Rachel P. Tucker-Cales (Mother) appeals the family court’s denial of her motion for relief from judgment. We affirm. 1
This child custody case has a tortured procedural history. On December 15,1995, the family court approved a settlement agreement between Robert Widdicombe (Father) and Mother, which addressed the custody of their minor child, a son born October 22, 1993. The settlement agreement provided that Mother would have custody and Father would have standard visitation. It also provided that neither party could take the child out of the jurisdiction without providing the other party 60 days’ notice.
On August 22, 2000, Father, who had remarried and moved to Illinois, filed a summons and complaint in South Carolina seeking custody of his son. The complaint alleged, among other things, that Mother moved numerous times without notifying Father. The complaint also alleged that Mother’s last known address was in South Carolina, but her present whereabouts were unknown.
In an affidavit attached to the complaint, Father recounted his longstanding hardships in locating and communicating with Mother and his son. He claimed he knew Mother and child were living in North Carolina, but for several years the only dependable way to get in touch with Mother was to withhold her support payments until she phoned. In 1998, according to Father, Mother dropped the child off at his home, claiming she would return the following morning. Mother did not return for two and a half weeks, and the child’s maternal grandmother eventually picked him up. From 1998 to 2000, Father learned several disturbing facts regarding Mother and his son, including allegations that Mother was on probation for passing fraudulent checks and was involved in an abusive bigamous marriage. He became increasingly concerned when, in June 2000, Mother’s probation officer notified him that Mother’s whereabouts were unknown. Father then received a telephone call from the child’s maternal grandmother informing him that Mother was living with her in South Carolina and he should send the child support payments there. A safety check performed by local police on August 2, 2000, confirmed that Mother and the child were in fact residing at the grandmother’s home. Shortly thereafter, Father learned from Mother’s probation officer that Mother was back in North
From August 17 to August 31, 2000, Father left a series of voice mail messages on the maternal grandmother’s answering machine. These messages indicate Father left Illinois and traveled to South Carolina to appear before the South Carolina family court.
On August 28, 2000, the family court issued an ex parte order granting Father immediate legal and physical custody of the child. This order was based on allegations in Father’s affidavit discussed above. He picked up the child from a North Carolina day care center promptly after obtaining emergency custody and returned to Illinois.
Mother filed an answer and counterclaim to Father’s motion for emergency relief in the South Carolina family court on November 11, 2000. Mother stated she moved to North Carolina in 1998 and returned to South Carolina in August 2000. Shortly thereafter, she moved back to North Carolina into a battered women’s shelter. Importantly, Mother asserted that, despite her many relocations, the South Carolina family court had jurisdiction because she was a resident of Charleston County, South Carolina, and had been so for over one year. She admitted Father’s allegations of being in a bigamous marriage, being investigated by social services in North Carolina, and being on probation for writing fraudulent checks. Mother demanded a hearing and sought full custody of the child.
On February 15, 2001, the family court issued a consent order granting temporary custody to Father.
2
On August 1, 2001, the family court struck the case from the active roster
The family court denied Mother’s motion to dismiss, concluding that South Carolina has exclusive, continuing jurisdiction based on the 1995 custody order and Mother’s residency in this state for more than one year. The family court also noted that no litigation was pending in any other state regarding custody of the child. Additionally, the family court denied Mother’s motion to change custody because exigent circumstances did not exist warranting a change in custody. The order provided that the temporary consent order of February 15,2001 was to remain in effect.
Mother filed a motion to reconsider on January 22, 2002, arguing again that because neither of the parents nor the child lived in South Carolina at the time Father’s action was filed, the family court lacked subject matter jurisdiction. After a hearing, the family court denied the motion to reconsider. The family court found that Mother submitted herself to the family court’s jurisdiction, and the case had continued without objection from Mother for over a year before she filed the motion to dismiss. Father was awarded $562.50 in attorney’s fees.
Mother appealed to this court. On November 18, 2002, Father’s motion to dismiss the appeal was granted on the ground that the appeal was interlocutory. Mother’s subsequent writs of prohibition and mandamus were dismissed in June 2003.
