Tirey v. Tirey

806 N.E.2d 360, 2004 Ind. App. LEXIS 679, 2004 WL 837863
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 20, 2004
Docket66A03-0310-CV-410
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 806 N.E.2d 360 (Tirey v. Tirey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tirey v. Tirey, 806 N.E.2d 360, 2004 Ind. App. LEXIS 679, 2004 WL 837863 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

FRIEDLANDER, Judge.

Dallis and Marla Tirey divorced in 1994. Their dissolution decree addressed child support with respect to two children: then eight-year-old RT., who was the Tireys' biological child, and then three-year-old AL., who was the biological daughter of Marla's brother, Neal Lloyd. AL. had lived with the Tireys since she was five days old, as will be explained more fully below. The court awarded custody 1 of both children to Marla, and Dallis was ordered to pay child support for both children. Dallis filed a motion to terminate his obligation as to AL., and the trial court denied the motion. Dallis appeals that ruling, presenting the following restated issues for review:

1. May a court impose a child support order upon a man who volunteered to pay support but is neither the biological father nor the adoptive parent of the child?
Did the trial court err in denying Dallis's request to modify his child
*362 support obligation with respect to AL.?

We affirm.

The facts favorable to the ruling are that in 1991, Victoria Shorter gave birth to a daughter, A.L. Sometime thereafter, a paternity proceeding was initiated and Lloyd was determined to be A.L.'s biological father. Lloyd was in prison at the time of AL's birth. While Shorter was pregnant with A.L., she had indicated to Marla that if the child turned out to be a girl, she was not interested in raising the child. When AL. was born, Marla and Dallis assumed custody of the child almost immediately. The record does not illuminate the details, but Dallis and Marla apparently took AL. home in February of 1991, when AL. was five days old. On September 18, 1991, Shorter executed an Agreement of Custody that stated, in relevant part, "I ... do hereby consent to and request that Marla and Dallis Tirey ... have full custody and control over the above named child." Appellant's Appendix at 49. It appears that the parties did not initiate legal proceedings to establish formal guardianship or legal custody of A.L. In fact, the only legal proceeding that has, to date, addressed the issue of custody of A.L. was the dissolution action between Dallis and Marla The documentary evidence on that point is found exclusively in the "Custody and Visitation" paragraph of the dissolution decree, which provided as follows:

The Wife is not now pregnant and the following minor child was born of the marriage, to-wit: [R.T.], born November 2, 1985. In addition, the parties have assumed custody of another minor child, to-wit: [A.L.], born February 28, 1991, as is more clearly shown by a copy of the custody agreement which was entered into by the parties and which is attached hereto and made a part hereof.
The Wife shall have custody of the minor children, and the Husband shall have visitation with said children at all reasonable times and places.... In addition, the Husband shall have the right to have access to the children's school records....

Id. at 45. Marla testified on the subject of how Dallis's child support obligation arose in the first place:

When we divoreed, I had a feeling that I didn't feel like [Dallis] should have been obligated to [A.L.] because it wasn't his biological child, and so I only asked for child support for [R.T.]. And he fought me on it, and he said that he was her dad, he raised her, and he wanted to continue to have part of her life. He wanted to pay child support and he wanted to have visitation.

Transcript at 20. The court set Dallis's child support obligation at $164.00 per week.

With respect to visitation privileges and his child support obligation, Dallis abided by the terms of the dissolution decree until 2000. In that year, Dallis was the subject of an unrelated eriminal prosecution. In an attempt to avoid that proceeding, Dallis moved to Kentucky. After he did so, he stopped paying child support. On August 29, 2002, a bench warrant was issued in Indiana against Dallis for failure to pay child support. By that time, he had accumulated a child support arrearage of $18,275. On January 28, 2008, Dallis filed a Verified Petition for Modification of Child Support in which he asked "[that the child support arrearage should be recalculated to exclude any obligation for [A.L.] since any child support order for said child would be illegal." Appellant's Appendix at 50. The "illegality" to which the modification motion alluded was the fact that Dallis was not A.L.'s biological *363 parent, nor was he her legal guardian or custodian.

We review the denial of a petition to modify child support under the clearly erroneous standard. Scoleri v. Scoleri, 766 N.E.2d 1211 (Ind.Ct.App.2002). The trial court's decision will be reversed only where it is clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances before the trial court. Id. We do not reweigh evidence or judge witness credibility. Rather, we consider only the evidence most favorable to the judgment, together with the reasonable inferences that can be drawn from that evidence. Id. The person seeking modification bears the burden of proving a substantial change in circumstances justifying modification. Id.

Dallis frames the issue before us as follows: "Is an agreement to pay child support, set forth in a divorcee decree enforceable when the parties are not the parents of the child and there has been no adoption of [sic] guardianship over the child[?]" Appellant's Brief at 9. In support of his contention that it is not, Dallis offers an argument focused primarily upon public policy considerations. According to Dallis, at stake is the strong public policy of enforcing a natural parent's obligation to support his or her child. Dallis claims that if our courts force him to abide by the terms of his agreement, then we are, in effect, "condon[ing] what amounts to criminal conduct on the part of the biological parents[(.]" Id. at 14. We assume that the "criminal conduct" to which he alludes is the failure of AL's biological parents to provide for her. Moreover, quoting Fairrow v. Fairrow, 559 N.E.2d 597, 600 (Ind.1990), Dallis notes that our courts have established that "(there is a substantial public policy, namely justice, which disfavors a support order against a husband who is not the child's father." Taking all of this together, Dallis contends that his agreement to pay support for A.L. should be voided because (1) it contravened the established public policy of having a child's biological parents (in this case, Lloyd and Shorter) assume the financial responsibility of raising a child, and (2) our sense of justice counsels against ordering someone to pay support for a child that is not their biological child or legal ward. We find neither argument persuasive on the facts of this case.

Dallis correctly notes that there is a strong public policy in favor of parents supporting their biological children and that sound public policy, as well as an innate sense of justice, also counsels against imposing that burden on someone who is not a biological parent of the child. The principal case on this point cited in Dallis's brief, Fairrow v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
806 N.E.2d 360, 2004 Ind. App. LEXIS 679, 2004 WL 837863, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tirey-v-tirey-indctapp-2004.