State ex rel. Human Servs. Dep't v. Rawls , 1 N.M. Ct. App. 666 ( 2012 )


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    '00'04- 17:02:57 2012.05.23
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 
    2012-NMCA-052
    Filing Date: April 6, 2012
    Docket No. 30,989
    STATE OF NEW MEXICO ex rel.
    HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT,
    Petitioner-Appellee,
    v.
    JOSEPH W. RAWLS,
    Respondent-Appellant,
    and
    DIANA DE ALBA-GARCIA,
    Respondent.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOÑA ANA COUNTY
    Mike Murphy, District Judge
    Gary K. King, Attorney General
    Santa Fe, NM
    Anthony C. Porter, Special Assistant Attorney General
    Las Cruces, NM
    for Appellee
    Jones, Snead, Wertheim & Wentworth, P.A.
    Roxie P. De Santiago
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellant
    OPINION
    SUTIN, Judge.
    1
    {1}     Joseph W. Rawls agreed to a judgment of paternity and to payment of child support.
    Later, through paternity testing, it was determined that he was not the child’s biological
    father. Based on Rule 1-060(B) NMRA, Rawls sought in the district court to have accrued
    and continuing child support abated on that ground and on the ground that he never had any
    relationship with the child. The child had been cared for by the child’s maternal
    grandmother. The child’s biological parents had been deported to Mexico. The district court
    denied relief. We hold that, under the unique circumstances of this case, Rawls should have
    been granted the relief he requested. We reverse the district court.
    BACKGROUND
    {2}      In November 2002, the New Mexico Human Services Department (HSD) sought the
    adjudication of Joseph W. Rawls as the father of a child (Child) and also sought an order
    requiring Rawls to pay child support. A district court hearing officer entered a report and
    decision in April 2003. This report and decision adjudicated Rawls the parent of Child,
    required Rawls to begin paying child support, and awarded judgment against Rawls for
    retroactive child support. This report and decision was entered by default because Rawls
    “failed to appear, answer, or otherwise plead within the time prescribe[d] by law and [was
    therefore] in default.” We will hereinafter refer to the April 2003 report and decision as “the
    default judgment.” In August 2004, HSD moved to reopen the case. Subsequently, a
    stipulated report and decision signed by the hearing officer and approved by HSD and Rawls
    was filed with the court. This August 2004 stipulated report and decision reiterated that
    Rawls was Child’s parent and was obligated to pay child support. It also contained an order
    and judgment determining that Rawls was in contempt of court and could purge the contempt
    as long as he was in strict compliance with the support payment and other requirements set
    out in the order and judgment. In this Opinion, we refer to the stipulated report and decision
    as “the stipulated order.”
    {3}     In February 2009, Rawls moved under Rule 1-060(B) to set aside the default
    judgment and the stipulated order on the ground that a paternity test administered in June
    2008 with results acquired in September 2008, with the cooperation of the Child Support
    Enforcement Division of the HSD, showed that he was not Child’s biological father. The
    court conducted a hearing on that motion in March 2010. At the hearing, Rawls’ counsel
    explained that Rawls would testify that he signed the stipulated order because it was the only
    option available in order to have his driver’s license reinstated, that he did not understand
    signing the stipulated order was an acknowledgment on his part that he was the biological
    father of Child, and that he understood HSD would schedule a paternity test. He states that
    when he later became aware, in 2008, that his driver’s license continued to be suspended for
    non-payment of child support he again contacted HSD, now with the assistance of counsel,
    and was able to schedule paternity testing. In addition, along with citing to the record of the
    lab results indicating that Rawls was not the biological father of Child, Rawls states that
    Child’s mother had represented to HSD that Rawls was the father of Child, and that the
    mother knew the representation was false because at a hearing in April 2011, when asked
    for the name of the biological father, she provided a name other than that of Rawls. We see
    2
    no refutation of any of these statements in HSD’s answer brief. In his reply brief, Rawls
    states that he “requested the paternity testing from [HSD] when he was first served with the
    [p]etition and again when he met with [HSD] officials to discuss his driver’s license
    suspension.”
    {4}     In an oral ruling in March 2010, the district court denied Rawls’ motion insofar as
    it was grounded on Rule 1-060(B)(1), (2), and (3), but indicated that testimony was
    necessary before the court could rule on the applicability of Rule 1-060(B)(5) and (6). In
    April 2010, Rawls moved pursuant to Rule 1-060(B)(5) and (6) to abate child support
    payments based on the grounds that the paternity test excluded him as Child’s biological
    father and that he did not have any emotional relationship with Child. In May 2010, the
    court instructed counsel to prepare briefs with points and authorities on the application of
    Rule 1-060(B)(6) relating to the fact that Rawls was excluded as Child’s biological father.
