Watkins v. Benjamin ( 2019 )


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  •               IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA18-894
    Filed: 20 August 2019
    Buncombe County, No. 13 CVD 3554
    HENRY C. WATKINS, Plaintiff,
    v.
    JENNIFER L. BENJAMIN (f/k/a Watkins), Defendant.
    Appeal by Defendant from orders entered 28 December 2017 and 25 January
    2018 by Judge Ward D. Scott in Buncombe County District Court. Heard in the Court
    of Appeals 23 May 2019.
    Jackson Family Law, by Jill Schnabel Jackson, for Plaintiff-Appellee.
    Jonathan McGirt for Defendant-Appellant.
    COLLINS, Judge.
    Defendant appeals from the trial court’s (1) 28 December 2017 order
    establishing child support obligations and settling arrearage issues between the
    parties and (2) 25 January 2018 order denying Defendant’s motions pursuant to
    North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure 59 and 60 seeking to modify the 28 December
    2017 order. Defendant contends that the trial court erred by exercising subject
    matter jurisdiction over the child support dispute in the 28 December 2017 order, and
    that both the 28 December 2017 and 25 January 2018 orders should be vacated (the
    latter as moot) as a result. We affirm.
    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    I.   Background
    The parties married in October 1996, separated in August 2012, and divorced
    in April 2014. Two children were born of the marriage, and the family lived together
    in Buncombe County.
    In April 2013, following the parties’ separation, Defendant and the children
    relocated to Virginia. On 19 August 2013, Plaintiff filed a complaint in Buncombe
    County District Court seeking equitable distribution of the marital estate and joint
    custody of the children. Defendant answered on 14 February 2014, and asserted a
    number of counterclaims including, inter alia, a claim for child support. Plaintiff
    replied, asserted affirmative defenses, and moved to dismiss on 3 April 2014,
    conceding that he “owe[d] a duty of support to the minor children.”
    The trial court entered a temporary consent order on 17 July 2014 awarding
    the parties joint custody of the children and awarding primary placement of the
    children to Plaintiff in Buncombe County. On 6 February 2015, the trial court
    entered an order that, inter alia, denied both parties’ claims for temporary child
    support, and reserved the issues of retroactive and prospective child support for
    subsequent determination. The trial court entered an order on 25 August 2015 that,
    inter alia, dismissed both parties’ pending claims for retroactive child support, held
    that no child support arrears existed as of 1 August 2015, and reserved the issues of
    child custody and prospective child support for subsequent determination.
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    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    On 9 October 2015, the trial court entered an order that, inter alia, found that
    Defendant had relocated to Maryland, awarded custody of the children to Plaintiff;
    and ordered Defendant to pay Plaintiff child support (including arrears) and
    temporary prospective child support. The trial court entered an order on 22 March
    2016 that, inter alia, calculated the arrears owed to Plaintiff by Defendant, set
    Defendant’s permanent prospective child support obligation to Plaintiff, and set forth
    certain prospective expenses to be shared by the parties. Plaintiff applied for child
    support services from the Buncombe County Child Support Enforcement Agency,
    which moved to intervene on 27 May 2016. On 28 June 2016, the trial court entered
    an order that, inter alia, allowed the intervention and recalculated the child support
    arrears owed to Plaintiff by Defendant.
    Defendant filed a motion to modify the child custody arrangement and to hold
    Plaintiff in civil contempt on 4 October 2016. The trial court entered a contempt
    citation and order to show cause on 6 October 2016. On 3 January 2017, the trial
    court entered a consent order that reflected the parties’ agreement to, inter alia: (1)
    modify the custody arrangement such that the parties would share joint custody of
    the children, and award primary placement of the children to Defendant; (2) settle
    Defendant’s pending claims in the action; (3) reserve Plaintiff’s rights to recover
    retroactive child support from Defendant; and (4) have the trial court and the State
    of North Carolina “retain jurisdiction over the parties and the minor children in
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    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    regards to child custody and child support issues” and “future modification of” the
    orders enforcing the trial court’s rulings on those issues.
    Sometime in early 2017, Defendant filed a complaint seeking child support
    from Plaintiff in the Circuit Court of Baltimore County, Maryland (the “Maryland
    action”). Plaintiff moved to dismiss, and the Maryland court dismissed Defendant’s
    Maryland action on 9 June 2017, concluding that it lacked personal jurisdiction over
    Plaintiff. On 13 November 2017, Defendant filed a petition with the Maryland court
    to have the dismissal of the Maryland action reviewed, and Defendant’s petition was
    apparently granted and remained pending as of the time the orders at issue in this
    appeal were entered.
    On 19 May 2017—after she filed the Maryland action, and before the Maryland
    court dismissed the same—Defendant moved the trial court (i.e., the Buncombe
    County District Court) to modify the child support obligations between the parties to
    reflect the modified custody arrangement, specifically arguing that “substantial
    changes in circumstances [] ha[d] occurred[.]”
    On 10 August 2017, Plaintiff moved the trial court to “review [] the current
    order of child support” and to “determine an appropriate award of support and an
    appropriate manner of crediting the arrears due from Defendant to Plaintiff.”
