Webb v. Brown

193 So. 3d 239, 2016 WL 1534815
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 15, 2016
DocketNo. 2015 CA 1594
StatusPublished

This text of 193 So. 3d 239 (Webb v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Brown, 193 So. 3d 239, 2016 WL 1534815 (La. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

WHIPPLE, C.J.

|2The State of Louisiana (“State”) appeals a trial court judgment, which granted plaiñtiff/appellée Corey Webb’s motion to nullify an authentic act of acknowledge[240]*240ment of paternity, through which he previously acknowledged himself to be the father of a child born to defendant/appellee, Ebony Brown (“Brown”). For the following reasons, we find that Webb’s action to nullify his authentic act acknowledging paternity is untimely, as it was filed more than two years after the peremptive deadline in LSA-R.S. 9:406(B)(2). Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s judgment, dismiss Webb’s motion with prejudice, and remand with instructions.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On October 19, 2010, Z.W. was born.1 On October 20, 2010, Corey Webb2 (‘Webb”) executed an in-hospital acknowl-edgement of paternity, which resulted in his name being placed as the father on Z.W.’s birth certificate. More than four years later, on December 30, 2014, these civil proceedings commenced when Webb filed a “Motion to Set Rule for Disavowal of Paternity,” contending that although he once believed he was Z.W.’s father, he now has cause to believe the contrary. The civil “motion,” which resulted in the judgment on review in the instant appeal, was allotted to Division “H” of the Sixteenth Judicial District Court and assigned for a hearing and conference before a hearing officer.

However, prior to the filing of the instant civil “motion” by Webb on August 26, 2011, The State of Louisiana, Department of Children and RFamily Services had instituted criminal non-support proceedings against Webb for criminal neglect of family and sought to establish child support and medical support. See State v. Webb, No.2011 NS 1939 on the docket of the Sixteenth Judicial District Court.3 As a result of the expedited child support proceedings held in that matter, by judgment dated February 22, 2012, Webb was initially ordered therein to obtain medical insurance for the child and to provide a payor designation. Thereafter, the State filed a motion in the non-support proceedings, on November 14, 2012, seeking modification of the prior order and to fix the amount of Webb’s child support obligation. On January 27, 2015, Webb was ordered to pay $1,106.00 in monthly child support for Z.W. In response to the hearing officer’s proposed judgment, Webb filed an “Objection” in the non-support proceedings.

Webb also separately commenced the instant civil proceedings by the filing of the aforesaid “Motion to Set Rule for Disavowal of Paternity.” This civil “Motion” (in actuality, a summary proceeding requesting that the matter be heard by rule to show cause) was allotted to the same division of the Sixteenth Judicial District Court and was likewise set for a mandatory conference before the same hearing officer.

The hearing officer conference concerning Webb’s “Motion” in these proceedings took place on February 2, 2015, which resulted in the hearing officer rendering [241]*241various, findings, including the identification of several critical procedural defects, namely: (1) that Webb’s motion was filed as a ^summary proceeding, but should have been filed by ordinary process pursuant to LSA-R-S. 9:406(B)(2);4 (2) that revocation or nullification of Webb’s ac-knowledgement, rather than a motion or action for disavowal of paternity, was the appropriate action Webb should have filed; and (3) that, because Webb’s motion was filed more than four years after he acknowledged Z.W., his cause of action was perempted pursuant to LSA-R.S. 9:406(B)(2). After noting these defects and specifically recognizing that there was a pending IV-D support rule regarding this child and these parties, the hearing officer rendered a conference report and proposed judgment ordering that the motion be dismissed with prejudice and at Webb’s costs.

On the same day, ie., February 2, 2015, a consent judgment was signed by another district judge, wherein Webb and Brown agreed to submit themselves and the child to DNA testing to determine whether Webb was Z.W.’s father “without the need for a hearing ordering same” and “in order to expedite the issues in this matter.” Following this DNA testing, Webb next filed an “Objection” to the Hearing Officer Recommendations, asserting that according to the DNA testing, he was not Z.W.’s biological father “despite him signing the birth certificate.”

Subsequent to the filing of this “Objection,” Webb also filed a “Motion to Nullify Acknowledgment,” wherein he alleged:

A couple of years later, [he] learned that [Z.W.] may not be his child and confronted [Brown] about it, as she continually stated that he was the only man with whom she had sexual relations during the period of time that the child was conceived. [Brown] continued to deceive [Webb] until he did a DNA test. At that time, [Brown] then stated that [another named individual] is the father if [Webb] is not the father.

|fiOn April 15, 2015, the trial court held a hearing on Webb’s “Motion for Disavowal of Paternity,” wherein the court stated, “according to DNA testing, [Webb] has a 0% probability of being the father of [Z.W.].” The trial court then reversed the hearing officer’s findings and recommendations, and granted Webb’s “Motion to Disavow Paternity.” A final written judgment was signed on August 18, 2015, decreeing that Webb was not the biological father of the child, and ordering that the Department of Vital Records remove his name from Z.W.’s birth record and that the'child’s name be changed from Z.W. to Z.B. (the mother’s last name). The State of Louisiana then filed the instant appeal of the trial court’s August 18, 2015 judgment granting Webb’s “Motion for Disavowal of Paternity.”5

In the instant appeal, the State6 assigns the following as error by the trial court:

[242]*242The trial court erred in rejecting the recommendation of the hearing officer that Webb failed to timely file the proper pleadings to contest his acknowledgement of paternity[,] and in rejecting the recommendations of the hearing officer that he pay [$1,106.00] in monthly child support. -

^DISCUSSION

Despite the unusual procedural posture of this case, the essential facts are not in dispute; instead, the issue in this appeal concerns a question of law. The scope of appellate review for an issue of law is simply to determine whether the trial court’s interpretative decision is legally correct. Furthermore, if the trial court’s decision is based on an erroneous application of law rather, than on a valid exercise of discretion, the decision is not entitled to deference by the reviewing court. Voisin v. International Companies & Consulting, Inc., 2005-0265 (La.App. 1st Cir.2/10/06), 924 So.2d 277, 279, writ denied. 2006-1019 (La.6/30/06), 933 So.2d 132.

Louisiana Civil Code article 196 provides, in pertinent part, that “[a] man may, by authentic -act or by signing the birth certificate, acknowledge a child not filiated to another man. ' The acknowledgment creates a presumption that the' man who acknowledges the child is the father.” Moreover, .an acknowledgment of paternity by an authentic act is deemed to be a legal finding of paternity and is sufficient to establish an obligation to support the child and to establish visitation without the necessity of obtaining a judgment of paternity. -See LSA-R.S.

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Bluebook (online)
193 So. 3d 239, 2016 WL 1534815, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-brown-lactapp-2016.