    In its points and authorities brief, HSD stated, among other things, that it did not foreclose
    the possibility, at some point in the future, of disestablishing paternity as to Rawls and
    prospectively setting aside a portion of the default judgment, contingent upon the
    cooperation of Rawls’ counsel in gathering information about Child’s biological father and
    the maternal grandmother.
    {5}     In November 2010, the court entered an order denying relief under Rule 1-060(B)(1),
    (2), and (3) and denying Rawls’ motion to set aside the stipulated order. Also in November
    2010, the court entered an order “denying motion to dismiss pursuant to [Rule] 1-
    060(B)(5)(6).” The court entered no findings of fact or conclusions of law and gave no
    written explanation or ground for the denial. Rawls appeals the November 2010 order
    entitled “Order Denying Motion to Dismiss Pursuant to [Rule] 1-060(B)(5)(6).” On appeal,
    Rawls asserts that the November 2010 order relating to Rule 1-060(B)(5) and (6) denied his
    Rule 1-060(B)(5) and (6) motions to abate ongoing child support and to set aside the default
    judgment and stipulated order, and was inconsistent with the law. Furthermore, he “assumes
    that the district court relie[d] on the undisputed fact that [he was] not the biological father
    of [C]hild.”
    {6}     Rawls specifically faults the court for failing to grant the prospective relief of child
    support abatement requested in his motion to abate child support and for failing to set aside
    the default judgment and the stipulated order. He seeks “[p]rospective relief” as available
    under “statutes granting courts continuing jurisdiction to modify and revoke child support
    orders” by setting aside the default judgment and stipulated order, thereby setting aside “the
    determination of paternity and . . . reliev[ing him] of ongoing child support obligations[.]”
    And he wants to be absolved of all related accrued child support.
    DISCUSSION
    Standard of Review
    3
    {7}     Rawls asserts that the issues on appeal are to be reviewed de novo because all
    pertinent facts are undisputed, the issues are of pure law, and the district court’s rulings were
    not consistent with the law. He also asserts that even if the standard of review is abuse of
    discretion, the issues turn on whether the court misapplied the law, thus calling for de novo
    review. HSD contends that a ruling on a motion for relief from a final judgment under Rule
    1-060(B) is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
    {8}     We review denials of Rule 1-060(B) motions generally for abuse of discretion, unless
    the issue is one of law. Stein v. Alpine Sports, Inc., 
    1998-NMSC-040
    , ¶ 6, 
    126 N.M. 258
    ,
    
    968 P.2d 769
    . To the extent an issue requires us to determine whether the district court
    misapprehended the applicable law or otherwise requires us to decide a pure matter of law,
    we turn to de novo review. N.M. Right to Choose/NARAL v. Johnson, 
    1999-NMSC-028
    , ¶ 7,
    
    127 N.M. 654
    , 
    986 P.2d 450
    ; Kinder Morgan CO2 Co., L.P. v. State Taxation & Revenue
    Dep’t, 
    2009-NMCA-019
    , ¶ 9, 
    145 N.M. 579
    , 
    203 P.3d 110
    .
    {9}     As pertinent to the issues before us, Rule 1-060(B)(5) and (6) read:
    On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party . .
    . from a final judgment, order[,] or proceeding for the following reasons:
    ...
    (5) . . . it is no longer equitable that the judgment should have
    prospective application; or
    (6) any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the
    judgment. The motion shall be made within a reasonable time[.]
    The Merits
    {10} HSD seeks to avoid the merits with its argument that Rawls failed to move for relief
    within a reasonable time. See Rule 1-060(B)(6) (“The motion shall be made within a
    reasonable time[.]”); Thompson v. Thompson, 
    99 N.M. 473
    , 475, 
    660 P.2d 115
    , 117 (1983)
    (stating that “Rule 60(b)(4), (5)[,] and (6) may be presented within a ‘reasonable time’”).
    HSD fails to point out where in the record it preserved this argument. We will not search
    the record for procedural events to which a party fails to cite, and we therefore will not
    consider HSD’s timeliness point. See Crutchfield v. N.M. Dep’t of Taxation & Revenue,
    
    2005-NMCA-022
    , ¶ 14, 
    137 N.M. 26
    , 
    106 P.3d 1273
     (“Absent [a] citation to the record or
    any obvious preservation, we will not consider the issue.”).
