Colby v. Colby ( 2019 )


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  •                      NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    In re the Matter of:
    MARGARET M. COLBY, Petitioner/Appellee,
    v.
    REGINALD D. COLBY, Respondent/Appellant.
    No. 1 CA-CV 18-0280 FC
    FILED 5-7-2019
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. DR 1999-017774
    The Honorable Roy C. Whitehead, Judge
    The Honorable Richard F. Albrecht, Commissioner
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    COUNSEL
    Law Office of Louis Lombardo PC, Chandler
    By Louis K. Lombardo
    Counsel for Respondent/Appellant
    Buffington Law LLC, Cortez, CO
    By Drew P. Buffington
    Counsel for Petitioner/Appellee
    COLBY v. COLBY
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Judge Michael J. Brown delivered the decision of the Court, in which
    Presiding Judge Diane M. Johnsen and Judge Jennifer M. Perkins joined.
    B R O W N, Judge:
    ¶1            Reginald D. Colby (“Husband”) appeals the superior court’s
    order denying his motion to set aside a dissolution decree’s spousal
    maintenance award and the court’s judgment requiring him to pay
    Margaret M. Colby (“Wife”) spousal maintenance arrears. For the reasons
    that follow, we reverse the order and the judgment and remand for further
    proceedings consistent with this decision.
    BACKGROUND
    ¶2            Husband and Wife married on July 30, 1967. On October 8,
    1999, Wife filed a petition for dissolution of marriage, requesting in part:
    12. That the Respondent shall pay to the Petitioner the sum of
    one thousand dollars ($1,000.00) per month for life for spousal
    maintenance.
    13. That the Respondent shall pay to the Petitioner one half of
    the Respondent’s Military Retirement.
    On October 18, Wife filed an amended petition for dissolution that changed
    the prior requests:
    12. Neither party is desirous of receiving spousal maintenance,
    except as may be hereinafter sought for in the prayer of this
    Petition for Dissolution.
    13. That the Respondent shall pay to the Petitioner all of
    Respondent’s Military Retirement for a period of six (6)
    months and thereafter one half of the Respondent’s Military
    Retirement.
    (Emphasis added.) The prayer for relief in the amended petition asked
    “[t]hat no spousal maintenance be awarded.” Other than these provisions,
    the amended petition was identical to the original petition. Also on October
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    COLBY v. COLBY
    Decision of the Court
    18, Husband filed a notarized acceptance of service, waiving formal process
    and acknowledging receipt of various documents, including the amended
    petition, to which he “decline[d] to plead.” Husband’s acceptance
    acknowledged that if he did not “agree with any relief asked for by [Wife],
    [he] must respond or [a]nswer within 20 days from the day [he] signed the
    original of this Acceptance of Service” and “failure to [r]espond . . . could
    result in the Court giving the other party any and all things requested in . . .
    her legal papers, through a Default . . . Decree.” (Emphasis added.)
    ¶3            After Husband declined to respond, Wife filed an application
    for default. Husband filed another acceptance of service in February 2000,
    acknowledging receipt of the original and amended petitions. Wife then
    filed a second application for default. At a default hearing in May 2000, the
    superior court entered a decree of dissolution of marriage by default on a
    form of judgment Wife submitted, which tracked the language of the first
    petition by awarding Wife spousal maintenance of $1,000 per month and
    half of Husband’s military retirement account. For the next 17 years, the
    parties informally agreed to an allocation of Husband’s military retirement
    pay. As far as the record reveals, Husband never provided Wife any
    support denominated “spousal maintenance.”
    ¶4           In 2017, Husband filed a motion to set aside the spousal
    maintenance award in the decree under Arizona Rule of Family Law
    Procedure (“ARFLP”) 85(b),1 asserting the award was void because Wife’s
    amended petition superseded the original petition and “the specific relief
    granted was not requested in the [a]mended [p]etition . . . but nevertheless
    was granted by the court at the default hearing.” Wife countered that (1)
    Husband’s request was untimely; (2) he waived the right to challenge the
    award by failing to file an answer or appear at the default hearing; (3) his
    motion was barred by the doctrine of laches, and (4) he did not show the
    judgment was void. The superior court summarily denied the motion.
    ¶5             Wife then petitioned to enforce the spousal maintenance
    award and establish arrears. After an evidentiary hearing, the parties
    stipulated to the principal amount Husband owed, but Husband expressly
    stated he was “not waiv[ing] his defenses to this enforcement action.” The
    1     Husband filed his motion under ARFLP 85(c); however, the ARFLP
    were revised effective January 1, 2019 and 85(c) was renumbered as 85(b).
