.789(2) to petition for such a modification. This is not such a petition and, because AFSD has no greater rights or remedies than its assignor has, there is no legal basis for this petition. It was properly denied.
AFSD also asserts that it is empowered by the last sentence of ORS 23.789(2) 4 to initiate proceedings for *393 an order of support under ORS 109.010, which provides:
«* * * Parents are bound to maintain their children who are poor and unable to support themselves * * * »
It is true that ORS 23.789(2) authorizes AFSD to "initiate proceedings for orders of support” under chapter 109 and that ORS 109.010 is a section of that chapter, but such a simplistic reading ignores the statutory scheme. ORS 109.010 merely states a legal duty; it does not provide for a legal procedure for the enforcement of that duty. That is done in other sections. Two examples illustrate this point: ORS 109.100 5 provides a procedure whereby a child, or the state on the child’s behalf, can apply to the circuit court for an order requiring a parent to provide for the child’s support in the absence of a dissolution decree. ORS 109.125 to 109.235 provides a filiation procedure culminating in a support order. In proper cases, AFSD may avail itself of any of the judicial procedures and remedies provided by ORS ch 109 for the enforcement of the general parental obligation described by ORS 109.010, but it may not create new ones by sole virtue of ORS 109.010.
Recently, in State ex rel Adult & Family Services v. McDonald, 42 Or App 793, 601 P2d *394 875 (1979), this court held that the state could proceed on behalf of a child under ORS 23.789(2), 109.010 and 109.100, to obtain an order of parental support, despite the existence of a dissolution decree which provides for custody of the child. It should be noted that the McDonald case was decided by a divided court. Moreover, it is arguable that allowing a separate order of child support under ORS 109.100 would be, essentially, a collateral attack on any pre-existing dissolution decree and would lead to the undesirable situation of two coequal court orders regulating the same familial and financial relationship. Because the petition in this case is predicated on the state’s rights as assignee of the mother by virtue of paying public assistance to her, the issue urged on appeal by the state of whether ORS 109.100 provides a separate basis for recovery is not presented and we do not reach it.
Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
608 P.2d 588, 45 Or. App. 389, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 2379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-adult-family-services-division-v-lester-orctapp-1980.