640 N.E.2d 1214 | Ohio Ct. App. | 1994
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *477 Appellant, Karyn Vance, timely appeals from the judgment of the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas, Juvenile Division, which dismissed her motion for an order to show cause against appellees, Edward Banks, Travel Productions and Atlantic Recording Studios. The trial court reasoned that since appellant receives Aid to Dependent Children ("ADC") from the Department of Human Services ("DHS") she could not bring an action in her own right to enforce a support obligation.
This court is called upon in this action to determine whether a custodial parent who receives ADC from the County Department of Human Services is divested of all rights to bring an action against the noncustodial parent to recover the amount owed as a consequence of the noncustodial parent's failure to support the child recipient. Because the right to bring an action to adjudicate parental relationship and establish the duty to support the child thereof is separate from the right to recover payments owed to the DHS by a noncustodial parent for support obligations, we answer the question in the affirmative.
The pertinent facts of this case are as follows:
On May 24, 1990, appellant filed a complaint on behalf of her minor child against appellee, to establish a parent and child relationship.1 At a hearing held on November 9, 1990, a child and parent relationship was established. Appellant was awarded the custody of the minor child. The court determined that the DHS was a party plaintiff because appellant was receiving ADC and had assigned all monies due for past care and current support to the DHS.
On July 2, 1991 appellant retained private counsel and filed a motion to require Banks to show cause and a motion to modify support. On April 6, 1992, appellant withdrew her motion to modify support. On March 9, 1992, the DHS intervened as a party for the sole purpose of collecting payments for past care and future support which have been and will be provided for the minor child by the DHS.
The court on November 20, 1992 dismissed appellant's motion to require Banks to show cause, holding that since appellant was still a recipient of ADC and had assigned her rights to support to the DHS she was not a proper party to file a complaint to recover past care and present support for the minor child.
"I. Appellant Karyn Vance is a party to the action on behalf of herself and the child and has not assigned her party status to a third party.
"II. The trial court erred in dismissing appellant's motion to show cause against the manifest weight of the evidence presented.
"III. Karyn Vance was a real party in interest.
"IV. The Department of Human Services was jointly prosecuting the appellant's motion to show cause.
"V. Appellant Karyn Vance has an absolute right to the first $50.00 in child support each month and thus a full right to enforce the child support order.
"VI. Appellants' [sic] rights to due process are violated by the trial court's ruling."
Appellant argues in her first assignment of error that since she is a party pursuant to R.C.
"(A) The natural mother, each man presumed to be the father under section
Appellant's understanding of proper parties as stated in R.C.
When a parent and child relationship has been established, the enforcement of the support order emanating from the relationship takes a different legal procedure and may require different parties depending on the factual basis of the case. R.C.
"(A) If the existence of the father and child relationship is declared or if paternity or a duty of support has been adjudicated under sections
R.C.
Appellant's misunderstanding of the statute notwithstanding, a motion for an order to show cause why a parent should not be held in contempt for failure to comply with a court order to support a child falls under the second category of the process and can be enforced only by a party who provided or provides the support. Appellant did not challenge the trial court's determination that she was receiving ADC at the time of the suit. The trial record also supports the trial court's finding of appellant's support from the DHS.
R.C.
"(A) The acceptance of aid under this chapter constitutes an assignment to the department of human services of any rights an individual receiving aid has to support from any other person, excluding medical support assigned pursuant to section
Appellant's argument that she did not assign her right to the DHS is in conflict with both the statutory conditions for the DHS support and appellant's own affidavit of indigency stating that her only source of income is the ADC. R.C.
"The county department of human services shall take action to recover erroneous payments, which may include instituting a civil action. Whenever aid has been furnished to a recipient for whose support another person is responsible such other person shall, in addition to the liability otherwise imposed, as a consequence of failure to support such recipient, be liable for all aid furnished to such recipient. The value of the aid so furnished may be recovered in a civil action brought by the county department."
Under R.C.
We find appellant's argument that she will not escape the welfare cycle if she is not allowed to enforce child support orders to be regrettably unpersuasive.
However, since appellant would get the DHS support for her child whether or not appellee pays the child support order, she does not have as much to lose as does the provider of the support for the child. The trial court ruled correctly that appellant was not a proper party to enforce the obligation of appellee to support his child.
Appellant's first assignment of error is overruled.
Appellant's second assignment of error is overruled.
Appellant's fifth assignment of error is overruled.
Appellant also argues that she has a right to be heard and to access the courts. We agree. The court doors are open to appellant when she has a legitimate gripe against the system. If appellant has money coming out of the collection, she has every right to seek a refund from the state, the refusal of which allows her to seek redress from the courts. As we statedsupra, the mere fact that appellant may receive some of the collected amount does not call for the abrogation of the conditions she agreed to before being accepted to the ADC program, or give her a right to represent the state by seeking to collect the money owed to the state.
Appellant cites Atkinson v. Austria (Nov. 20, 1989), Green App. No. 89-CA-4, unreported, 1989 WL 140199, as controlling. Because we do not see the *484 relevance of the Atkinson decision to this case, we overrule appellant's sixth assignment of error and affirm the decision of the trial court.
Judgment affirmed.
KRUPANSKY and JOHN V. CORRIGAN, JJ., concur.
JOHN V. CORRIGAN, J., retired, of the Eighth Appellate District, sitting by assignment.