Watauga Cty. o/b/o McKiernan v. Shell

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 19, 2019
Docket18-687
StatusPublished

This text of Watauga Cty. o/b/o McKiernan v. Shell (Watauga Cty. o/b/o McKiernan v. Shell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watauga Cty. o/b/o McKiernan v. Shell, (N.C. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA18-687

Filed: 19 March 2019

Watauga County, No. 09 CVD 389

WATAUGA COUNTY on behalf of Nicole R. McKiernan, Plaintiff

v.

DAVID DWAYNE SHELL, Defendant.

Appeal by plaintiff from order entered 6 February 2018 by Judge Larry Leake

in District Court, Watauga County. Heard in the Court of Appeals 13 February 2019.

Di Santi Watson Capua Wilson & Garrett, PLLC, by Chelsea Bell Garrett, for plaintiff-appellant.

No brief filed for defendant-appellee.

STROUD, Judge.

The Watauga County Child Support Enforcement Agency appeals a trial court

order staying a IV-D child support proceeding initiated by the Avery County Child

Support Enforcement Agency to establish “continuing support and maintenance” “as

required by the North Carolina Child Support Guidelines, N.C.G.S. 50-13.4[;]” the

stay order was based upon a pending appeal in the related Chapter 50 child custody

proceeding between the parents of the children.1 The trial court acted under a

1We have listed the caption of this case as shown in the order on appeal, but we note that Watauga County file number 09 CVD 389 is a Chapter 50 custody claim involving different parties, while the Chapter IV-D child support claim which is the subject of this appeal is file number 17 CVD 116. The actual plaintiffs in Watauga County file number 09 CVD 389, David W. and Donna Shell, did not appear as parties in this appeal. WATAUGA CTY. O/B/O MCKIERNAN V. SHELL

Opinion of the Court

misapprehension of the applicable law in determining it had no jurisdiction to

consider a Chapter IV-D child support enforcement claim while the Chapter 50

custody appeal was pending. We reverse the stay order and remand for further

proceedings in accord with this opinion.

I. Background

Mother Nicole McKieran and Father David D. Shell are the parents of two

minor children for whom plaintiff Watauga County Child Support Enforcement

Agency sought to establish child support. Mother and Father are also defendants in

a child custody proceeding under Chapter 50 of the North Carolina General Statutes

brought in 2009 by the children’s paternal grandparents as plaintiffs. See Shell v.

Shell, ___ N.C. App. ___, ___, 819 S.E.2d 566 (2018). An order modifying child custody

was appealed to this Court, and we will quote the background as stated in the opinion

in the custody case:

This appeal arises from the modification of a 2012 custody order. Plaintiffs, David and Donna Shell, are the paternal grandparents of the children, Sam and Kim. Defendant David Shell is the son of plaintiffs and father of Sam and Kim. Defendant Nicole Green is the children’s mother and has married since the prior order and is now Nicole McKiernan. We will identify all parties by their relation to Sam and Kim. Therefore, plaintiffs will be referred to as the “Grandparents,” defendant Shell as “Father” and defendant Green as “Mother.” Although both parents are “defendants,” the interests of defendant Father are aligned with plaintiff Grandparents and are opposed to the interests of defendant Mother. The prior custody order was entered in May 2012.

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Father was granted sole legal and physical custody of the children and Mother had visitation rights. . . . On 3 June 2016, Mother moved to modify custody alleging that since the prior custody order there had been a substantial change of circumstances affecting the welfare of the children because she had remained sober for several years, maintained a job for over two years, and gotten remarried. She also alleged that Father had become more difficult to deal with regarding visitation. He refused to send the children’s homework so the children could complete it during visits with Mother, and he denied Mother information about the children’s school activities and would not allow her to participate. On 17 and 30 January 2017, the trial court held a hearing on the motion to modify custody. The trial court entered an order modifying custody on 6 February 2017, which determined there had been a substantial change of circumstances affecting the welfare of the children and modified custody, granting Father and Mother joint legal custody, with Mother receiving primary physical custody. Father and Grandparents appeal[ed on 8 March 2017 and 18 July 2017, respectively.]

Id. at ___, 819 S.E.2d at 569-70 (footnotes omitted). The order appealed from in Shell

is from Watauga County, file number 09 CVD 389.

While the appeal in Shell was pending before this Court, on 4 May 2017, the

Avery County Child Support Enforcement Agency filed a verified complaint on behalf

of Mother against Father for IV-D child support. See generally N.C. Gen. Stat. § 110-

129(7) (2017) (“‘IV-D’ case means a case in which services have been applied for or

are being provided by a child support enforcement agency established pursuant to

Title IV-D of the Social Security Act as amended and this Article.”). The IV-D child

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support case was filed in Avery County, file number 17 CVD 116. Custody claims are

not considered in IV-D child support cases as noted in Gray v. Peele:

We understand that the order failed to address child custody because this case was heard in Wake County Civil IV–D District Court and prosecuted by the Wake County Child Support Enforcement Agency on behalf of Plaintiff. The “Civil IV–D” session of District Court is commonly referred to as “child support court.” Chapter 110 of the North Carolina General Statutes sets out a comprehensive statutory scheme for establishment of child support orders and enforcement of those orders in cases which fall under that Chapter, defined as “a case in which services have been applied for or are being provided by a child support enforcement agency established pursuant to Title IV–D of the Social Security Act as amended and this Article.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 110–129(7) (2011). N.C. Gen. Stat. § 110– 129.1(a)(3) grants to the Department of Health and Human Services the “power and duty” to Establish and implement procedures under which in IV–D cases either parent or, in the case of an assignment of support, the State may request that a child support order enforced under this Chapter be reviewed and, if appropriate, adjusted in accordance with the most recently adopted uniform statewide child support guidelines prescribed by the Conference of Chief District Court Judges. Because of the specialized nature of the IV–D session of court, motions for modification of custody are not heard, nor do Child Support Enforcement agencies represent parents in regard to any custody issues.

235 N.C. App. 554, 559, 761 S.E.2d 739, 743 (2014).

Based upon the trial court’s Chapter 50 custody order, as of February 2017,

the children were in the primary physical custody of Mother, and Avery County Child

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Support Enforcement Agency then filed its complaint to establish child support on

her behalf:

(c) Actions or proceedings to establish, enforce, or modify a duty of support or establish paternity as initiated under this Article shall be brought in the name of the county or State agency on behalf of the public assistance recipient or nonrecipient client.

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