Judges: DAN MORALES, Attorney General of Texas
Filed Date: 10/14/1993
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/6/2016
Honorable Mike Driscoll Harris County Attorney 1001 Preston, Suite 634 Houston, Texas 77002-1891
Re: Whether a constable may, to collect delinquent child support payments, seize and sell personal property that sections
Dear Mr. Driscoll:
You have asked us to consider the following questions:
1. What personal property, if any, can the constable seize and sell pursuant to a writ of execution issued to collect child support arrearages, attorney fees and interest?
2. What additional or other property, if any, can the constable seize pursuant to said writ of execution if prior to the issuance of said writ of execution the plaintiff in execution has obtained and filed for record in the county clerk's office an abstract of judgment to establish a "child support lien" pursuant to section 14.972 of the Family Code?
3. What property can the constable seize, if the plaintiff in execution obtains an order pursuant to section 14.979 of the Family Code foreclosing on the child support lien purportedly created by filing the abstract of judgment in the office of the county clerk?
We will consider your questions in the order you asked them.
Section 14.05 of the Family Code authorizes a court1 in a suit affecting the parent-child relationship2 to order either or both parents to make periodic payments for the support of the child generally until the child is eighteen years of age. If the obliger3 fails or refuses timely to make a periodic payment, that fact "shall constitutes a final judgment" for all child support unpaid and owing, including interest calculated pursuant to section 14.34 of the Family Code. Fam. Code § 14.41(a). If the obligee4 or obligor makes a proper motion, the court, after notice and hearing, must confirm the amount of child support in arrears and must render judgment against the obligor for the amount of child support unpaid and owing, including interest. Id. The obligee may enforce the judgment "by any means available for the enforcement of judgments for debts or by an order of the court requiring that income be withheld from the disposable earnings of the obligor in an amount sufficient to satisfy the judgment." Id.; see id. § 14.43 (specifying requirements for court order enforcing judgment through withholding of obligor's disposable earnings).
Execution is a process by which a court enforces its judgment by authorizing a sheriff or constable to seize property and cause its transfer or sale. TEX. R. CIV. P. 621, 622. To execute upon a judgment of the district court, the obligee must apply for a writ of execution at least thirty days after the day the judge signed the final judgment; thus, a court may issue an execution only on a valid, final judgment. Id. rule 627; see id. rule 621. The writ of execution orders the sheriff or constable to, without delay, seize any and all of "the property of the defendant found within [the officer's] county that is not exempt from execution," to sell the property, and to apply the proceeds of the sale to the underlying debt. Id. rule 637 (emphasis added); see id. rules 639-643 (instructing how to levy on various types of property). The Texas Constitution and state statutes provide for the exemption from execution of certain real and personal property.
Article
The Property Code does not define "child support lien." However, pursuant to chapter 14, subchapter F of the Family Code (sections 14.971-14.983), a child support lien attaches to all of an obligor's nonhomestead real property5 and to all of the obligor's personal property not exempt under the Texas Constitution, "including all claims for negligence, personal injury, or workers' compensation" that the obligor owns on or after the date on which the lien attaches. Fam. Code § 14.972(b), (c). The lien attaches when the claimant6 files one of two documents — either an abstract of judgment7 or a child support lien notice8 for past due child support — with:
(1) the county clerk of any county in which the obligor is believed to own nonexempt real or personal property or in the county in which the obligor resides;
(2) the clerk of the court in which a claim, counterclaim, or suit by the obligor is pending, provided that a copy of the lien is mailed to the attorney of record for the obligor; and
(3) any attorney who represents the obligor in a claim or counterclaim which has not been filed with a court.
Id. § 14.974.
Significantly, a claimant may create a child support lien with or without judicial action, and the child support lien may or may not be supported by a judgment. If a court already has determined that an obligor is in arrears on his or her child support payments, the claimant may perfect the child support lien by filing in accordance with section 14.974 of the Family Code either an abstract of judgment or a child support lien notice. See Fam. Code §§ 14.972(a), 14.973(a)(4), (5). If the court determined that the obligor is in arrears and determined the amount of arrears, but for some reason failed to include a money judgment in its order, a claimant may perfect the child support lien only by filing a child support lien notice. Id. § 14.973(a)(4). Additionally, a claimant may perfect the child support lien only by filing a child support lien notice if no court has determined that the obligor is in arrears but an administrative determination of an arrearage exists in a writ of withholding issued pursuant to section 14.45 of the Family Code. Id.
Your first question requires us to consider whether, given that section
In your second question, you ask whether the constable may seize additional property if, prior to the time the court issues a writ of execution, the obligee has filed in the county clerk's office an abstract of judgment.10 As discussed supra, once a claimant files an abstract of judgment with an appropriate county clerk, a child support lien attaches to all nonhomestead real property in that county as well as all personal property not exempt under provisions of the Texas Constitution. See Fam. Code § 14.972(a), (b), (c). Pursuant to section
Your second question requires us to construe section 14.979(a) of the Family Code, which provides as follows:
When a child support lien notice has been filed under this subchapter, an action to foreclose a lien on nonexempt real or personal property may be brought in the district court of the county in which the property is or was located and the lien was filed. [Emphasis added.]