On January 6, 2004, Mother filed an expedited motion for relief from judgment in the family court, again alleging the case was void
ab initio
for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. The family court denied Mother’s motion, finding that no final
Mother then filed a motion to reconsider, limiting her request to only two issues: (1) whether the family court had jurisdiction at the commencement of the case; and (2) whether the family court failed to consider all the factors required by law in awarding attorney’s fees in that it did not consider her financial condition. Mother alleged in her supporting affidavit that she moved to North Carolina in 1998 and was still living there when Father’s complaint was filed. The family court denied Wife’s motion on March 11, 2004. This appeal follows.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
On appeal from the family court, this court has authority to determine facts in accordance with its own view of the preponderance of the evidence.
Murdock v. Murdock,
LAW/ANALYSIS
I. Interlocutory Appeal
We must first address Father’s argument that this court lacks jurisdiction because the orders appealed from are interlocutory. We disagree.
Section 14-3-330 of the South Carolina Code (1976 & Supp. 2004) sets forth the requirements for appellate jurisdiction and reads as follows:
[Appellate courts] shall have appellate jurisdiction for correction of errors of law in law cases, and shall review upon appeal:
(2) An order affecting a substantial right made in an action when such order (a) in effect determines the action andprevents a judgment from which an appeal might be taken or discontinues the action....
Matters involving the custody of one’s child certainly constitute a “substantial right” as contemplated in the South Carolina statute.
See Santosky v. Kramer,
Under the unique factual circumstances of the present case, we conclude the family court orders have the practical effect of a final order affecting Mother’s substantial rights.
3
In any event, the issues raised by Mother on appeal have been the subject of much contention in this case. They will inevitably be raised to the family court again in the future and, because they have been fully briefed by the parties, we find that it would be in the interest of judicial economy to decide the matters now.
See Southern Bell Tel. and Tel. Co. v. Hamm,
II. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
Mother’s argument on appeal, as well as before the family court in several of her prior motion hearings, is that the South
The two statutes in question govern the subject matter jurisdiction of state courts to rule in interstate custody disputes.
See, e.g., Foley v. Foley,
The provisions of the PKPA applicable to the present case are contained in subsection (d) of 28 U.S.C. § 1738A, which deals with continuing jurisdiction and reads as follows:
(d) The jurisdiction of a court of a State which has made a child custody determination consistently with the provisions of this section continues as long as the requirement of subsection (c)(1) of this section continues to be met and such State remains the residence of the child or of any contestant.
Subsection (c)(1), mentioned in the quote above, requires that the family court maintain jurisdiction under its own state law. Therefore, “[sjubsection (d) basically sets forth three criteria, all of which must be met, for a court to retain [continuing] jurisdiction” under the PKPA.
Dahlen v. Dahlen,
In the present case, the first criterion is undisputed. The child and both parties to the action were South Carolina residents at the time of the initial custody decree and, suffice
The second requirement, that jurisdiction under South Carolina law be maintained, is a more complex matter. In 1981, South Carolina adopted the UCCJA as its governing law in interstate custody disputes. See S.C.Code Ann. §§ 20-7-782 to 830 (1985). The applicable portion of the UCCJA regarding jurisdiction reads as follows:
(a) A court of this State which is competent to decide child custody matters has jurisdiction to make a child custody determination by initial or modification decree if:
(2) it is in the best interest of the child that a court of this State assume jurisdiction because (i) the child and his parents, or the child and at least one contestant, have a significant connection with this State and (ii) there is available in this State substantial evidence concerning the child’s present or future care, protection, training, and personal relationships....
S.C.Code Ann. § 20-7-788 (1985).
The purpose of the UCCJA is to prevent conflicting custody decrees between different states.
See Kirylik v. Kirylik,
It is the PKPA’s third requirement for continuing jurisdiction, however, that is by far the most contested issue in this case. Unlike the UCCJA, the PKPA expressly states that at least the child or one of the contestants must remain a resident of the decree state for that state to properly exercise continuing jurisdiction.