    {11} As we have indicated in this Opinion, Rawls seeks relief from all accrued, unpaid
    child support, as well as relief from any obligation for future child support. We interpret
    Rule 1-060(B)(5)’s reference to prospective relief to mean relief from the date the Rule 1-
    060(B) motion was filed, not from the time of the default judgment or stipulated order. If
    4
    the grounds for relief are met, we interpret Rule 1-060(B)(6) as intended to provide relief
    with respect to the accrued and prospective child support. Intermixed in the Rule 1-060(B)
    analyses is the extent, if any, to which the notion of changed circumstances under the
    applicable Uniform Parentage Act, NMSA 1978, §§ 40-11-1 to -23 (1986, as amended
    through 2004) (current version at NMSA 1978, §§ 40-11A-101 to -903 (2009)), is to play
    a part.
    {12} The unique circumstances of this case raise a significant issue as to the fairness of
    requiring a person to pay child support when he is unerringly determined not to be the
    biological father of a child and found to have had no personal relationship with the child.
    In this case, of course, this circumstance is set against Rawls’ initial agreement to paternity
    in a judgment; the substantial period of time that passed before he obtained a paternity test;
    the consequence of Child’s biological parents being deported, leaving Child with the
    maternal grandmother; and the concern about who should have provided child support and
    who should continue to provide child support. Basic notions of fairness and justice strongly
    suggest that Rawls should not be compelled to pay the accrued and prospective child
    support. Nevertheless, we must balance that view with policies disfavoring vacation of
    judgments and arguments that abatement of child support will prejudice HSD and harm
    Child.
    {13} The district court did not make things easy for effective appellate review. The court
    presumably determined under Rule 1-060(B)(5) that Rawls failed to prove that it was “no
    longer equitable that the judgment should have prospective application[.]” But without this
    Court considering credibility of witnesses, sufficiency of proof, and equitable considerations,
    we have no way of knowing the underlying basis for that determination. Nor do we know
    why the court refused to grant relief under Rule 1-060(B)(6). We are unaware whether the
    court denied the relief on a “reasonable time” ground or on an “extraordinary circumstance”
    ground. Rule 1-060(B)(6) cannot be used to circumvent the one-year time period or other
    requirements of Subparts (1), (2), and (3). Resolution Trust Corp. v. Ferri, 
    120 N.M. 320
    ,
    323, 
    901 P.2d 738
    , 741 (1995). We are given no reasons why the district court denied relief
    under Rule 1-060(B)(5) or (6), and we will not assume that its reason for doing so was based
    on its conclusion that the motion was made pursuant to Rule 1-060(B)(5) and (6) to
    circumvent the time requirements of Rule 1-060(B)(1), (2), and (3). See State v. Thayer, 
    80 N.M. 579
    , 582, 
    458 P.2d 831
    , 834 (Ct. App. 1969) (“We will not assume facts unsupported
    by the record.”).
    {14} That generally we apply an abuse of discretion standard of review in Rule 1-
    060(B)(5) and (6) determinations does not mean that every determination under that rule
    requires us to apply the abuse of discretion standard in a particular way or that we must
    blindly adhere to the discretion aspect of the standard. There are instances in which this
    Court can turn to de novo review to determine whether a district court has abused its
    discretion. This Court has held that we will determine that a district court has abused its
    discretion “when it applies an incorrect standard, incorrect substantive law, or its
    discretionary decision is premised on a misapprehension of the law.” Klinksiek v. Klinksiek,
    5
    
    2005-NMCA-008
    , ¶ 4, 
    136 N.M. 693
    , 
    104 P.3d 559
     (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted); see also Johnson, 
    1999-NMSC-028
    , ¶ 7 (“[W]e may characterize as an abuse of
    discretion a discretionary decision that is premised on a misapprehension of the law.”
