MEMORANDUM AND ORDER
On December 21, 1994, defendant Ricky Hampshire was charged with willful failure to pay a past due child support obligation in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 228. The support obligation arose from a divorce proceeding commenced by Hampshire’s ex-wife in Kansas on October 4, 1985. The District Court of Riley County granted an order for temporary custody аnd support on October 30, 1985, pursuant to K.S.A. 60-1607(b), requir *1329 ing Hampshire to pay support at a rate of $450.00 per month. Hampshire was personally served with process at the Riley County Jail in Manhattan, Kansas. On January 28, 1986, the court filed a journal entry finding that Hampshire had been properly served and was in default. The court’s final order required Hamрshire to pay support at a rate of $350.00 per month.
In the present criminal action, Hampshire has been charged with violating the Child Support Recovery Act of 1992 (CSRA), 18 U.S.C. § 228. Subsection (a) of CSRA provides that it is a punishable offense to “willfully fail[] to pay a past due support obligation with respect to a child who resides in anothеr State.”
Hampshire has moved to dismiss the government’s information on several grounds. On June 8, 1995, the court held a hearing in which the United States and the defendant presented oral arguments relating to these motions. Additionally, defendant presented the testimony of Kristy Swenson, an attorney with extensive experience in matters of domestic rеlations. After examination of the witness by both the defendant and the government, the court has no difficulty in finding Ms. Swenson to be an extremely competent, knowledgeable, and skilled attorney in family law matters. This matter, however, turns upon wholly independent considerations, and the court finds that recourse to the testimony of the witness is unnecеssary.
Constitutionality of 18 U.S.C. § 228
Hampshire’s first motion seeks a determination either that 18 U.S.C. § 228 is unconstitutional or that this court should abstain from exercising jurisdiction in the present action. He first contends that CSRA is invalid because Congress did not explicitly set forth the constitutionally enumerated power supporting the statute, citing
United States v. Bass,
This appears to be the first case directly challenging the validity of the CSRA. The court finds that Hampshire’s eonstitu-tional arguments must be rejected. Unlike
Bass,
and unlike the Supreme Court’s recent decision in
United States v. Lopez,
— U.S. -,
In
Bass,
the Supreme Court upheld the reversal of thе defendant’s conviction for possession of a firearm in violation of the former 18 U.S.C App. § 1202(a). The law did not expressly require any connection between the possession of the firearm and interstate commerce. Holding that “unless Congress conveys its purpose clearly, it will not be deemed to have significantly changed the federal-state balance,”
Similarly, in the recent
Lopez
decision, the Court, in striking down the Gun-Free School Zones Act of 1990, 18 U.S.C. § 922(a)(1)(A), stressed that the statute had “no express jurisdictional element which might limit its reach to a discrete set of firearm possessions that additionally have an explicit connection with or effеct on interstate commerce.” — U.S. at-,
The statute in the present case only affects willful violations of interstate child support obligations. The interstate nexus is explicitly identified in the statute. Further, it would appear that the failure to pay child support has an effect on interstate commerce sufficient to cоmply with constitutional requirements.
See Wickard v. Filburn,
Thus, even with the recent decision in Lopez, the CSRA remains constitutional. In Lopez, the Court held unconstitutional a federal law banning possession of a gun within 1,000 feet of a school. The law contained no requirement that the gun had traveled in interstate commerce. The CSRA would be subject to a similar сonstitutional infirmity only if it was also directed at a purely local activity — if it attempted, for example, to criminalize avoidance of child support where the parties affected all resided in a single state. But because the requirement of an interstate relationship is one of the explicit elements of the сrime created by 18 U.S.C. § 228, the law is constitutional.
Hampshire correctly observes that the majority decision in
Lopez
criticizes as over-broad the position taken in the dissenting opinion of Justice Breyer, creating the potential for congressional regulation of matters traditionally reserved for the states, such as “child rearing.” In this context, however, the Court is simply expressing the concern that аn unlimited construction of the Commerce Clause would enable Congress to “regulate
any
activity that it found was related to the economic productivity of individual citizens: family law (including marriage, divorce, and child custody), for example.” — U.S. at -,
Hampshire’s argument that the CSRA violates the Tenth Amendment’s reservation and infringes the states’s police powers is in error. The CSRA creates criminal sanсtions for individuals who fail to comply with child support obligations; it makes no attempt to regulate the conduct of the states, as states. It is regulation of purely private conduct, and does not represent a violation of the Tenth Amendment.
See New York v. United States,
Central to Hampshire’s argument is his reliance on the “domestic relations excеption,” in which federal courts have traditionally refused to exercise jurisdiction over civil cases addressing matters of marriage, divorce, and child custody.
See Ankenbrandt v. Richards,
Moreover, because the domestic relations exception is rooted in a narrow construction of the diversity jurisdiction statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1332, the rule has no application where there exists an independent basis for federаl jurisdiction beyond diversity of citizenship. The present ease does not involve a diversity action directed at obtaining a divorce or child custody decree or for an award *1331 of alimony. It is a criminal action undertaken pursuant to an express grant of jurisdictional authority. 28 U.S.C. § 228. Accordingly, the domestic relations exception has no application.
