Susan V. HOFFMAN, Appellant,
v.
Richard Paul FOLEY, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Third District.
Melvin A. Rubin, Miami, for appellant.
Genet & Milner North Miami Beach, and Paul E. Sawyer, III, for appellee.
Before NESBITT, FERGUSON and LEVY, JJ.
FERGUSON, Judge.
This appeal presents a significant policy question never addressed directly by Florida courts, and on which courts of other states are divided: Whether a mother with custody of a minor child pursuant to a judgment dissolving the marriage, who removes the infant child from the jurisdiction and conceals its whereabouts for a period of five years, is entitled on a Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act (URESA) claim to all child-support payments accruing during the five-year period *146 of concealment. The trial court ruled that on equitable principles the mother was not entitled to relief. We affirm.
Susan Hoffman and Richard Foley were married in 1975; their child, Jessica, was born two years later. Upon the parties' dissolution of marriage in 1979, Susan was awarded custody of Jessica. Richard was granted reasonable visitation rights. Shortly after the divorce, Susan remarried and without notice to Richard, moved from Florida to Phoenix, Arizona. For the next five years Jessica's whereabouts were unknown to Richard. During that five-year period Richard contacted missing children agencies and made other diligent efforts to locate the mother and child. Susan, on the other hand, took no steps to enforce support payments even though she knew where to find her former husband. She finally contacted Richard five years later and informed him of the child's whereabouts; he immediately resumed support payments and visitation.[1] Two years later Susan filed a URESA claim against Richard for child-support arrearages.
Susan contends that she is entitled to support arrearages under section 88.271, Florida Statutes (1987), which provides that the noncustodial parent's obligation to pay support is unaffected by any interference with visitation. See Baggett v. Walsh,
Mrs. Hoffman's primary contention in this appeal is that the trial court erred in finding her guilty of laches and that laches is not an appropriate defense in a URESA proceeding. Laches, however, may be a valid defense to a URESA action for child support, see Parrish v. Department of Health and Rehab. Servs.,
In non-URESA child-support cases, courts focus on the action of the custodial parent concealment of the child as affirmative misconduct which equity will not condone. Craig v. Craig,
Recognizing first that the remedies for interference with visitation rights are not available where the custodial parent's whereabouts are unknown, courts have distinguished between interference with visitation and actual concealment of the child. In Solberg v. Wenker,
Similarly in Sears v. Sears,
In this case, as in Robinson, the father was prejudiced by the mother's lengthy delay in seeking enforcement of the final judgment. If the mother had sought to enforce the support order after *148 her move to Arizona, the father would have been put on notice of the whereabouts of the parties' only child and could have exercised the remedies available where there is an interference with visitation rights.
There is competent and substantial evidence to support a conclusion that: (1) the father was prevented from making child-support payments for five years because of the mother's act of concealment; (2) an action was not commenced until an additional two years after the mother had made known the child's whereabouts; (3) the mother at all times during the seven-year period knew where to find her former husband; and (4) the father suffered prejudice because he was prevented from exercising his legal rights to visitation or to change of custody due to his lack of knowledge of the child's whereabouts. Either equitable principle, laches or estoppel, when applied to the facts, supports the judgment.
Affirmed.
NOTES
Notes
[1] Richard does not contest his duty to make prospective support payments. See Borring v. Winters,
[2] The first district declined to follow Solberg in Leeper v. Leeper,
[3] There is a close relationship between laches and estoppel but the terms are not synonymous. Hallam v. Gladman,
