Union Pacific Railroad v. Bolton

840 F. Supp. 421, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18728, 1993 WL 546951
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedDecember 17, 1993
DocketCiv. A. 93-3405
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 840 F. Supp. 421 (Union Pacific Railroad v. Bolton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Pacific Railroad v. Bolton, 840 F. Supp. 421, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18728, 1993 WL 546951 (E.D. La. 1993).

Opinion

ORDER AND REASONS

FELDMAN, District Judge.

This motion asks a new question: Can the federal interpleader statute be used to avoid the domestic relations exception to federal subject matter jurisdiction? The answer is, no.

Union Pacific Railroad filed this inter-pleader action to extricate itself from conflicting state court judgments that arose out of a bitter divorce and child support dispute. Because the underlying quarrel so patently involves a lengthy domestic fight over paternity and entitlement to child support payments, the Court requested the parties to address whether the Court has jurisdiction of this interpleader proceeding. The Court finds that it lacks subject matter jurisdiction, and UPRR’s interpleader action is dismissed.

*423 I. Background

A. The Family Fight

This sad tale arises out of the broken marriage of Susan Strohmeyer and Robert Wayne Bolton. 1 On February 23, 1981, Strohmeyer filed suit for a judicial separation in state court in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana. On April 10, 1981, that court granted Strohmeyer a judicial separation; it held that Bolton fathered Strohmeyer’s child; and it awarded Strohmeyer child support. Bolton, who now says he was mistaken at the time, did not contest paternity in the Louisiana case. (Bolton observes that he was misled and did not contest paternity because the child had been born during the marriage and was almost eight months old when suit was filed. He adds that Louisiana Civil Code Article 189 prevented him from contesting paternity.) 2

B. The States Fight

The problem the railroad faces did not develop until October of 1990, when Strohmeyer sued Bolton for an increase in child support in Nebraska, where Bolton presently lives and works for the railroad. Bolton chose to contest paternity in the Nebraska court, and he succeeded. The Nebraska court ordered Strohmeyer and her child to submit to blood tests to enable the court to adjudicate the paternity issue. 3 Strohmeyer refused to submit to blood testing. Because Nebraska (like Louisiana) allows a court to find against the party who refuses to submit to a blood test, 4 the Nebraska court stayed any further child support payments until Strohmeyer submitted to blood testing. That order was entered September 30, 1991. It prohibited Strohmeyer from doing anything to collect child support from Bolton, and it was extended to prohibit UPRR from taking any steps which would assist Strohmeyer to collect child support.

The Nebraska court held that Bolton was not the father of Strohmeyer’s child. Unhappy with the courts in Nebraska, Strohmeyer returned to Louisiana and sought an increase in child support and a wage assignment. It is said that Strohmeyer never told the Louisiana court of the events in Nebraska. On March 13, 1992, the Louisiana court issued an Income Assignment which directed UPRR to withhold income from Bolton’s monthly wages in the amount of $855.93 on account of the child support payments the Louisiana court said Bolton owed Strohmeyer. It does not appear that the Louisiana court sought to reconcile the Nebraska events with its order. Regrettably, Nebraska seems not to have cared much about Louisiana either, as this feud unfolded between the states with everyone caught in the middle.

Two weeks after issuance of the Income Assignment order, an employee of UPRR, Rita Jensen, wrote to the Louisiana court and included a copy of the Nebraska court’s order, stating that UPRR believed it could not comply with the Income Assignment order. In response, on April 8,1992, a hearing officer from the Louisiana court, Carol Aecardo, wrote UPRR and took the position that the Nebraska order did not enjoin execution of the Louisiana Income Assignment order. Subsequently, for some reason, the Louisiana court recanted, and on June 24, 1992 it granted Bolton’s Petition to Recognize and Enforce a Foreign Judgment and recalled the earlier Income Assignment order. Then confusion began to reign. Less *424 than three months later, the Louisiana court dismissed Bolton’s Petition to Recognize and Enforce a Foreign Judgment. Bolton unsuccessfully appealed to the Louisiana Fifth Circuit Court of Appeal. Thus, the railroad became the third victim in this amazing story.

The Louisiana court issued a second Income Assignment order on October 2, 1992. It again directed UPRR to withhold $855.93 a month from Bolton’s pay check. UPRR withheld the money for two months and sent it to the Louisiana court. But, not to be outdone, on November 30,1992 the Nebraska court issued a temporary injunction which restrained and enjoined UPRR from complying with the Louisiana Income Assignment order. Strohmeyer then filed a contempt proceeding against the railroad in the Louisiana court; she asked that court to cite UPRR for contempt for not withholding Bolton’s wages.

A temporary peace was apparently reached. On May 24, 1993 the Nebraska court dismissed the temporary restraining order. A day later, on May 25, 1993, the Louisiana court dismissed the contempt proceeding against UPRR. Once the Nebraska court’s temporary restraining order was no longer effective, UPRR resumed withholding Bolton’s wages under the Income Assignment order. UPRR withheld funds from Mr. Bolton’s June 1993 pay. But peace was elusive.

In June the Nebraska court reinstated Bolton’s injunction petition and again issued a temporary order restraining UPRR from complying with the Income Assignment • order. A month and a half later in July, Strohmeyer filed yet another contempt rule against UPRR for failing to withhold Bolton’s wages. The second contempt rule is still pending before the Louisiana court.

C. The Family Fight Gets Worse

Bolton has now filed suit against the child’s alleged father, Pat Crabtree, in the same Louisiana case in which Strohmeyer obtained her increased child support award and wage assignment orders. Moreover, he recently amended his claim to move against Strohmeyer too because of a recently passed statute, La.R.S. 9:305. That statute appears to revive Bolton’s paternity argument in Louisiana, which had previously prescribed. 5

D. What To Do?

UPRR now faces an impossible situation. The Court is not unsympathetic. The railroad cannot safely obey the order of either state court. Compliance with either court order would be a per se violation of the other. So UPRR has turned to this Court in the hope of extricating itself from its predicament.

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840 F. Supp. 421, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 18728, 1993 WL 546951, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-pacific-railroad-v-bolton-laed-1993.