STATE EX REL. MOORE v. Hawkins

200 S.W.3d 91, 2006 WL 2129804
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 1, 2006
DocketWD 65616
StatusPublished

This text of 200 S.W.3d 91 (STATE EX REL. MOORE v. Hawkins) 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
STATE EX REL. MOORE v. Hawkins, 200 S.W.3d 91, 2006 WL 2129804 (Mo. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

THOMAS H. NEWTON, Presiding Judge.

Mr. Robert Hawkins brings this appeal from a circuit court’s refusal to declare that a 1992 court order is not a final judgment of paternity. We affirm.

When Ms. Phillipia Moore sought state aid for herself and her five-year-old son in 1991, she identified Mr. Hawkins as the child’s father. Ms. Moore and Mr. Hawkins were living together at the time without the benefit of matrimony, so the State of Missouri, Division of Child Support Enforcement (Division), filed a petition for paternity in Jackson County Circuit Court. While there was some difficulty with service, in May 1992 Mr. Hawkins was served with an alias summons and the petition, which alleged that he was the child’s natural father and sought to have the parent and child relationship declared to exist between him and the child. He did not file a response. The petition was called for a hearing on July 30, 1992, without notice to either Mr. Hawkins or Ms. Moore, and the circuit court, finding Mr. Hawkins to be in default, ruled that he was the natural father of Ms. Moore’s son. The court’s ruling is set forth in a document that is denominated an “Order.” The order con *93 stitutes a final determination of the only issue raised by the paternity petition, i.e., whether Mr. Hawkins was the child’s father. 1

Thereafter, in October 1992, Mr. Hawkins filed a statement of non-paternity with the Division. He continued to live with Ms. Moore and the child in his home for the next seven years and took no other action with respect to the 1992 paternity order. The child, who is autistic, was encouraged to and did refer to Mr. Hawkins as “Daddy.” Mr. Hawkins’s relationship with Ms. Moore ended in 1999, and in 2000 the Division obtained a support order against Mr. Hawkins of $474 monthly. His income was garnished, and he began changing jobs to avoid the income withholding order. Mr. Hawkins testified that he hired an attorney to contest the child support order, but any pleadings that may have been filed were for some unknown reason unsuccessful. 2 In January 2000, Mr. Hawkins took the child for DNA testing and learned that he was excluded as the father.

In November 2008, Mr. Hawkins filed a petition for declaratory judgment, seeking to set aside the 1992 order. He asked the court to declare that the order was interlocutory because it had not been denominated a “judgment” as required under Rule 74.01; 3 did not adjudicate the rights and liabilities of all the parties; 4 and, as an interlocutory order, could be modified at any time. In March 2004 Mr. Hawkins filed a motion for leave to file an answer to the paternity petition. The court realigned the parties and deferred ruling on this motion and on Ms. Moore’s motion to dismiss. Following a hearing at which the parties essentially stipulated that Mr. Hawkins was not the child’s natural father, the court ruled that the 1992 order was not interlocutory but was rather a final and appealable judgment. The court also concluded that Mr. Hawkins had waived any opportunity to contest the original paternity finding because he defaulted in both the original and administrative proceedings and waited nearly four years after being excluded as the biological father to file the action for declaratory judgment.

While Mr. Hawkins had attempted to show during the hearing that Ms. Moore lied to him about his paternity, the court further stated that it would not address any potential fraud issues under Rule 74.06(b) because they had not been raised in Mr. Hawkins’s petition. Mr. Hawkins filed motions for relief from judgment and for new trial, arguing that it was no longer equitable that the 1992 judgment remain in force and that he should be relieved as a party from the judgment due to Ms. Moore’s fraud and misrepresentations. He also claimed that the circuit court’s 2005 judgment was inconsistent for acknowledging non-paternity while refusing to disturb the 1992 paternity order. The circuit court denied his motions, and he now appeals.

Mr. Hawkins challenges the 1992 order as void for “jurisdictional defect” *94 and as lacking finality both because it was not denominated a “judgment” and the parties did not accept the benefits or burdens of the order. He further claims that (i) the circuit court’s 2005 judgment is internally inconsistent and cannot stand, and (ii) the paternity case must be dismissed because there is conclusive DNA evidence that he is not the child’s natural father. We apply the same standard of review in a declaratory judgment case as in any other bench-tried matter. R.W. v. Sanders, 168 S.W.3d 65, 68 (Mo. banc 2005). We affirm the court’s judgment unless it is not supported by substantial evidence, it is against the weight of the evidence, or it erroneously declares or applies the law. Id.

Mr. Hawkins’s first point on appeal raises an issue that has recently been laid to rest by the Missouri Supreme Court. 5 He contends that the court that issued the paternity order lacked jurisdiction because, without the participation of the parties and the child’s next friend during the July 1992 hearing, there was no evidence on which a determination of paternity or the child’s best interests could be made. A similar issue was raised and rejected in In re Marriage of Hendrix, 183 S.W.3d 582 (Mo. banc 2006). In that case, a mother challenged a child custody modification ruling by claiming that an evidentiary hearing was a jurisdictional prerequisite and that the court’s reliance on stipulated facts to make its determination was a jurisdictional defect that rendered the judgment void. Id. at 587. Noting that “the label ‘jurisdictional defect’ has no application to mere legal errors,” the court distinguished those cases where subject matter or personal jurisdiction is at stake 6 from those cases that simply involve assertions of legal error, such as failing to make necessary findings or making findings not supported by the evidence. Id. at 590. The court was concerned that mislabeling a mere legal error as jurisdictional defect creates “the potential for great mischief because calling legal errors ‘jurisdictional’ could be used years later to void settled judgments.” Id.

We believe that Mr. Hawkins is asserting legal error, i.e., insufficient evidence, in the guise of “jurisdictional defect.” 7 The Uniform Parentage Act, §§ 210.817 — .852, RSMo Cum.Supp.1989, does not require a hearing in an action to establish paternity. In fact, the law provides “[i]f any party fails to file his answer or otherwise appear in response to an action commenced under sections 210.817 to 210.852 within the time prescribed by law or rules of practice of the court, the court may enter judgment against him by default.” § 210.839.5, *95 RSMo Cum.Supp.1989.

Related

City of St. Louis v. Hughes
950 S.W.2d 850 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1997)
Stith v. St. Louis Public Service Co.
251 S.W.2d 693 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 1952)
In Re Marriage of Hendrix
183 S.W.3d 582 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2006)
R.W. v. Sanders
168 S.W.3d 65 (Supreme Court of Missouri, 2005)
Harmon v. Headley
95 S.W.3d 154 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2003)
State ex rel. Division of Family Services v. Grills
799 S.W.2d 209 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1990)
Division of Child Support Enforcement v. Shelton
25 S.W.3d 165 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2000)
J.L.M. ex rel. J.R.P.M. v. R.L.C.
132 S.W.3d 279 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 2004)

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200 S.W.3d 91, 2006 WL 2129804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-moore-v-hawkins-moctapp-2006.