As an alternative basis for avoiding the application of the CSRA, Hampshire argues that the court should apply the abstention doctrine, designed to promote federal-state comity, under which the court may refuse to exercise jurisdiction in a matter which would disrupt the establishment of a сoherent state policy. Hampshire seeks abstention under the doctrine as articulated in either
Younger v. Harris,
Because federal courts have a “virtually unflagging obligation” to exercise the jurisdiction extended to them, abstention should rarely be invoked.
Colorado River Water Conserv’n Dist. v. United States,
In Ankenbrandt, the court recognized the potential application of the Burford abstention to the child abuse tort claims advanced therein. Such abstention might be warranted, the Court observed
if a federal suit were filed prior to effectuation of a divorce, alimony, or child custody decree, and the suit depended on a determinatiоn of the status of the parties. Where, as here, the status of the domestic relationship has been determined as a matter of state law, and in any event has no bearing on the underlying torts alleged, we have no difficulty concluding that Burford abstention is inappropriate in this case.
In the present case, the divorce deсree and Hampshire’s child support obligations are currently fixed. There is no indication that there are other enforcement proceedings against Hampshire at the state level which will be displaced or hampered by the present prosecution. Accordingly, the Burford abstention is inapplicable.
It is not for this court to address the wisdom or folly of Congress in adopting the CSRA. Certainly many of the policy arguments advanced by the defendant, relating to the heavy burden that the federalization of interstate child support obligations may place upon the courts, may not be wholly misplaced. But a statute’s dubious grounding in public policy is not a basis for a finding of unconstitutionality. The CSRA doеs not violate the constitutional limitations on Congress’ power, and there is no valid reason to abstain from exercising jurisdiction over the present prosecution of Hampshire’s alleged actions in breaking the law.
Due Process Challenge to the Underlying Obligation
In a separate motion to dismiss the information, Hampshire argues that the present criminal action should be dismissed since it arises from a civil judgment which was not rendered consistent with due process. The underlying decree is infirm and cannot form the basis for the present criminal prosecution. The Supreme Court has held that when a deprivation of liberty in a criminal proceeding is premised on a previous determination in an administrative proceeding, “there must be
some
meaningful review of the administrative proceeding.”
United States v. Mendoza-Lopez,
Hampshire argues that as an AWOL soldier in custody in the Riley County Jail, he had no meaningful opportunity either to be heard or to appeal the divorce action.
See Boddie v. Connecticut,
The United States contends that no due process violation occurred, noting that
Bod-die,
for example, dealt with the rights of indigents rather than incarcerated persons. Other courts, however, have directly held that it is a violation of the Constitution to prevent prisoners a meaningful opportunity to obtain a divorce.
Lynk v. LaPorte Superior Court No. 2,
The court is unable to accept Hampshire’s general due process argument. In Lynk, the court found a violation of equal protection on the basis of an Indiana requirement that the prisoner be physically present at a mandatory hearing in order to obtain the divorce he sought. In the present case, however, Hampshire has never explicitly articulated what speсific provisions of Kansas law prevented him from defending himself in, or appealing, the state divorce decree and the associated award of child support. The court would agree with Hampshire that the default decree violated the provisions of the Soldiers and Sailors Civil Relief Act when the state court did not аppoint counsel for him. However, whether that violation justifies the dismissal of the present action is another question.
The United States mistakes the issue as being whether the Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act “‘empower[s] this court to collaterally review, vacate or impede t[he] decisions of a state court.’ ” (Pltf.’s Resp. to Mtn to Dism. Info. Chg.’g Viol, of Stat., p. 7, quoting
Shatswell v. Shatswell,
The court finds that it is not. A judgment rendered in violation of the Act is merely voidable, rather than void, and does not violate due process.
Sarfaty v. Sarfaty,
There is no indication here that Hampshire ever attempted to have the award of support set aside within the appropriate time. That a judgment in violation of the various provisions of 50 App.U.S.C. § 520 is voidable, rather than void, is a reflection of the fact that those protections are not mandated by constitutional guarantees but by specific legislation adopted by Congress. As noted earlier, Hampshire has never articulated any specific procedure adopted by the Kansas court in rendering the decree which violated due process. Hampshire has failed to prove that he was unable to challenge the decreе directly, unable to appeal it, or unable to have it subsequently set aside pursuant to various statutory provisions. He has not cited to any authority holding that the state is constitutionally obliged to provide a prisoner with an attorney to handle his interests in private civil litigation with other persons, upon matters unrelated to the сause or conditions of his confinement. Finally, the court would note that in addition to the provisions for voiding a default judgment under the Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act, K.S.A. 60-255(b) allows Kansas courts to set aside prior default judgments for good cause.
*1333 Because Hampshire has failed to show that he was actually prevented from exerсising his due process right in connection with the divorce decree, the rule announced in Mendoza-Lopez is not applicable here. That rule prohibited a criminal prosecution predicated upon an earlier administrative decision which was rendered without due process. With the technical and statutory violation of the Soldiers and Sailors Relief Act aside, Hampshire has not shown that the support judgment was rendered without due process. Because the underlying support decree did not violate any constitutional protection, the present criminal proceeding cannot be dismissed on the grounds sought.
IT IS ACCORDINGLY ORDERED this 13th day of June, 1995, that the defendant’s motion to dismiss information (Dkt. No. 16) and his motion to dismiss information charging violation of statute unconstitutionally enacted or alternatively requesting the court to abstain (Dkt. No. 14) are hereby denied.