4
Mother contends that because, at the time of filing, Father was a resident of Illinois and she and the child were in North Carolina, where the pair had lived sporadically since 1998, the South Carolina family court lacked
Throughout the PKPA, initial jurisdictional requirements are discussed in terms of the child’s “home state.” The term “home state” is defined in the statute as “the state in which, immediately preceding the time involved, the child lived with his parents, a parent, or a person acting as parent, for at least six consecutive months.... ” 28 U.S.C. § 1738A(b)(4) (1988). This language provides a court with clear standards governing its jurisdiction over a custody dispute in which there is no previous custody decree. Such is not the case when courts seek to assert continuing jurisdiction over a preexisting custody decree. Rather than employing the expressly defined term of “home state” that is used throughout the statute, the PKPA sets forth a requirement of “residence,” a term left undefined in the statute, when discussing a court’s continuing jurisdiction over custody matters. Because “residence” is not defined in the statute, the determination of whether a decree state has lost its continuing jurisdiction generally turns on the question of the parties’ or child’s domicile.
Child Custody: When Does State that Issued Previous Custody Determination Have Continuing Jurisdiction under Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction Act (UCCJA) or Parental Kidnapping Prevention Act (PKPA), 28 U.S.C. § 1738A
In these matters, domicile is determined by an analysis similar to that required for diversity jurisdiction in federal courts, which involves a determination of intent.
Id.
“Domicile is the place of one’s true, fixed, and permanent home and principal establishment, to which one has the intention of returning after an absence therefrom.” 32A Am. Jur. 2d
Federal Courts
§ 746 (2004). “The question of a person’s place of residence is largely one of intent to be determined under the facts and circumstances of each case. The act and intent as to domicile, not the duration of the residence, are the determining factors.”
Ferguson v. Employers Mut. Cas. Co.
In the present case, the question of Mother and child’s residence is muddled at best. However, for many of the same reasons asserted in the UCCJA analysis above, we conclude Mother was a resident of South Carolina at the time Father filed his complaint. Mother first raised the issue of residency over a year after the case’s commencement. At that point, the family court needed only to look to Mother’s prior pleadings, filed shortly after the emergency change in custody, for her own assertions that she was “a resident of Charleston County, South Carolina where she has lived for over one (1) year;” thus, she stated, the family court had “jurisdiction of this matter by virtue of its continuing and exclusive jurisdiction.”
5
Although Mother and child were actually staying in a North Carolina shelter at the time, Mother and the maternal grandmother made several assertions to Father that they intended the grandmother’s South Carolina home to be the address through which to contact her. The most recent contact with the Mother and child, a safety cheek performed by local police, confirmed that the pair was living in South Carolina. Though this is a difficult issue, there is certainly evidence in the record supporting the conclusion that Mother intended South Carolina to be her state of residency at the time the emergency action was filed.
See I'On, L.L.C. v. Town of Mt. Pleasant,
Moreover, several state courts have applied the doctrine of unclean hands to jurisdiction under the PKPA and UCCJA.
See, e.g., Sams v. Boston,
Because we conclude Mother was a resident of South Carolina at the time Father filed his complaint, the PKPA’s third requirement for continuing jurisdiction is satisfied. The South Carolina family court, therefore, had jurisdiction to order the emergency change in custody.
III. Attorney’s Fees
Mother next argues the family court erred in awarding attorney’s fees in that it failed to consider her financial condition in determining the award. We disagree.
An award of attorney’s fees is within the sound discretion of the family court and will not be disturbed on appeal absent an abuse of discretion.
See Bowen v. Bowen, 327
S.C. 561, 563,
The family court expressly considered each of the
Glasscock
factors. It specifically found, in reviewing Mother’s motion to reconsider, that she failed to provide the court with evidence of her financial situation on the issue of attorney’s fees. Thus, we find no abuse of discretion in the award.
See Henggeler v. Hanson,
For the foregoing reasons, the family court’s denial of Mother’s motion is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We decide this case without oral argument pursuant to Rule 215, SCACR.
. In January of 2004, Father filed a petition to enroll this order in Illinois to establish Illinois as the proper forum to seek modification of custody.
. Father’s motion to dismiss this appeal based on its interlocutory nature was recently denied on similar grounds.
. As previously stated, when the provisions of the PKPA and the UCCJA conflict, the PKPA controls under the Supremacy Clause of the United States Constitution.
See Schwartz,
. Although Mother’s attorney filed these pleadings without her signature, a party is generally bound by stipulations made by their counsel.
See Sadighi v. Daghighfekr,
