United States v. Kramer

50 F. Supp. 2d 855, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7717, 1999 WL 336264
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Indiana
DecidedMay 10, 1999
DocketIP 98-140 CR B/F
StatusPublished

This text of 50 F. Supp. 2d 855 (United States v. Kramer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Indiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Kramer, 50 F. Supp. 2d 855, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7717, 1999 WL 336264 (S.D. Ind. 1999).

Opinion

ENTRY

BARKER, Chief Judge.'

The prosecution, United States of America (the “government”), seeks a criminal conviction of defendant, Robert H. Kramer (“Kramer”), for willfully failing to pay a past due child support obligation, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 228, known as the “Child Support Recovery Act” (“CSRA”). For the reasons discussed, we find the defendant GUILTY as charged in the grand jury’s one count indictment.

Factual Summary

On March 10, 1999, a bench trial was conducted at which only two witnesses testified, one for the government and one for the defendant: Janice Jacobs (formerly Janice Hughes), the mother of the child for whom support is sought, and the defendant *856 Kramer. 'Our factual recitation derives from the testimony of these two individuals and the exhibits introduced into evidence.

On November 25, 1980, Jacobs, a resident of Indianapolis, gave birth to a son, Beecher Ray Hughes (“Beecher”). Approximately ten months earlier in January 1980, Kramer and Jacobs had met in Indianapolis and had a brief sexual relationship that ended no later than January 30, 1980. Kramer’s permanent residence was in Minnesota; he has never resided in Indiana, but his job brought him to Indianapolis for three weeks in January 1980, while he trained to become a truck driver for Mayflower. Jacobs maintains that Kramer was her son’s father. Kramer testified that he received a call via his dispatcher when Beecher was born informing him that he was the father of a baby boy (Jacobs’ brother apparently called Mayflower and asked that the newborn’s weight and length be conveyed to Kramer).

Sometime in late 1982, Jacobs and Kramer had a conversation when Jacobs informed Kramer that she intended to file a paternity action against him in Indiana. The parties dispute whether Kramer ever denied being Beecher’s father, but they agree that Jacobs filed the paternity action in 1982 in the Marion County Circuit Court, Marion County, Indiana, under cause number CPT82-5637. It is also undisputed that Kramer never appeared at this or any subsequent paternity-related proceedings and that the Indiana court established Kramer’s paternity by default judgment. In December 1992, the Marion County Circuit Court directed Kramer to pay child support for Beecher to the Marion County Clerk at the rate of $25 per week. Kramer also testified that sometime in 1991, he had a conversation with an Indiana' social services agent regarding paternity, when he informed the agent that he did not wish to discuss the situation further unless his paternity was first established by some means such as a blood test.

Kramer testified both that he possessed no knowledge (in 1982) that a paternity action had been filed against him and that he never received either formal service of process or any informal notification of the paternity proceedings. Neither party asserts (nor does the state court file reveal) that service of process was in fact obtained on Kramer. Kramer testified that he first learned of the paternity action in the fall of 1990 when his employer, Mayflower, informed him' that an Indiana court had ordered it to take $50.00 from each two-week pay-check for outstanding child support. Kramer testified that Mayflower informed him that it would comply with the court order and that if he disagreed with the order it was up to him “to do something about it.” Kramer testified that this attachment of wages prompted him to retain Indianapolis attorney Timothy L. Bookwalter and to challenge the 1982 default judgment establishing his paternity. Kramer succeeded in retaining Bookwal-ter, an attorney licensed arid practicing in Indiana, even though he maintained a residence in Minnesota. In a sworn statement in that pleading (Def.’s Ex. A), Kramer denied that he is the father of Beecher and stated that he had possessed no knowledge of the paternity proceeding until Mayflower informed him in 1990 that a wage withholding order was in place. He denied ever residing in Indiana, noting that he had been employed as an over-the-road truck driver for the past eleven years.

The Marion County Circuit Court set a hearing on Kramer’s petition to set aside the default judgment for September 24, 1991. Kramer failed to appear at the hearing despite learning from Bookwalter that a hearing had been scheduled for that date. Kramer testified that he contacted Bookwalter by telephone and informed him that he would be unable to attend the hearing. He testified that he repeated his a telephone calls notifying his counsel of his unavailability for other court settings a “couple of times.” Def.’s Ex. A In December 1991, Bookwalter filed a motion to withdraw as Kramer’s counsel, stating that *857 Kramer “has failed and refused to cooperate with counsel by not appearing for court dates.” Kramer received Bookwalter’s notice of his withdrawal as counsel, but he failed to retain another attorney to challenge the dfefault judgment establishing his paternity. Kramer worked at Mayflower until January 1992, when he quit because he failed to renew his trucker’s license and because he was suffering from “asthma” and self-diagnosed “depression” caused in part by worries regarding the Indiana child support order.

In June 1993 through February 1994, Kramer obtained a job at Lenneman Transport, where he apparently managed to work despite his asthma and depression. He earned approximately $1,600.00 a .month. In December 1993, he injured his back and eventually received workers compensation benefits in the amounts of $8,200 in November 1994 and $20,000 in February 1996. Lenneman never attached any of Kramer’s wages to pay child support obligations. In 1995, Kramer also received $5,100 from the estate of his deceased mother. Kramer has not worked since February 1994 because he does not believe that he could pass a physical, due to his bad back, asthma and depression. He currently resides in the state of Washington with his brother. In 1996, when an FBI Special Agent visited Kramer in Washington, Kramer testified that he informed that agent that he did not see any reason to attempt to work while this paternity action remained unresolved. Kramer further testified that after Bookwalter withdrew as his attorney and Kramer left Mayflower, he saw no reason to do anything since he did not know that he owed child support.

On October 15, 1998, a federal Grand Jury returned the following indictment:

The Grand Jury charges that:

Between October 1993, and December, 1995, ROBERT HERBERT KRAMER, defendant herein, and a resident of Minnesota, did willfully fail to pay a past due support obligation with respect to a child who resides in Indiana, all in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 228.

Legal Background

The Child Support Recovery Act makes it a crime for one to willfully fail to pay a past due child support obligation with respect to a child who resides in another State. The CSRA defines a “past due child support obligation” as any amount “determined under a court order or an order of an administrative process pursuant to the law of a State to be due from a person for the support and maintenance of a child....” 1

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Bluebook (online)
50 F. Supp. 2d 855, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 7717, 1999 WL 336264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kramer-insd-1999.