    (alteration, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted)); State v. Elinski, 1997-NMCA-
    117, ¶ 8, 
    124 N.M. 261
    , 
    948 P.2d 1209
     (holding that a district court abused its discretion
    when it exercised its discretion based on a “misapprehension of the law”). In addition, this
    Court has recognized that “[w]here the court’s discretion is fact-based, we must look at the
    facts relied on by the trial court as a basis for the exercise of its discretion[] to determine if
    these facts are supported by substantial evidence” and that an abuse of discretion “occurs
    where the court’s ruling is clearly against the logic and effect of the facts and circumstances
    before the court.” Apodaca v. AAA Gas Co., 
    2003-NMCA-085
    , ¶ 60, 
    134 N.M. 77
    , 
    73 P.3d 215
     (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    {15} Although no procedural rule requires a district court to explain its reasons or to set
    out findings of fact and conclusions of law in connection with its determination under Rule
    1-060(B) following an evidentiary hearing, it behooves the district court to go beyond a bare
    ruling with no explanation or finding. We will not grant substantial, much less virtually
    automatic deference under such circumstances. We hold that the district court’s decision is
    clearly against the logic and effect of the facts it considered.
    {16} At the outset, Rawls may have thought he was Child’s biological father. Evidence
    in the record indicates that Rawls wanted a paternity test early on and may have agreed to
    the stipulated order more out of concern for his driver’s license than the consequences of his
    agreement. Unless circumstances exist, beyond his early stipulation, to require a different
    application of New Mexico’s child support statutes and case law, we see no reasonable basis
    on which to saddle Rawls with accrued or prospective child support. The question before
    us is whether the circumstances of this case are of such an extraordinary nature as to relieve
    Rawls from the child support; and, if so, whether Rawls should nevertheless be denied relief
    because his conduct (his early stipulation and passive pursuit of paternity testing) may have
    resulted in undue prejudice to HSD or harm to Child.
    {17} We hold that the determination that Rawls is not Child’s biological father after his
    admission early on that he was Child’s father is an extraordinary circumstance under Rule
    1-060(B)(6). This view is supported by Child’s mother’s apparent misrepresentation to HSD
    that Rawls was the father and her later admission in court that another named man was the
    biological father. While this circumstance is not a “changed circumstance” in the nature, for
    example, of the onset of adverse financial changes that might require a change in a child
    support obligation, we think that the change from a mistaken admission of paternity to proof
    of non-paternity qualifies as an extraordinary change of circumstance sufficient to permit
    Rule 1-060(B)(6) relief from a child support obligation.
    {18} Furthermore, HSD fails to show us where in the record Child has been harmed by
    Rawls’ conduct or that Child will be harmed to any extent that would justify burdening
    Rawls with accrued and prospective child support. We have not been shown that Child has
    6
    not received adequate support in the past. Nor has it been shown that Child will not receive
    adequate support in the future. In balancing whether Rawls instead of HSD should provide
    the support, we come down on Rawls’ side. That HSD cannot successfully enforce the
    obligation against Child’s deported mother and biological father does not change the balance
    that favors Rawls. To prove that it is or will be harmful to Child to grant relief to Rawls,
    HSD had the burden to present evidence of such harm resulting from Rawls’ conduct.
    Having failed in that burden, we see no reasonable basis on which to saddle Rawls with an
    obligation to pay any child support. See Atcherian v. State, 
    14 P.3d 970
    , 972 (Alaska 2000)
    (affirming the district court’s vacation of the default judgment of paternity and awarding a
    refund of child support collected after the appellant, having obtained a paternity test
    excluding him as the child’s biological father, filed his motion to vacate the judgment);
    Kilpper v. State, 
    983 P.2d 729
    , 730, 732 (Alaska 1999) (holding that the appellant, who
    signed an affidavit acknowledging paternity of a child, was entitled to prospective relief
    from future child support payments upon a showing that he was not the biological father of
    the child); MAM v. State Dep’t of Family Servs., 
    99 P.3d 982
    , 983, 985-86 (Wyo. 2004)
    (holding that the court abused its discretion in denying the appellant’s motion to set aside
    a stipulated paternity order where the appellant proved, among other facts, that he was not
    the child’s biological father and that he did not have a relationship with the child); Williams
    v. Williams, 
    843 So. 2d 720
    , 721, 723 (Miss. 2003) (refusing “to sanction the manifest
    injustice of forcing a man to support a child which science has proven not to be his” and
    therefore terminating further child support obligations notwithstanding a divorce decree in
    which the appellant swore that he was the father of the child); M.A.S. v. Miss. Dep’t of
    Human Servs., 
    842 So. 2d 527
    , 528, 531 (Miss. 2003) (en banc) (holding that,
    notwithstanding a nine-year delay in requesting relief, and the appellant’s failure to submit
    to DNA testing earlier, it was “profoundly unjust to require [the appellant] to continue
    making child support payments for a child which is known not to be his” and thereby
    ordering the trial court to set aside the paternity and child support order); Wheat v.
