Webb v. Menix

2004 NMCA 048, 90 P.3d 989, 135 N.M. 531
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 20, 2004
Docket23,736
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 2004 NMCA 048 (Webb v. Menix) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Webb v. Menix, 2004 NMCA 048, 90 P.3d 989, 135 N.M. 531 (N.M. Ct. App. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

PICKARD, J.

{1} The issues in this case arise from Mother’s attempt to receive retroactive child support payments under the Uniform Parentage Act [UPA], NMSA 1978, §§ 40-11-1 to -23 (1986, as amended through 2001). The parties’ child was born in December 1986, shortly after their pro se divorce. In May 1999, Mother filed this suit in her own name seeking a determination of paternity, as well as custody, past and future child support, and attorney fees. The district court ruled that Mother waived most of her claim to retroactive child support, determined an amount of monthly support Father should pay, and awarded Mother a portion of her requested attorney fees.

{2} The issues raised on appeal are whether the district court erred in (1) awarding child support retroactive only to Decernber 1998, (2) awarding Mother only $1500 of her requested attorney fees, (3) refusing to allow the child to be added as a party at the commencement of trial, and (4) computing Father’s available gross income for purposes of child support. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the judgment of the district court.

RETROACTIVE CHILD SUPPORT

{3} The UPA states that the court shall award child support retroactive to the child’s birth provided that it consider applicable equitable defenses “in deciding whether and how long to order retroactive support.” Section 40 — 11—15(C)(2). Before ruling that Mother had waived her claim to most of the retroactive child support, the district court noted that the equities weighed heavily on both sides in this case. Our review of the record leads us to conclude the district court properly weighed the equities.

{4} Our Court has previously recognized two kinds of common-law waiver in the child support context: intentional waiver and waiver by acquiescence. See Sisneroz v. Polanco, 1999-NMCA-039, ¶ 12, 126 N.M. 779, 975 P.2d 392. Intentional waiver consists of three elements: “(1) a known legal right; (2) relinquished for consideration; and (3) where waiver does not infringe on the rights of others.” Id. ¶ 15. Noting that retroactive child support is for the benefit of the child as well as the parent, this Court determined that the father in Sisneroz did not establish all the elements of intentional waiver. Id. We do likewise.

{5} Unlike intentional waiver, however, the defense of waiver by acquiescence “arises when a person knows he is entitled to enforce a right and neglects to do so for such a length of time that under the facts of the case the other party may fairly infer that he has waived or abandoned such right.” Id. ¶ 16 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). Waiver by acquiescence should not be inferred from doubtful or ambiguous acts. Id. In rejecting the father’s assertion of waiver by acquiescence in Sisneroz, this Court noted that he relied on the fact that the mother failed to ask him directly for support and, when he asked the child’s maternal grandparents if the child needed anything, he was told that the child was doing fine. Id. ¶ 17. In Sisneroz, there was no evidence that the mother told the father she did not want his money. Id. The mother did not tell the father he could not see the child, and she facilitated a relationship between the father and the child. Id.

{6} Mother’s actions in this case differ from those in Sisneroz. In this case, both parties testified that Mother told Father that the child was not his child. There was testimony that Mother also told third parties that Father was not the child’s father and even identified another man as the father. Mother did not name Father on the birth certificate, which indicated that the father was unknown. The divorce decree, entered in the parties’ pro se divorce, did not mention the unborn child, although the parties knew Mother was pregnant. Mother testified that she wanted the divorce before the birth certificate was issued and that she didn’t want Father on the birth certificate because she was angry and frightened. There was undisputed evidence that Mother destroyed clothing for the child after she learned that Father had bought the clothing, instead of her parents’ having bought it, as she was led to believe. Mother testified that she told her family that she did not want anything from Father.

{7} Mother explained that her purpose in asserting Father was not the child’s biological father was so he would not take the baby from her. She testified she thought Father would kidnap the child and go to Italy where his father lived. There was evidence that Father once threatened to take the child during an argument when Mother was six or seven months pregnant, and it was during this argument that Mother told Father the child was not his. Mother also sought to explain her fear of Father with evidence that he had committed a battery on her and she was hospitalized as a result.

{8} On appeal, Mother argues the district court erred in refusing to adopt her requested finding that she had a reasonable fear that Father would take the child. This argument, however, ignores the appellate standard of review. In reviewing the district court’s findings, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to the findings and disregard unfavorable evidence. See Williams v. Williams, 109 N.M. 92, 95, 781 P.2d 1170, 1173 (Ct.App.1989). This Court does not reweigh the evidence or judge the credibility of the witnesses. Id. Although Mother’s testimony about her fear that Father would take the child may not have been rebutted by other testimony, it was for the district court to weigh this testimony in the context of all the other evidence before it.

{9} The evidence supports the finding that, beginning in December 1998, Mother was willing to acknowledge Father as the child’s father and to begin to facilitate a relationship between Father and the child. At the same time, Father began paying support for the child. Although Mother may have feared that Father would take the child as he once threatened in an argument before the child was born, the evidence that she denied his paternity to Father and others, she destroyed the baby clothing once she learned it was from Father and not her parents, she told her family she did not want anything from Father, and she did not take any action until late 1998 to acknowledge Father’s paternity supports the determination that Mother waived any right or claim she had to child support until December 1998. See id. at 99, 781 P.2d at 1177 (affirming the determination that the mother waived child support arrearages for a time because she told the father that she did not want his money, she told him she did not want him to ever see the child again, and she did not ask the father for child support during that time); cf. Sisneroz, 1999-NMCA-039, ¶ 17, 126 N.M. 779, 975 P.2d 392 (reversing the determination that the mother waived her right to child support because the mother facilitated a relationship between the father and the child and had sought to establish paternity and obtain support through the Child Support Enforcement Division).

{10} In Williams, the mother had filed a URESA proceeding in Texas ten years before she sought arrearages in New Mexico. 109 N.M. at 100, 781 P.2d at 1178.

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Bluebook (online)
2004 NMCA 048, 90 P.3d 989, 135 N.M. 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/webb-v-menix-nmctapp-2004.