Walker v. Amos

746 N.E.2d 642, 140 Ohio App. 3d 32, 2000 Ohio App. LEXIS 2009
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 12, 2000
DocketT.C. No. DR9400726, C.A. No. C-990373.
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 746 N.E.2d 642 (Walker v. Amos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Amos, 746 N.E.2d 642, 140 Ohio App. 3d 32, 2000 Ohio App. LEXIS 2009 (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

Painter, Judge.

In a complex case involving the interplay of child-support statutes, we determine that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to modify, by suspending, a support order from another state, where the mother and child still reside. Because the tidal court had no subject-matter jurisdiction, we vacate its order.

I. Procedural History

Appellant Debra Walker and appellee Edgar Amos III, although they have never been married to each other, are the parents of one child. Walker and the child reside in Madison County, Indiana, and Amos resides in Hamilton County, *35 Ohio. In March 1994, Walker filed a uniform support petition form with the Hamilton County Clerk of Courts. The petition contained boxes to identify what action was being sought by the petitioner, which Walker marked to indicate that she was seeking a Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support (“URESA”) order for child support and medical coverage and for the collection of arrearages. She also requested income withholding and Amos’s Social Security number. She did not indicate on the form that she was seeking registration of a foreign support order or the enforcement of an existing order.

The form indicated that Amos had been ordered to pay $35 a week and had an adjudicated arrearage of $1,225. The petition was signed by Walker and by Joseph Kilmer, the deputy prosecuting attorney of the Madison County Child Support Division.

Also attached to the petition was a request from Kilmer for verification of Amos’s Ohio address, a copy of the decree of paternity in which an Indiana court had found, in pertinent part, that Amos had admitted to being the father of the child, that the parties had agreed that Amos would pay $35 a week beginning August 11, 1989, and that Amos should make every effort to provide medical insurance and should pay outstanding medical bills. The petition also had attached a computer printout of the support payments Amos had made from 1989 through March 1993, a copy of a photograph of Amos, and the certification from the Madison County Clerk of Court that the documents attached to the petition were a true copy of the original record.

Included in the documents was an order from the Indiana court certifying that the petition had been filed in Indiana in December 1993, that Amos was believed to be in Ohio, that Walker had been examined under oath and had affirmed the allegations in the petition, that Amos owed a duty of support, and that Walker was indigent. The Indiana court ordered that the certificate, copies of the petition, and a copy of Indiana’s reciprocal support statute be transmitted to Ohio’s Bureau of Child Support in Columbus.

The Hamilton County Clerk of Courts notified Amos by summons that he had received the certified complaint from Indiana and other documents under Ohio’s URESA law and instructed Amos to show cause why the order of support requested by Walker should not be made. The notice was captioned to indicate that the proceedings would involve an R.C. 3113.21(C) (Support Order to Withhold Earnings) hearing. The record before us next contains a printed “Report of Referee, URESA, Enforcing Existing Foreign Orders” that was apparently placed of record after a hearing. In that order, the referee determined that the existing order the court was being asked to adopt and enforce was for $151.67 a month (this is the correct monthly amount due based on the Indiana court’s weekly ordered $35), and that the arrearage was $1,890. The court ordered *36 payment of the monthly amount and $25 per month on the arrearage. The court did not order health coverage because it determined that Amos did not have health insurance available at a reasonable cost. The report was signed by the referee, Amos, and the Ohio Assistant Prosecutor for the Child Support Enforcement Agency (“CSEA”), and was approved by the trial court. Subsequently, the trial court entered a seek-work order under former R.C. 3113.21(D)(7).

Amos continued to fail to meet his child-support obligations. The CSEA filed contempt motions. In June 1995, the court concluded that Amos was physically able to work and found him in contempt for not meeting his support obligations. Amos failed to appear for the hearing scheduled to purge his contempt. He was apprehended. He paid the arrearages in full and was released.

Seven months later, CSEA filed another contempt motion because Amos had again failed to meet his support obligations. The hearing on the motion was continued twice for Amos to subpoena a witness to testify whether he was able to work. The motion was eventually dismissed when the court found that Amos had presented evidence of his inability to work due to his mental health problems. Almost one year later, CSEA filed another contempt motion. The trial court granted a continuance to allow Amos an opportunity to provide an updated medical statement about his mental health and his ability to work, and a status report on his “SSD claim.”

Three months later, another continuance was granted based on the possibility that Amos would be eligible for Supplemental Security Income (“SSI”). Amos was determined to be eligible for SSI benefits and received an $8,000 retroactive payment, none of which went toward his support obligations. Because Amos failed to comply with the court’s earlier order to make payments upon receiving SSI benefits, the court found Amos to be in contempt. Amos avoided incarceration by paying $2,000 to the support account, and a contempt hearing was scheduled.

Amos filed a motion to dismiss the contempt proceedings based on the fact that he was a recipient of SSI. After a four-month continuance, the parties attended a hearing before the trial court. The court granted Amos’s motion, set aside its contempt order, and, among other things, suspended Amos’s obligation to make child-support payments from the time he first became entitled to SSI benefits until further order of the court.

Walker and CSEA have appealed the trial court’s decision. After oral argument, we requested that the parties file supplemental briefs on the issue of whether an Ohio court has subject-matter jurisdiction to modify a foreign state’s child-support order by suspending its operation, when the father is a resident of Ohio, but the child and the mother reside in a foreign state. The parties filed their supplemental briefs on March 16, 2000. We have decided that the trial *37 court lacked subject-matter jurisdiction to suspend Amos’s child-support obligations.

II. URESA

At the time Walker filed her petition, Ohio applied its version of URESA to matters concerning a foreign state’s child-support order. (The law was changed in January 1998, so that R.C. Chapter 3115, which contained URESA, was repealed and replaced by the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act [“UIFSA”]. Our references to R.C. Chapter 3115 in this opinion pertain to URESA, unless otherwise indicated.) The Fourth District Court of Appeals has provided a succinct explanation of URESA:

“URESA’s purpose was to provide a practical method to enforce the legal obligations of child support when an obligor left the state in which the children resided. [Citation deleted.] The URESA process commences when the obligee, ie.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
746 N.E.2d 642, 140 Ohio App. 3d 32, 2000 Ohio App. LEXIS 2009, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-amos-ohioctapp-2000.