Office of the Attorney General — State of Texas
John Cornyn The Honorable Toby Goodman Chair, Committee on Juvenile Justice and Family Issues Texas House of Representatives P.O. Box 2910 Austin, Texas 78768-2910
Re: Whether a statute that permits a court to order income withholding to collect certain attorney's fees and costs associated with establishing or enforcing a child-support obligation violates article
Dear Representative Goodman:
Although article
We conclude that a statute constitutionally may not permit a court to order income withholding to pay attorney's fees and costs associated with establishing a child-support obligation. Attorney's fees and costs incurred to establish a child-support obligation, see Request Letter, note 1, at 3, are not associated with enforcing an existing obligation. See Tex. Const. art.
You ask three questions:
• (1) May attorney's fees and costs arising from the establishment of a child support obligation be collected through income withholding, as such withholding is authorized under Article
XVI , section28 , Texas Constitution?• (2) May ordered attorney fees and costs relating to the enforcement of a child support obligation be enforced "by any means available for the enforcement of child support," including income withholding, in accordance with Article
XVI , section28 , Texas Constitution?• (3) May the constitutionally authorized garnishment of current wages for personal services for the enforcement of court-ordered child support payments be extended to include fees charged for the services of Domestic Relations Offices and court registries in the processing of child support cases?
Request Letter, supra note 1, at 3.
Article
No current wages for personal service shall ever be subject to garnishment, except for the enforcement of court-ordered:
(1) child support payments; or
(2) spousal maintenance.
Tex. Const. art.
Portions of chapters 157 and 158 of the Family Code authorize a court to enforce an existing child-support obligation with an income-withholding order. "If [a] court finds that [a] respondent has failed to make child support payments" and has thereby accumulated a child-support arrearage, the court "shall order the respondent to pay the movant's reasonable attorney's fees and all court costs in addition to the arrearages." Tex. Fam. Code Ann. §
Chapter 158 provides specifically for withholding from earnings to pay child support. In an action for past-due child-support payments, a court must order that income be withheld from the obligor's disposable earnings to liquidate the child-support arrearage. Id. § 158.003(a) (Vernon Supp. 2001). Under section 158.102, a court may issue an "order or writ for income withholding . . . until all current support and child support arrearages, interest, and any applicable fees and costs,including ordered attorney's fees and court costs, have been paid." Id. § 158.102 (emphasis added). Section 158.103 requires a court to include in its order or writ of withholding "the information that is necessary for an employer or other entity to comply with the existing child support order, including . . . the amount of arrearages, accrued interest, and ordered fees andcosts." Id. § 158.103(3) (emphasis added).
You suggest that, to the extent that these sections of chapters 157 and 158 of the Family Code permit a court to order income withholding to pay attorney's fees and court costs related to establishing a child-support obligation or to enforcing an existing child-support obligation, they run afoul of article XVI, section 28. See Request Letter, supra note 1, at 1-3. You summarize current court practices:
Some Texas courts order that attorney's fees and costs incurred in the enforcement of child support be collected through income withholding, along with the requisite payment on the obligation (i.e., current support and any arrears and interest on the arrears). Other courts, however, apparently order attorney's fees and costs incurred in the establishment of a child support obligation to be collected through income withholding. Furthermore, some courts in Texas are now including payment of county Domestic Relations Office fees and court registry fees as part of the "ordered fees and costs" specified in an order or writ of withholding for child support. Although that may appear permissible within the statutory language of Section 158.103(3), do such fees [and costs] conform to the intention of the constitutional authorization . . . ?
Id. at 2. We base our analysis on this information.
This opinion addresses only whether a statute that permits a court to include various attorney's fees and costs in an income-withholding order comports with article
The answers to all of your questions depend upon the meaning of the phrase "enforcement of court-ordered child support payments" in article XVI, section 28 of the constitution. On its face, article XVI, section 28 permits garnishment for the "enforcement of court-ordered child support payments." See Tex. Const. art.
Courts have construed the phrase "child support payments" to encompass attorney's fees and court costs that "are incidental to and a part of" enforcing a child-support obligation. Ex parteBinse,
We conclude, to answer your first question, that to the extent a statute permits a court to include in an order for income withholding attorney's fees and costs associated with establishing a child-support obligation, the statute runs afoul of article XVI, section 28 of the constitution. Article XVI, section 28 excepts from the general prohibition on garnishment the "enforcement" of a child-support obligation. Establishing a child-support obligation is not a component of enforcing an existing order. Thus, only attorney's fees and costs necessarily incurred to enforce an existing child-support obligation may be collected through income withholding, not those incurred to create a new obligation. Attorney's fees and costs that are not incurred to enforce an existing child-support obligation are not within the exception and may not be included in an income-withholding order. See Roosth,
To answer your second question, we conclude that, consistently with article XVI, section 28 of the constitution, a statute may permit including attorney's fees necessarily incurred to enforce an existing child-support obligation in an income-withholding order. The court determines, in any particular enforcement action, whether and what portion of attorney's fees were necessarily incurred in connection with the action.
To answer your final question, we conclude that, consistently with article XVI, section 28 of the constitution, a statute may permit including in an order for income withholding costs "for the services of Domestic Relations Offices and court registries" if the court determines that the costs are necessary incidents of the enforcement action.
Yours very truly,
JOHN CORNYN Attorney General
ANDY TAYLOR Assistant Attorney General
CLARK KENT ERVIN Deputy Attorney General — General Counsel
SUSAN D. GUSKY Chair, Opinion Committee
Kymberly K. Oltrogge Assistant Attorney General — Opinion Committee
No current wages for personal service shall ever be subject to garnishment, except for the enforcement of:
(1) court-ordered child support payments or spousal maintenance; or
(2) a judgment entered by a court.
Tex. S.J. Res. 9, 77th Leg., R.S. (2001).