    See ARFLP, Correlation Table. For ease of reference, we refer to 85(b)
    throughout this decision.
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    COLBY v. COLBY
    Decision of the Court
    superior court entered judgment in favor of Wife, and against Husband, in
    the amount of $152,354.68. Husband timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    ¶6             Husband asserts the superior court erred in denying his
    motion to set aside the spousal maintenance award, arguing the award in
    the decree is void because Wife did not request spousal maintenance in the
    amended petition. See ARFLP 85(b)(4) (stating “the court may relieve a
    party from a final judgment” if “the judgment is void”); see also Ariz. R. Civ.
    P. 60(b)(4) (same).2 We review the denial of a motion to set aside for an
    abuse of discretion, but we determine de novo whether a decree is void.
    Duckstein v. Wolf, 
    230 Ariz. 227
    , 231, ¶ 8 (App. 2012); see also Martin v. Martin,
    
    182 Ariz. 11
    , 15 (App. 1994) (“A judgment . . . is ‘void’ if the court entering
    it lacked jurisdiction: (1) over the subject matter, (2) over the person
    involved, or (3) to render the particular judgment or order entered.”).
    ¶7           We note that although both parties’ arguments focus on the
    ARFLP and cases applying those rules, we will apply the Arizona Rules of
    Civil Procedure (“Rule”) (1999) because the ARFLP were not adopted until
    2006. See Ariz. S. Ct., Admin. Order R-05-008. Accordingly, whether the
    spousal maintenance award was void when entered in 2000 is governed by
    Rule 54(d), which stated that “[a] judgment by default shall not be different
    in kind from or exceed in amount that prayed for in the demand for
    judgment.” Ariz. R. Civ. P. 54(d) (1999) (emphasis added).
    ¶8             Rule 54(d)’s purpose is “to assure the defendant who
    consciously allows a default judgment to be taken against him that he may
    rest secure in the knowledge that the judgment will not exceed the relief
    requested in the complaint,” thereby “[guaranteeing] the defendant due
    process.” Consequently, a default judgment that does not comply with
    Rule 54(d) is “null and void . . . to the extent that it exceeded the demand.”
    Darnell v. Denton, 
    137 Ariz. 204
    , 206 (App. 1983); S. Ariz. Sch. for Boys, Inc. v.
    Chery, 
    119 Ariz. 277
    , 283 (App. 1978) (explaining that a default hearing is
    subject to the limitation of Rule 54(d) in that a court cannot award relief that
    “is more than or different in kind from that requested”); see Cockerham v.
    Zikratch, 
    127 Ariz. 230
    , 234 (1980) (recognizing that due process
    considerations may negate a court’s jurisdiction); see also United Student Aid
    Funds, Inc. v. Espinosa, 
    559 U.S. 260
    , 271 (2010) (construing Federal Rule of
    2      Effective January 1, 2017, Rule 60(c) was re-numbered as Rule 60(b)
    but there are no substantive differences. See Ariz. S. Ct., Admin. Order R-
    16-0010 attachment B at 11.
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    COLBY v. COLBY
    Decision of the Court
    Civil Procedure 60(b)(4) as “applying . . . where a judgment is premised on
    a certain type of jurisdictional error or on a violation of due process that
    deprives a party of notice of the opportunity to be heard”).
    ¶9             Wife contends Husband was not denied due process because
    he chose not to answer the petition and not to attend the default hearing.
    We reject this argument. “Once the defendant is served with a copy of the
    complaint, he can respond or do nothing. If he opts for the latter course,
    the defendant knows that greater relief than that prayed for or relief
    different in kind will not be entered against him.” Tarnoff v. Jones, 17 Ariz.
    App. 240, 244 (1972); see also 
    Darnell, 137 Ariz. at 206
    . As this court
    previously explained, Rule 54(d)’s “explicit and emphatic mandate . . . does
    not differentiate between a default based on a total failure to appear and a
    default following an appearance.” 
    Chery, 119 Ariz. at 283
    . By granting
    spousal maintenance when the amended petition unequivocally did not
    request such an award (and in fact stated that none was sought), the court
    exceeded its authority under Rule 54(d) and violated Husband’s due
    process right to “fair notice of the allegations.” See 
    Cockerham, 127 Ariz. at 234
    . Such a violation is a defect that “undermin[es] jurisdiction so as to
    render [the] judgment void.” 
    Id. at 235;
    see also 
    Espinosa, 559 U.S. at 271
    .