    Commonwealth, 
    217 S.W.3d 266
    , 267-69 (Ky. Ct. App. 2007) (stating that notwithstanding
    the fact that the appellant had acknowledged paternity of the child, there was no basis, from
    an equitable standpoint, to require him to continue to pay child support considering, among
    other factors, that he had no relationship with the child).
    {19} We therefore set aside the default judgment and the stipulated order. We hold that
    Rawls is released from his obligation to pay prospective child support. In this context, we
    interpret “prospective” relief to have commenced on February 24, 2009, the filing date of
    Rawls’ Rule 1-060(B) motion, which was accompanied by proof that Rawls is not Child’s
    biological father.
    {20} We further hold that Rawls should not be burdened with the obligation to pay any
    accrued child support. In Wheat, under circumstances similar to those of this case, the
    Kentucky Court of Appeals held that if the district court determined that the mother of the
    child, who had “apparently [failed to] disclose the name of the true biological father when
    she supplied the name of [the appellant] as the purported father of [the child,]” was guilty
    of fraud or misrepresentation, then the accrued child support should be set aside. 217
    7
    S.W.3d at 271. That case was remanded for a hearing on whether the mother had made a
    material representation which was false and which was either known to be false or which
    was made recklessly, and which was made with an inducement to be acted upon and was
    relied upon thereby causing the injury. Id. The Wheat court instructed the trial court that
    if, on remand, the factors were met, the accrued child support should be set aside. Id.
    {21} Here, Rawls argues that “even the limited record can establish all five of the[]
    [Wheat] elements.” Rawls continues:
    [Child’s mother] made a material misrepresentation in that she represented
    [Rawls] as the father of . . . Child to [HSD]. Such a representation was false
    as [Rawls] is not the biological father of . . . Child. [Child’s mother] knew
    the representation was false because at the hearing on April 14, 2011, when
    asked for the name of the biological father of . . . [C]hild, she provided a
    name other than [Rawls]. [Child’s mother] made the representation so that
    child support could be collected from [Rawls] and [HSD] acted upon that
    representation to file a [p]etition to name [Rawls] as [the] father of . . . Child.
    The outcome of that [p]etition, the related default judgment and stipulated
    order have all caused untold injury on [Rawls]. [Rawls] has accrued over
    $35,000 in child support payments for a child that is not his, he has a
    suspended driver’s license, is facing criminal repercussions for driving
    without a license, has lost his [c]ommercial [d]river’s [l]icense . . . which was
    the source of income for himself and his family including three other
    children[] and has had to pay attorney fees and costs.
    HSD does not specifically respond to this argument in its answer brief. See Santa Fe Pac.
    Gold Corp. v. United Nuclear Corp., 
    2007-NMCA-133
    , ¶ 41, 
    143 N.M. 215
    , 
    175 P.3d 309
    (stating that where a party declines to address an issue in its answer brief, the issue is treated
    as a concession). We are persuaded that, under the particular facts of this case, the most
    logical and consistent conclusion is that Rawls should not be liable for any support for Child,
    who is not his progeny, and that, pursuant to Rule 1-060(B)(6), the default judgment, as well
    as the stipulated order, should be set aside, leaving Rawls with no obligation as to accrued
    or prospective child support.
    {22} In sum, we can see no reasonable basis under the circumstances here on which to
    hold Rawls responsible for child support for Child once it was determined that he was not
    the biological father of Child, after it was obvious that Child’s mother either mistakenly or
    intentionally pointed to Rawls as the father, and absent any harm to Child.
    CONCLUSION
    {23} We reverse. The default judgment and stipulated order are hereby set aside to the
    extent they purport to establish Rawls’ paternity and require Rawls to pay accrued child
    support, as well as any prospective child support.
    8
    {24}    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
    ____________________________________
    J. MILES HANISEE, Judge
    Topic Index for State of NM ex rel HSD v. Rawls, Docket No. 30,989
    AE                  APPEAL AND ERROR
    AE-SR               Standard of Review
    CP                  CIVIL PROCEDURE
    CP-RE               Rule 60(B) Motion
    CP-TL               Time Limitations
    DR                  DOMESTIC RELATIONS
    DR-CT               Child Support
    DR-PT               Paternity
    EV                  EVIDENCE
    EV-BT               Blood/Breath Tests
    JM                  JUDGMENT
    JM-DF               Default Judgment
    JM-PJ               Post Judgment Relief
    9