This opinion will
be unpublished and
may not be cited
except as provided by
Minn. Stat. §
480A.08, subd. 3 (2004).
STATE OF MINNESOTA
IN COURT OF
APPEALS
A05-1569
Itasca County
Health and Human Services,
Respondent,
Lynn Florian n/k/a
Lynn Castro,
Respondent,
vs.
Robert W. Cadotte,
Appellant.
Filed June 27, 2006
Reversed
Lansing, Judge
Itasca County
District Court
File No. 31-F9-93-000176
John J. Muhar, Itasca County
Attorney, Heidi M. Chandler, Assistant County Attorney, 123 Northeast Fourth Street,
Grand Rapids, MN 55744(for
respondent Itasca County Health and Human Services)
Lynn Castro, 1505 Q Street, Rio Linda, CA 95673 (pro se respondent)
Michael W. Jonak, Jonak Law Office, 426 Northwest Fourth Street, Grand
Rapids, MN 55744 (for appellant)
Considered and decided by Halbrooks,
Presiding Judge; Lansing, Judge; and Shumaker, Judge.
U N P U B L I S H E D O P I N I O N
LANSING, Judge
In this child-support enforcement
action, Robert Cadotte appeals from a district court order determining the
validity of an administrative order withholding income for child-support
arrears. Cadotte argues that the
district court erred by validating the administrative enforcement because the
county did not comply with the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act by
registering the out-of-state order in Minnesota. Because the county did not register the order
after Cadotte contested its enforcement, we reverse.
F
A C T S
This dispute over an administrative order
for income withholding to enforce a California
court’s child-support-arrearage order raises procedural issues under the Uniform
Interstate Family Support Act. Robert
Cadotte and Lynn Castro dissolved their marriage in California in 1978. The dissolution order requires that Cadotte
pay child support for their minor son. The
California
court modified Cadotte’s child-support obligation in 1979 to include support
for their daughter born after the dissolution order.
Cadotte later moved to Minnesota,
where he continues to reside. In October
1992 Sacramento County, California,
filed a petition in Minnesota
seeking to establish an order for child support and unreimbursed public
assistance, to collect arrears, and to obtain either medical coverage for the
minors or supplemental child support. In
March 1993 a Minnesota administrative law
judge (ALJ) issued an order that recognized the California order for child support and
stated Cadotte’s child-support arrears as of January 1993, which totaled
$23,900. The ALJ applied Minnesota’s
child-support guidelines and ordered Cadotte to pay $315 a month in child
support and $63 a month for arrears. This order was modified in November 1993
to decrease Cadotte’s child-support obligation to $152 a month.
In February 2004 Sacramento County filed a motion in a California superior court to determine
Cadotte’s child-support arrears. The
court determined in June 2004 that Cadotte owed approximately $69,000 and
ordered him to pay $350 a month. A child-support
officer for Itasca County Health and Human Services in Minnesota adminstratively ordered Cadotte’s
employer in July 2004 to withhold $350 a month from Cadotte’s income.
In September 2004 Cadotte filed a motion in Itasca County District Court contesting
the validity and enforcement of the July 2004 administrative order. A
child-support magistrate confirmed its validity. On Cadotte’s motion for review, the district
court affirmed the magistrate’s findings.
Cadotte appeals, arguing that the court erred by enforcing the administrative
order to withhold income because the county failed to register the June 2004 California order in Minnesota after he contested its
enforcement.
D
E C I S I O N
Minnesota and California
have both enacted the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA). See Minn.
Stat. §§ 518C.101-.902 (2004); see also Cal.
Fam. Code §§ 4900-5005 (2004). The
purpose of UIFSA is to provide uniform state laws governing the establishment,
enforcement, and modification of child-support orders. Kasdan
v. Berney, 587 N.W.2d 319, 322 (Minn.
App. 1999).
Under UIFSA, a child-support enforcement
agency may administratively enforce a support order from another state, without
registering the order in the enforcing state, if the obligor does not contest the
administrative enforcement. Minn. Stat. § 518C.508. An obligor, however, may contest administrative
enforcement by providing notice to the support-enforcement agency, the employers
that received an income-withholding order, and the person or agency designated
to receive the withheld income. Id.
§ 518C.506. When the obligor
fulfills these steps, “the support enforcement agency shall register the
order.” Id.
§§ 518C.508(b), .602 (stating procedure for registering order for
enforcement). The registering party must
then provide notice to the contesting party and the obligor’s employer. Id. § 518C.605. When the order has been registered, the contesting
party may challenge the validity or enforcement of the order by raising one or
more of seven statutorily enumerated defenses.
Id. § 518C.607(a). If the party does not establish a defense,
the registering court will issue an order confirming the out-of-state order. Id. §
518C.607(c).
Itasca County Health and Human
Services failed to follow the statutory procedures for enforcing the June 2004 California order to collect child-support arrears from
Cadotte in Minnesota. The county’s July 2004 order to withhold
income states that its directive is “based on the support order from Minnesota.” But the county did not obtain an order from a Minnesota court that would provide a basis for enforcing
the June 2004 California
order.
Although Minn. Stat. § 518C.508(b)
allows administrative enforcement of an uncontested order without registration,
Cadotte contested the enforcement of the California
order in September 2004. Cadotte followed
the requirements of Minn. Stat. § 518C.506(b) and provided notice of his
contest to Itasca County Health and Human Services; his employer, Swanson
Motors; and the designated recipient of the money, the Minnesota Child Support
Payment Center.
The county acknowledges that it did
not register the order in Minnesota,
and, on appeal, has stated that it intends to comply with the statute and
register the order. Because the California order was not
registered in compliance with UIFSA, we reverse the district court’s order
enforcing the administrative income withholding. See In
re Marriage of Erickson, 991 P.2d 123, 125 (Wash. App. 2000) (holding that district
court may not enforce support order issued by different state when order was
not registered under UIFSA); see also
Garde v. One 1992 Ford Explorer XLT,
662 N.W.2d 165, 167 (Minn. App. 2003) (holding that district court may not
enforce order when party failed to comply with statutory procedural
requirements).
Reversed.