    ¶10            Wife argues the original petition provided Husband fair
    notice of the allegation because it made a specific request for spousal
    maintenance and Husband acknowledged service of that petition. Wife
    directs us to Kline v. Kline, 
    221 Ariz. 564
    , 569, ¶ 15 (App. 2009), where we
    held that a default judgment for spousal maintenance is valid pursuant to
    ARFLP 44(G)3—which was identical to Rule 54—if the petitioner
    specifically requested spousal maintenance in a pleading and provided the
    opposing party legally adequate notice of the pleading. Wife’s argument,
    however, ignores the general rule that when a “complaint is amended in a
    material way,” the original complaint becomes functus officio; a defendant
    has the right to respond to the amended complaint de novo; and “all
    subsequent proceedings are regarded as based on the amended complaint.”
    Campbell v. Deddens, 
    21 Ariz. App. 295
    , 297 (1974); see Functus Officio, Black’s
    Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (“[W]ithout further authority or legal
    competence. . . .”). Here, the amended petition was materially different
    from the original petition, see supra ¶ 2, and Wife does not argue the
    3      Subsection G of ARFLP 44 is no longer part of the ARFLP. Under
    the revised ARFLP, the court may enter a default decree on all issues in a
    case, with or without a hearing, but “the petitioner must use a new Form 6
    to provide an evidentiary basis for entering a default decree for spousal
    maintenance.” See ARFLP Prefatory Cmt. to the 2019 Amendments.
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    COLBY v. COLBY
    Decision of the Court
    amended petition was not the operative pleading for the purposes of Rule
    54(d). Cf. Rodriguez v. Rodriguez, 
    8 Ariz. App. 5
    , 8–9 (1968) (“Although a
    superseded pleading becomes functus officio, the effect of the trial court’s
    dismissal of the amended complaints was to restore the original
    complaint.” (citation omitted)).      Accordingly, paragraph 10 of the
    dissolution decree, awarding Wife $1,000 per month indefinitely, is void
    because it granted relief that exceeded and was different in kind from that
    requested. See 
    Darnell, 137 Ariz. at 206
    .
    ¶11           Wife also argues that Husband’s motion to set aside was
    untimely because he failed to show (1) his delay was excusable, (2) he acted
    promptly in seeking relief, and (3) he had a “meritorious defense” to an
    award of spousal maintenance, citing Blair v. Burgener, 
    226 Ariz. 213
    , 216,
    ¶ 7 (App. 2010). Wife is correct in that most motions seeking to set aside
    judgments “must be made within a reasonable time.” ARFLP 85(c)(1); see
    also ARFLP 78(a)(1) (stating that a judgment “includes a decree or an order
    from which an appeal lies”). However, that requirement does not apply
    when the judgment is void. 
    Martin, 182 Ariz. at 14
    (“There is no time limit
    in which a motion [alleging a judgment is void] may be brought; the court
    must vacate a void judgment or order . . . .”); 
    Darnell, 137 Ariz. at 206
    (explaining that a party seeking relief from a void judgment does not have
    to show there was prompt action in seeking relief); Int’l Glass & Mirror, Inc.
    v. Banco Ganadero Y Agricola, S.A., 
    25 Ariz. App. 604
    , 605 (1976) (citing cases
    where the judgments were set aside decades after entry and explaining that
    the general “reasonable time” requirement does not apply when the
    judgment is void).
    ¶12            Finally, we reject Wife’s argument that Husband’s request for
    relief is barred by the doctrine of laches. “A void judgment cannot acquire
    validity because of laches.” Int’l Glass & Mirror, 
    Inc., 25 Ariz. App. at 605
    .
    ¶13            Given our conclusion that the decree’s award of spousal
    maintenance is void, we also vacate the order granting Wife spousal
    maintenance arrears. Smith v. Smith, 
    235 Ariz. 181
    , 184, ¶ 12 (App. 2014)
    (explaining that a void decree “is a nullity, is not entitled to enforcement
    and . . . [a]ll proceedings founded on the void [decree] are themselves
    regarded as invalid and ineffective for any purpose” (alterations in original)
    (quoting State v. Cramer, 
    192 Ariz. 150
    , 153, ¶ 12 (App. 1998))).
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    COLBY v. COLBY
    Decision of the Court
    CONCLUSION
    ¶14            We hold that paragraph 10 of the dissolution decree,
    awarding spousal maintenance, is void because it exceeded the relief
    requested in the amended petition. We therefore reverse the court’s order
    denying Husband’s motion to set aside and the judgment awarding spousal
    maintenance arrears and remand for further proceedings consistent with
    this decision. In our discretion, we deny both parties’ requests for
    attorneys’ fees under Arizona Revised Statutes section 25-324. We award
    taxable costs to Husband upon compliance with ARCAP 21.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
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