    Plaintiff stated that the children were with Defendant in Maryland, but did not allege
    that a substantial change in circumstances had taken place.
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    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    The trial court entered a consent order on 7 November 2017 granting
    Defendant’s request to voluntarily dismiss the 19 May 2017 motion without prejudice.
    Defendant paid the arrears she owed to Plaintiff in full on 9 November 2017.
    The trial court held a hearing on 14-15 November 2017 on Plaintiff’s 10 August
    2017 motion to clarify the child support obligations owed by the parties. At the
    hearing, Defendant moved to dismiss due to the pendency of the Maryland court’s
    review of the dismissal of the Maryland action. The trial court denied Defendant’s
    motion.
    The trial court entered the child support order here at issue on 28 December
    2017. In its 28 December 2017 order, the trial court, inter alia: (1) found that “North
    Carolina retains ongoing, exclusive jurisdiction of the matters of custody and support
    of the minor children[,]” even though the children resided with Defendant in
    Maryland; (2) ordered Plaintiff to make child support payments going forward; and
    (3) decreed that the order “resolve[d] all pending matters of child support[ and]
    arrears[] by and between the parties.”
    On 8 January 2018, Defendant moved the trial court under N.C. Gen. Stat. §
    1A-1, Rules 59 and 60, to amend the 28 December 2017 order after consideration of
    Defendant’s draft proposed order, which the trial court agreed to consider. On 25
    January 2018, the trial court entered an order denying Defendant’s Rule 59 and 60
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    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    motions and dismissing them with prejudice. Defendant timely appealed both the 28
    December 2017 and 25 January 2018 orders.
    II.    Discussion
    Defendant contends that the trial court erred by exercising subject matter
    jurisdiction over the child support issue in the 28 December 2017 order, and that the
    25 January 2018 order is moot as a result.
    a. Standard of Review
    We review a trial court’s exercise of subject matter jurisdiction de novo. Keith
    v. Wallerich, 
    201 N.C. App. 550
    , 554, 
    687 S.E.2d 299
    , 302 (2009).
    b. Analysis
    The Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (“UIFSA”), codified at N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 52C (2017), contains a provision that sets forth whether a state has jurisdiction
    over a support dispute when there exist multiple support proceedings pending
    simultaneously in multiple states: N.C. Gen. Stat. § 52C-2-204 (“Simultaneous
    Proceedings”). N.C. Gen. Stat. § 52C-2-204(a) specifically concerns when a “tribunal
    of this State may exercise jurisdiction to establish a support order”—as opposed to
    the state’s jurisdiction to modify an existing support order—and sets forth certain
    deadlines for filing a support petition which a litigant must meet if it seeks to have a
    state exercise jurisdiction over the petition. 
    Id. (emphasis added).
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    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    Defendant argues that, pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 52C-2-204(a), the trial
    court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the child support issue in the 28
    December 2017 order. Specifically, Defendant argues that since Plaintiff did not owe
    Defendant child support on 28 December 2017, the 28 December 2017 order setting
    Plaintiff’s obligation to Defendant was the establishment of a new child support order,
    rather than the modification of the existing child support order (as last modified on
    28 June 2016) which previously obligated Defendant to pay Plaintiff. Since no child
    support obligation flowing from Plaintiff to Defendant had been established as of 28
    December 2017, Defendant’s argument continues, the facts that (1) Defendant filed
    the Maryland action in early 2017 to establish Plaintiff’s child support obligation to
    Defendant and (2) Plaintiff did not move the trial court until 10 August 2017 to clarify
    Plaintiff’s obligation to Defendant—which was beyond the time Maryland law
    allowed Plaintiff to file a responsive pleading contesting Maryland’s exercise of
    jurisdiction—mean that North Carolina was not authorized to exercise jurisdiction
    over the child support issue on 28 December 2017 under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 52C-2-
    204(a).
    Defendant does not argue that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to modify its
    existing orders, such that we need not analyze whether Plaintiff met N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 52C-2-204(a)’s filing deadlines unless we decide that the 28 December 2017 order
    was the establishment of a new support order rather than a modification of an
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    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    existing support order. A threshold question is therefore whether the trial court’s 28
    December 2017 order was, in fact, the establishment of a new child support order
    under UIFSA as Defendant suggests.
    Neither “establishment” nor “modification” are expressly defined in UIFSA’s
    “Definitions” section, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 52C-1-101. Defendant argues that UIFSA
    makes a “distinction between ‘establishment’ proceedings versus ‘modification’
    proceedings” that is “tied to the definition of ‘obligor.’” Defendant points out that
    UIFSA defines “[o]bligor” as one who is actually or allegedly obligated to owe child
    support, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 52C-1-101(13), and argues that since Plaintiff was not
    actually or allegedly obligated to Defendant for child support prior to the initiation of
    the Maryland action, the result is that Plaintiff was not an “[o]bligor” prior to that
    time whose obligation could be modified in a modification proceeding.
