Teal v. Smiley, No. Fa 97-0624195s (Dec. 29, 2002)

2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 16613-a
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedDecember 29, 2002
DocketNo. FA 97-0624195S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 16613-a (Teal v. Smiley, No. Fa 97-0624195s (Dec. 29, 2002)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Teal v. Smiley, No. Fa 97-0624195s (Dec. 29, 2002), 2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 16613-a (Colo. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

HEADNOTE MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO OPEN #103
The Defendant father, Kenneth Smiley, moves to open the judgment of paternity, entered on December 16, 1997. He claims that he is not the father of the minor child and that he did not receive notice of the paternity proceedings, until a wage withholding for child support was executed sometime in the year 2002. The State opposes the motion claiming proper abode service was made on the underlying paternity petition. The State further argues that the Motion to Open should be denied because it was filed more than 4 years after judgment and is, therefore, untimely.

HELD: Service of the paternity petition was properly made on the Defendant at his usual place of abode. However, notice of the default judgment was not properly made and the Motion to Open Judgment of paternity and support orders, is timely. The Defendant has raised a meritorious defense, i.e. that he may not be the father of the minor child, he has satisfied the conditions precedent to open a judgment. His Motion to Open is GRANTED.

A hearing on the underlying paternity petition is to be scheduled by the clerk, with notice to all parties. The Defendant may appear and raise defenses to the petition, and he may request genetic/D.N.A. testing. All support orders are suspended pending a final adjudication of paternity.

In the event that the Defendant is adjudicated to be the father, support orders may be modified based upon the Defendant's actual earnings or earning capacity, pursuant to General Statute § 46b-2 15(c), without need for further written motion for modification.

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO OPEN #103 CT Page 16613-b
The Defendant father, Kenneth Smiley, moves to open the judgment of paternity, entered on December 16, 1997. The motion, dated September 27,2002, claims that he is not the father of the minor child, Shyheim, date of birth 6/10/97. Defendant further claims that he did not receive notice of the paternity proceedings, until a wage f withholding for child support was executed sometime in the year 2002. The State opposes the motion claiming proper abode service was made on the underlying paternity petition. The State further argues that the Motion to Open should be denied because it was filed more than 4 years after judgment and is, therefore, untimely. HELD: Service of the paternity petition was properly made on the Defendant at his usual place of abode. However, notice of the default judgment was not properly made and the Motion to Open Judgment of paternity and support orders, is granted.

Factual Background

Pursuant to Connecticut General Statute § 46b-162, the State of Connecticut . . . through the Commissioner of Social Services (hereinafter "DSS") initiated a paternity. petition against the Defendant, claiming that the Defendant was the father of the minor child, Shyheim. The Court file contains a return of service of the paternity petition, executed by a Hartford county deputy sheriff. The return indicates that on September 26, 1997, the Defendant was served at his usual place of abode, 55 Sargeant Street, Hartford, Connecticut. The case was continued to December 16, 1997, to subpoena the mother to court. The Court file includes an appearance of the mother of the minor child, Shakyra Teal, dated December 16, 1997. She executed a military affidavit, attesting to the fact that the Defendant was not then in the military service. The Defendant did not appear in the paternity proceeding. A default judgment of paternity entered on December 16, 1997. Simultaneously, child support orders entered against the Defendant. The Orders included a weekly monetary order. Specifically, the Defendant was ordered to pay $45. per week as current child support, and $9. per week on an arrearage found to be in the total amount of $1,365.24., payable to the State and/or to the mother. The Orders were entered "without prejudice".

The Defendant did not receive notice of the default orders. The Court file indicates that the clerk's notification report, JD 72265, dated January 20, 1998, was not sent to the Defendant.1 On October 19,2002, four years and ten months after a default judgment entered, a Notice to Non-Appearing Obligor was sent to the Defendant. This notice was sent to the Defendant at 250 Fairfield Ave., Hartford, Ct. On October 31, 2002, an assistant attorney general filed a copy of the notice in the Court file. The "green card" receipt of the notice was clearly signed by someone other than the Defendant. The Defendant claims he was unaware of CT Page 16613-c any proceeding or adjudication of paternity until the wage withholding began, sometime in 2002.2

Motion to Open Default Judgment

Personal Jurisdiction: Service

Connecticut General Statute § 46b-160 provides that a default judgment of paternity may enter if a putative father fails to appear. The Statute clearly delineates the required allegations contained in a verified petition seeking a paternity judgment, the procedure for service of the petition, and the return of the petition. Gen. Stat. § 46b-160. In the pending matter, the State has met all, but one of the criteria. The original hearing on the paternity petition was scheduled for November 4, 1997, more than 90 days after the issuance of the summons on July 28, 1997.

The Defendant now claims that when the paternity petition was served in October of 1997, he was not residing at 55 Sargeant Street, Hartford, Ct. The credible and substantial evidence supports the presumption of abode service pursuant to the sheriffs return of service. The Defendant testified that he lived at another address and/or may have been incarcerated at the time of the proceedings. However, he testified, in vague terms. He testified that he had stayed at this address, that he had maintained clothing at this address, and that some family and friends would telephone him at this address.

Judicial notice is taken of the Hartford Superior Court judicial file, captioned Deas/St. of Ct. v. Smiley, Docket No. 96-0620733. In Deas, et alv. Smiley, the Defendant appeared on June 11, 1996, identifying his home address as 55 Sargeant Street, 3rd Floor, Hartford, Ct. A judgment of paternity entered in this file in June 1996, and notice of said judgment was sent to the Defendant at 55 Sargeant Street on July 30, 1996. The Defendant did not, and does not, contest abode service in the Deas matter. Although service in the Deas matter occurred six months earlier, the Defendant did not demonstrate that he had a change in his primary residence when served with the paternity petition at issue.

Service of process in a civil action may be made at the place of a defendant's abode. General Statute § 52-57. Whether a particular place is the usual place of abode of a defendant is a question of fact. The usual place of abode is considered to be the place where a person is living at the particular time when service is made. Grant v. Dalliber,11 Conn. 234, 238. It is presumed that the matters stated in the return are true.

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Bluebook (online)
2002 Conn. Super. Ct. 16613-a, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teal-v-smiley-no-fa-97-0624195s-dec-29-2002-connsuperct-2002.