Willis v. State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Enforcement Division

992 P.2d 581, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 157, 1999 WL 1067500
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 26, 1999
DocketS-8367
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 992 P.2d 581 (Willis v. State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Enforcement Division) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Willis v. State, Department of Revenue, Child Support Enforcement Division, 992 P.2d 581, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 157, 1999 WL 1067500 (Ala. 1999).

Opinions

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Tom M. Willis appeals an administrative decision requiring him to pay the state more than $13,000 in child support arrears and $157 in ongoing monthly payments to reimburse the Child Support Enforcement Division for public assistance it paid on behalf of Willis’s two young daughters. Although CSED reduced Willis’s ongoing child support obligation by applying Alaska Civil Rule 90.3(e)’s “good cause” exception, Willis challenges the reduction as insufficient. He also challenges CSED’s unexplained failure to reduce his arrears under the same exception. Because we conclude that CSED’s decision requires clarification, we remand for further consideration and findings.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In 1988 the State of Alaska began providing public assistance to Pauline Bobby on behalf of her two daughters, Arlettie, born in 1975, and Alice, born in 1979. CSED subsequently petitioned for an order establishing Willis’s paternity of the two girls. On May 9, 1994, the superior court granted the petition and issued an order declaring Willis their father. The following year, CSED issued a Notice and Finding of Financial Responsibility directing Willis to pay ongoing support of $606 per month from April 1, 1995, and to pay $38,797 to reimburse the state for its public assistance payments, and for past-due support, accrued from May 1, 1988, to March 31, 1995. In calculating Willis’s arrears and ongoing support obligation, CSED relied on average Alaskan wage statistics provided by the state’s Department of Labor.

Willis, who lived in the village of Stony River with his wife of eight years and their four children, requested a formal hearing to challenge CSED’s finding. CSED hearing officer Kay Howard conducted a telephonic hearing on December 4, 1995. Before the hearing CSED reduced Willis’s ongoing support obligation to $462 per month effective November 1, 1995, and adjusted his arrears to $48,653 through October 31, 1995. These changes reflected Arlettie’s emancipation upon her eighteenth birthday on August 31, 1993.

At the hearing, Willis requested a further reduction. He based this request in part on the contention Alice had spent periods of time in his custody and that Arlettie had actually become emancipated before her eighteenth birthday. But he also based this request on a claim of financial hardship resulting from his low earnings, unusually high family expenses, and limited job prospects.

To support his financial hardship claim, Willis relied on income tax returns from the years 1988 through 1994, which reflected less than $2,000 per year of adjusted income in 1988 and 1989, $14,587 and $12,095 per year of adjusted income in 1990 and 1991, and less than $11,000 per year of adjusted income from 1992 through 1994. Willis also testified at the hearing that he had recently lost a $300-per-month job at MarkAir, which had gone out of business. Willis explained that at the time of the hearing he was earning $860 per month working for. the Post Office and for Arctic Circle Air. According to Willis, his wife earned an additional $300 per month. Willis contended that he had no immediate prospects for further employment, since jobs in Stony River are scarce. Willis further testified that his monthly bills and debts presently exceeded his salary. Specifically, he claimed that on a monthly basis he paid $90 for housing, $400 for food, $150 for gas, $200 for fuel to heat the house, $221 for a four-wheeler, $140 for a snow machine, $120-$140 for electricity, $212 for a boat motor, $25 for local phone charges, and $62 in credit card debt.

[584]*584David Peltier, the Child Support Enforcement Officer who represented CSED at the hearing, did not dispute Willis’s testimony. After hearing Willis testify, Peltier acknowledged that he understood Willis’s “argument for poverty.” But because Peltier had not yet received all of Willis’s tax records and also wanted to see documentation corroborating Alice and Arlettie’s custodial status, he told the' hearing officer, Howard, that CSED would “relook” its figures after he received and reviewed this information. Howard asked Willis’s counsel, James Davis, if Willis would provide the additional information. Davis replied that Willis would supply the information and that he had no objection to Peltier’s further review of Willis’s tax records. Davis nevertheless expressed concern that CSED might confine its further review to the written records, ignoring the testimony Willis had given to support his request for a hardship exemption:

[I]t seems to me that the CSED’s practice up until today in every case that I have ever dealt with it about, they don’t — that hardship determination, whether or not somebody is- indigent, I haven’t seen how they calculate that. They look at the W-2s and the data the W-2s reflect, and I will get that all to the CSED, I guess all I am saying .is that I hope they look at the testimony that [indiscernible] which is that Mr. Willis and his wife have four kids, are making a little under — it seems to me ten thousand dollars a year, and taking care of them in an expensive area to live.

Peltier replied that although he had no authority to determine whether a noncustodial parent qualifies for a hardship exemption, he could give the hearing officer a recommendation. In fact, Peltier offered to do so for Willis: “[A]t your request, Mr. Davis, I would be happy to make a recommendation also to Ms. Howard as to whether after reviewing this and reviewing his testimony as to whether he does or does not meet the criteria.” Davis responded to this offer affirmatively, “I appreciate that.” Davis also asked if Willis could provide anything else “that you think might be helpful to find out.” Indicating uncertainty about “all the factors you look at,” Davis emphasized that “Willis is more than happy to answer any questions you might have, because we would hate for you to think that he ... has been better off than he really is.”

Peltier answered that he thought no further testimony would be necessary: “[Actually, you took — Mr. Willis has provided pretty good answers to the questions you asked.” But Howard intervened, saying that she needed some additional information about Willis’s expenses. Upon questioning Willis further, Howard asked Peltier if he needed any other information. Peltier said, “I think we have got it all.” After noting preliminarily that Willis’s monthly expenses appeared to exceed his monthly income, Pel-tier said that he would review Willis’s tax records, “and then I believe I can make a recommendation to the hearing examiner.”

At this point, Davis repeated that he would submit the remaining records and, expressing renewed concern over the adequacy of the testimony Willis had already given, Davis offered additional testimony to establish Willis’s past financial circumstances more completely:

I just have one question for Mr. Peltier and for the hearing officer. Do we need to walk Mr. Willis back through time insofar as our position for Mr. Willis is going to be that he has been indigent all the years in question. The testimony that he has given is to his present financial status, but it doesn’t roll back, or he hasn’t testified, and I don’t know if he could. But it doesn’t roll back to ’88 unless — how do we deal with that problem?

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
992 P.2d 581, 1999 Alas. LEXIS 157, 1999 WL 1067500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willis-v-state-department-of-revenue-child-support-enforcement-division-alaska-1999.