    But Defendant does not cite to any authority for her contention that UIFSA
    employs an “obligor-focused approach[.]” As mentioned above, N.C. Gen. Stat. § 52C-
    2-204(a) describes when a “tribunal of this State may exercise jurisdiction to establish
    a support order[,]” not an obligation.     N.C. Gen. Stat. § 52C-2-204(a) (emphasis
    added). And “[s]upport order” is expressly defined by UIFSA as “a judgment, decree,
    order, decision, or directive, whether temporary, final, or subject to modification,
    issued in a state or a foreign country for the benefit of a child, a spouse, or a former
    spouse, which provides for monetary support, health care, arrearages, retroactive
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    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    support, or reimbursement for financial assistance provided to an individual obligee
    in place of child support.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 52C-1-101(21). That definition does not
    specify that a support order is confined to the obligations of one specific obligor,
    discrete from any obligations the obligee might owe to the obligor. On the contrary,
    that definition contemplates that a “[s]upport order” is an “order, . . . for the benefit
    of a child, . . . which [inter alia] provides for monetary support, . . . [and] arrearages,”
    and specifically contemplates that such a support order can be “subject to
    modification.” 
    Id. Since the
    trial court entered an order first on 9 October 2015—
    which was most recently superseded on 28 June 2016—requiring Defendant to pay
    Plaintiff prospective child support and arrearages for the benefit of the parties’
    children, a support order had already been established prior to the trial court’s 28
    December 2017 order. We thus conclude that the 28 December 2017 order was a
    modification thereof rather than the establishment of a new child support order.
    Our conclusion resonates with the purposes for which our legislature (and the
    legislatures of many of our sister states, including Maryland) enacted UIFSA:
    UIFSA was enacted to replace its predecessor, the Uniform
    Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act (“URESA”). Under
    URESA, a state could assert jurisdiction to establish,
    vacate, or modify a child or spousal support obligation even
    when a similar obligation had been created in another
    jurisdiction. The result was often multiple, inconsistent
    obligations existing for the same obligor and injustice in
    that obligors could avoid their responsibility by moving to
    another jurisdiction and having their support obligations
    modified or even vacated. UIFSA creates a structure
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    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    designed to correct this problem and provide for only one
    support order at a time.
    Butler v. Butler, 
    152 N.C. App. 74
    , 78, 
    566 S.E.2d 707
    , 709-10 (2002) (internal
    quotation marks and citations omitted). And most on-point on the facts of this case,
    the official commentary to the UIFSA “Definitions” section (notably regarding the
    definition of “[o]bligor”) states as follows, in part:
    The one-order system of UIFSA can succeed only if the
    respective obligations of support are adjusted as the
    physical possession of a child changes between parents or
    involves a third-party caretaker. This must be
    accomplished in the context of modification, and not by the
    creation of multiple orders attempting to reflect each
    changing custody scenario.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 52C-1-101 official commentary (2015) (emphasis added). We
    accordingly conclude that the trial court did not err in exercising jurisdiction over the
    child support issue, and affirm the trial court’s modification of its existing child
    support order.
    Nonetheless, Plaintiff asks us to remand the 28 December 2017 order to the
    trial court for the addition of a conclusion that there has been a substantial change
    in circumstances. We do not believe that remand is necessary. While a child support
    order may only be modified “upon . . . a showing of changed circumstances,” N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 50-13.7(a) (2017), the lack of an express conclusion that such a showing has
    been made does not render such a modification deficient such that remand is required
    where the findings in the order reflect the showing of the changed circumstances. See
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    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    Davis v. Davis, 
    229 N.C. App. 494
    , 503, 
    748 S.E.2d 594
    , 601 (2013) (“even if the ‘magic
    words’ are not used, the factual findings must still make the substantial change of
    circumstances and its effect upon the children clear”).
    In its 28 December 2017 order, the trial court found that the children had
    moved to Maryland to live with Defendant. The undisputed finding regarding the
    children’s move reflects a substantial change of circumstances sufficient to support
    the modification of the support order under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 50-13.7(a). See Shipman
    v. Shipman, 
    357 N.C. 471
    , 479, 
    586 S.E.2d 250
    , 256 (2003) (reviewing the trial court’s
    modification of a child custody order and noting that “the effects of the substantial
    changes in circumstances on the minor child . . . [were] self-evident, given the nature
    and cumulative effect of those changes as characterized by the trial court in its
    findings of fact”). We accordingly decline to remand the 28 December 2017 order to
    the trial court.
    Finally, Defendant’s arguments concerning the 25 January 2018 order rest
    upon a conclusion that the 28 December 2017 order is void. As we decline to so
    conclude, and instead affirm the 28 December 2017 order, Defendant’s arguments are
    unavailing, and we also affirm the 25 January 2018 order.
    III.   Conclusion
    Because we conclude that the trial court’s 28 December 2017 order was a
    modification of the trial court’s existing child support order, we conclude that the trial
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    WATKINS V. BENJAMIN
    Opinion of the Court
    court had subject matter jurisdiction over the child support issue and affirm both the
    28 December 2017 and 25 January 2018 orders.
    AFFIRMED.
    Judges BRYANT and MURPHY concur.
    - 12 -
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 18-894

Filed Date: 8/20/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021