The former husband challenges an order issued under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.540(b) vacating a portion of an agreed order that awarded a final money judgment for back child support. We reverse because there was no legal basis under the rule to grant relief.
The parties, both attorneys, stipulated to a final judgment of dissolution of marriage in 1999. Under the applicable child support guidelines, the former husband’s child support obligation calculated at $828.16 per month. Nonetheless, the agreed judgment provided that he would pay $1,300 per month in child support commencing December 1, 1999 and $1,500 per month commencing December 1, 2000, in addition to other education, medical, and wedding expenses.
Significantly, the agreed judgment provided that “[o]nly the amount due under the guidelines ($828.16) shall be enforceable by the [court’s] contempt powers” and that the other expenses were “not enforceable by the [court’s] contempt powers.”
Over the next nine years, the former husband neglected to pay much of his child support obligations or the education and medical expenses. This led to multiple contempt proceedings, motions to enforce the final judgment, and a motion to withdraw filed by the former wife’s attorney.
In 2008, the former husband notified the circuit court that the parties had reached a settlement agreement. On November 21, 2008, the circuit court entered an “Agreed Order Containing Money Judgment” that settled “all pending motions of the parties.” Using standard language for a final money judgment,
Over three years later, on April 4, 2012, the former wife moved for the enforcement of the $70,000 money judgment. The former husband responded that he was current on the $828.16 child support payments punishable by contempt; accordingly, he moved to dismiss the proceedings directed at the $70,000 judgment because the circuit court had divested itself of jurisdiction over the money judgment in paragraph 7 of the Agreed Order.
Even though she did not file a motion for rehearing directed at the Agreed Order, or take an appeal, the wife responded that she never agreed “to relinquish jurisdiction of this action.” She also moved the court to set aside that part of paragraph 7 divesting the court of jurisdiction as “against law, equity, public policy and for extrinsic fraud” so that the former wife would not “be denied [the] opportunity to obtain child support past due.”
Following a hearing, on March 25, 2013, the circuit judge entered an order denying former husband’s motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction. As to former wife’s argument that she never agreed to the provision at issue, the trial court determined that the language in the Agreed Order was “clear and unambiguous,” and that her claim was otherwise untimely raised. Nevertheless, relying upon the “well established law that parents may not contract away the rights of their child for support,” the court, pursuant to Rule 1.540(b)(4), struck the provision relinquishing jurisdiction over the money judgment, reasoning as follows:
[T]his Court finds that the language contained in the Agreed Order Containing Money Judgment ... relinquishing this Court of its jurisdiction over the Money Judgment for child support and related child expenses was not in the best interests of the child as it deprived the parents and/or child of the ability to enforce the Money Judgment in the state in which the child resides. Therefore, this language is void as against public policy and that portion of the Money Judgment is stricken and set aside.
The circuit court erred on both procedural and substantive grounds. First, the provision in the Agreed Order did not violate public policy because it did not preclude the former wife from seeking enforcement of the money judgment by instituting an action on a judgment in the civil division of a Florida circuit court or commencing collection proceedings in New York. Second, even if the provision were “void as against public policy,” it rendered the Agreed Order merely “voidable,” so that relief was not authorized under Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.540(b)(4).
Paragraph 7 of the Agreed Order divested the court of jurisdiction over the $70,000 money judgment. We read that to mean that the former wife was precluded from pursuing collection remedies within the context of the ongoing case in the family division of the circuit court. Nothing in the Agreed Order prevented the former wife from filing an action on the $70,000 judgment in the civil division of a Florida circuit court and pursuing her collection remedies in the newly filed action.
“Every judgment gives rise to a common law cause of action to enforce it, called an action upon a judgment.” Burshan v. Nat’l Union Fire Ins. Co. of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
[i]n defending an action on a judgment, a “defendant cannot avail himself of defenses which he might have interposed in the original action.” Restatement (First) of Judgments § 47 cmt. e. However, a defendant may “interpose defenses which have arisen since the rendition of the judgment, such as payment, release, accord and satisfaction, or the [s]tatute of [l]imitations.” Id.
For these reasons, contrary to the circuit judge’s conclusion, the Agreed Order did not “contract away” the right of the child for support or deprive the child of the ability to enforce the money judgment in Florida. The order was therefore not void as against public policy.
The second reason for reversal derives from the operation of Rule 1.540(b)(4), which allows for relief from a “void” judgment but not a “voidable” one. If paragraph 7 was void as against public policy, then the Agreed Order was merely “voidable.”
“ ‘The general purpose of [rule 1.540(b) ] is to enable the court to grant relief against an unjust decree ....’” Smith v. Frank Griffin Volkswagen Inc.,
In applying rule 1.540(b)(4), “a distinction exists between a judgment that is void and one that is voidable.” Krueger v. Ponton,
“In contrast, a voidable judgment is a judgment that has been entered based upon some error in procedure that allows a party to have the judgment vacated, but the judgment has legal force and effect unless and until it is vacated.” Zitani v. Reed,
“Generally, a void judgment is one entered without subject matter jurisdiction or personal jurisdiction....” Zitani,
Analogous to the case at hand, in Department of Health & Rehabilitative Services v. Morley,
Two years later, the wife, and the Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services, appealed a final judgment in a URE-SA action which held that the husband had no child support obligation due to the final judgment of dissolution. They argued that the provision abdicating the husband’s child support was “void insofar as it permanently relieve[d the husband] of any ongoing support obligation regardless of any demonstrated need of support.” Id. at 403-04. Recognizing that the provision was contrary to public policy, the fifth district nonetheless affirmed the final URESA judgment, finding the challenge untimely since the provision’s inclusion merely rendered the judgment voidable. Id. at 404. As the court explained:
[D]oes the incorporation of a void agreement into a final judgment likewise render the final judgment void? The answer is no. In the case sub judice, the final judgment of dissolution incorporating the settlement agreement was itself voidable, though not void, under the general rule that if a court has jurisdiction over the person and the subject matter, an error in the judgment does not make the judgment void, but rather reversible on appeal.
As noted, the final judgment of dissolution was not appealed. Because the identical issue (support) was litigated between the identical parties ... before two judges of the same court ... , and the final judgment of dissolution was issued later in time than the URESA order, the final judgment of dissolution, albeit voidable, remains nonetheless presumptively valid and binding on the litigants.
Id. (citations omitted). This Court has followed suit in similar circumstances. See
Similarly, in this case, even if the Agreed Order’s divestiture of jurisdiction over the money judgment was void as against public policy, the order itself was merely voidable, since the trial court had personal and subject matter jurisdiction over the parties and there was no due process violation. Generally, if errors affect only the substance of a final judgment, they must be corrected within the ten-day time limit of rule 1.530 or by appellate review. Here, the trial court reversibly erred in vacating the offending provision pursuant to Rule 1.540(b)(4) because the Agreed Order was not “void” within the meaning of the rule. Furthermore, insofar as the former wife challenges the language of paragraph 7 as being against her wishes, or as the product of fraud, such claim is time-barred. See Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.540(b)(1) (permitting a court to set aside a final judgment for “mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect” within one year of the order’s rendition); Fla. R. Civ. P. 1.540(b)(3) (placing one year limitation on fraud claims).
Reversed and, remanded.
Notes
. See Fla. R. Civ. P. Form 1.988.
. See Susan G. v. Martin L.,
