The petitioner, Jeffrey Gray, appeals an order of the Salem Family Division {Ryan, J.) finding that he failed to comply with the family division’s July 8, 2005 Uniform Support Order. We affirm.
The record supports the following facts. Jeffrey Gray and Janette Gray are the parents of two children; they divorced in August 2002. In October 2004, the Salem Family Division {DiMeo, J.) awarded custody of the children to the children’s aunt. In a separate order, the family division ordered the father and mother to pay child support directly to the aunt. They appealed the custody order.
While the appeal was pending, the father moved to modify the support order. On July 8,2005, the Salem Family Division {Korbey, J.) modified the order so that the father was to make his child support payments directly to the New Hampshire Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS). The father did not appeal.
In January 2006, we held that under RSA 458:17 the family division lacked statutory authority to award custody to the aunt.
In the Matter of Jeffrey G. & Janette P.,
In September 2006, while that appeal was pending, the father moved to vacate
In an unpublished order dated November 28, 2006, we affirmed the family division’s order ceding jurisdiction over the children’s custody to Maine. Petition of Jeffrey G., No. 2006-0349 (N.H. November 28, 2006). On January 30,2007, the Family Division {Hurd, J.) partially granted DHHS’s motion to reconsider suspending enforcement of the support order and scheduled a hearing. At the hearing, the family division vacated its suspension of the enforcement of the support order. On February 28,2007, the father filed a “notice to court, office of child support enforcement, and child support referee” stating that the family division lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the issues of custody and support. The Family Division {Hurd, J.) granted DHHS’s motion to dismiss the notice.
On April 29,2008, DHHS moved for the father to show cause why he had not complied with the support order. On August 12,2008, the Salem Family Division issued an order finding the father in contempt because he had failed to comply with the support order. As of July 25,2008, the father owed $29,901.84 in child support. This appeal followed.
I. Salem Family Division’s Authority to Enforce the Support Order
The father raises twenty-one issues on appeal, including several jurisdictional arguments stemming from his claim that the court’s authority to award support pursuant to RSA 458:17 (2004) (now codified at RSA 461-A:14,1 (Supp. 2009)) is dependent upon its authority to award custody. Therefore, he argues, the support order is unenforceable because in Jeffrey G. we held that the Salem Family Division did not have jurisdiction to award custody of the children to the aunt. DHHS counters that the father’s arguments are barred by res judicata and collateral estoppel because he failed to appeal the family division’s earlier decisions. Alternatively, DHHS argues that support and custody are independent, so that the family division retained authority to enforce the support order.
We first address whether the father’s failure to appeal the family division’s previous rulings bars his jurisdictional arguments in this appeal. Subject matter jurisdiction is “jurisdiction over the nature of the case and the type of relief sought; the extent to which a court can rule on the conduct of persons or the status of things.” Black’S LAW DICTIONARY 931 (9th ed. 2009). In other words, it is “a tribunal’s authority to adjudicate the type of controversy involved in the action.”
Shoop v. Kittitas County,
To determine whether the family division had subject matter jurisdiction over the father’s support order, we must interpret the relevant statutes. When undertaking statutory interpretation, “[w]e first examine the language found in the statute and where possible, we ascribe the plain and ordinary meanings to words used.”
Appeal of Garrison Place Real Estate Inn Trust,
The plain language of RSA chapter 490-D (Supp. 2009) grants subject matter jurisdiction to the family division over the father’s support order.
See Daine,
The father, however, argues that our decision in
Jeffrey G.
terminated his obligation to comply with the support order. We disagree. In
Jeffrey G.,
we only considered whether the family division had statutory authority to award custody of the minor children to the aunt. Moreover, we unequivocally stated that “the trial court had jurisdiction to determine custody of the children pursuant to RSA 458:17.”
Jeffrey G.,
We conclude that the family division retained jurisdiction over the issue of child support after it ceded jurisdiction over the custody dispute to Maine. The Uniform
II. Family Division’s Order Finding the Father in Contempt
The father raises several challenges to the family division’s decree that he is not in compliance with the support order. First, he argues that the family division unsustainably exercised its discretion when it found that he was voluntarily underemployed and not in compliance with the support order. Next, he contends that the court erred in requiring him to submit income tax returns for 2001 to 2005 because they do not reflect his present income. Finally, he challenges the court’s finding that he is $29,901.84 in arrears. DHHS contends that the Salem Family Division properly found he was voluntarily underemployed and that he failed to comply with the support order. We agree.
“The court’s powers in custody, maintenance, and education of children in divorce and separation cases are conferred entirely by statute. We afford broad discretion to the trial court in divorce matters, and will not disturb the trial court’s rulings regarding child support absent an unsustainable exercise of discretion or an error of law.”
In the Matter of Johnson & Johnson,
We cannot conclude that the family division unsustainably exercised its discretion when it found the father failed to comply with the support order. At the hearing, the father provided no evidence to show that his financial circumstances had changed, thus requiring a modification of the support order. The only evidence before the family division was a financial affidavit the father submitted. In addition, the family division found the father to be voluntarily underemployed “[b]ased upon his most current financial affidavit and the total absence of any evidence that he is physically or mentally incapacitated.” This was further supported by “the lack of any requests since 2005 to modify his obligation based upon a substantial change in circumstances.”
Next, we address the father’s argument that the family division improperly required him to submit his tax returns for the years 2001-2005. When calculating a parent’s child support obligation, the court must first determine the parent’s “present income.”
Feddersen,
Finally, the father contests the family division’s finding that he owes $29,901.84, arguing that he only owes $5,743 because that was the amount owed when we issued our decision in
Jeffrey G.
As set forth above, support
orders remain in effect until they are judicially modified.
See In the Matter of Haller & Mills,
We have reviewed the father’s remaining arguments and hold that they lack merit and warrant no extended consideration.
Vogel v. Vogel,
Affirmed.