On its face, section 14.979(a) applies only to a child support lien predicated upon the filing of a child support lien notice; it does not apply to a child support lien predicated upon the filing of an abstract of judgment. You argue, however, that section 14.979(a) also should apply to a child support lien predicated upon the filing of an abstract of judgment. This would require us to add to section 14.979 the words "abstract of judgment," so that section 14.979(a) would read, "When a child support lien notice or abstract of judgment has been filed . . ., an action to foreclose . . . may be brought." If we construe section 14.979(a) as you suggest, then a constable may not seize additional property if, prior to the time the court issues a writ of execution, the obligee has filed in the county clerk's office an abstract of judgment unless the obligee also has prevailed in a foreclosure proceeding. We decline to construe section 14.979(a) in this manner.
We must presume that every word the legislature excluded from a statute was excluded for a purpose. Cameron v. Terrell Garrett, Inc.,
Foreclosure is the process by which a lien holder may become entitled to possess or sell property subject to the lien to satisfy a debt or obligation. Rule 309 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure provides generally for the foreclosure of liens. Under rule 309, a judgment for the foreclosure of a lien "shall be . . . that an order of sale shall issue to any sheriff or any constable within the State of Texas, directing him to seize and sell the same as under execution, in satisfaction of the judgment." Accordingly, we note that any holder of a child support lien may institute a foreclosure proceeding on the lien, regardless of whether the lien is predicated upon the filing of an abstract of judgment or a child support lien notice. If the lien holder prevails in the foreclosure proceeding, the judgment "shall be that the [claimant] recover his debt, damages and costs." TEX. R. CIV. P. 309. To satisfy the judgment, the court shall issue an order of sale "to any sheriff or any constable within the State of Texas, directing him to seize and sell the same as under execution." Id. (Emphasis added.) Furthermore, the court shall order the sheriff or constable to, "as in case of ordinary executions," satisfy the debt out of any other of the obligor's property if the property to which the lien attaches is not found or is insufficient. Id.
The primary purpose of a foreclosure proceeding under section 14.979(a) of the Family Code is to provide a judicial forum to decide whether an obligor is in arrears on the payment of child support. When a claimant has created a child support lien by filing either an abstract of judgment or a child support lien notice based upon a valid, final judgment, however, a court already has determined that the obligor is in arrears and the amount of child support the obligor owes. In fact, the only defensive issue an obligor may raise at such a foreclosure proceeding is a claim of satisfaction. Rule 630 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, however, mandates that an execution upon a judgment for a sum of money must specify the sum actually due when the court issues the writ of execution. Furthermore, if a writ of execution misstates the amount actually due on the judgment, the obligor may file a claim for injunctive relief. See Civ. Prac. Rem. Code §
Requiring a claimant to institute a foreclosure proceeding on a child support lien predicated upon the filing of an abstract of judgment or a child support lien notice based upon a valid, final court judgment simply would require the court once again to determine that the obligor is in arrears and the amount of child support the obligor owes. On the other hand, requiring a claimant to foreclose upon a child support lien predicated upon the filing of a child support lien notice not based upon a valid, final court judgment is not superfluous; no court has yet validly and finally determined that the obligor is in arrears and the amount of the arrearage. Consequently, we do not believe that the legislature intended to require a claimant to initiate foreclosure proceedings on a child support lien established by the filing of an abstract of judgment or a child support lien notice based upon a valid, final court judgment. Thus, in answer to your second question, a constable may seize all of an obligor's nonhomestead real property and all of the obligor's personal property pursuant to a writ of execution if, prior to the issuance of the writ of execution, the claimant has obtained and filed for record in the county clerk's office an abstract of judgment. The claimant need not institute a foreclosure proceeding in compliance with section 14.979(a) of the Family Code.
Finally, you ask what property the constable may seize if the claimant has not only filed an abstract of judgment, thereby establishing a child support lien, but also foreclosed on the lien in accordance with section 14.979(b)(2) of the Family Code and has thereby obtained an order requiring the constable to levy execution to satisfy the lien, costs, and attorney's fees. As we stated above, under rule 309 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, any holder of a child support lien may foreclose on the lien, regardless of the method by which the lien attached. Assuming that the court properly conducted a hearing and rendered judgment, the court's order authorizes the constable to seize all of the obligor's nonhomestead real property and all personal property, even that personal property that sections
Rule 309 of the Texas Rules of Civil Procedure authorizes any holder of a child support lien to foreclose on the lien, regardless of whether the lien attached upon the filing of an abstract of judgment or a child support lien notice. On the other hand, section 14.979(a) of the Family Code requires a claimant to foreclose on the child support lien only if the lien attached by virtue of the filing of a child support lien notice that was not based on a valid, final court judgment finding the obligor in arrears and determining the amount of the arrearage. Section 14.979(a) does not require a claimant to foreclose on a child support lien that is predicated upon the filing of an abstract of judgment or a child support lien notice based upon a valid, final court judgment. Thus, if, prior to the issuance of the writ of execution, the claimant obtained an abstract of judgment and filed it for record in the appropriate county clerk's office thereby creating a child support lien, the constable may seize all of a child support obligor's nonhomestead real property and all of the obligor's personal property. Likewise, if a claimant chooses to institute foreclosure proceedings upon a child support lien predicated upon the filing of an abstract of judgment, the constable may seize all of a child support obligor's nonhomestead real property and all of the obligor's personal property.
Very truly yours,
DAN MORALES Attorney General of Texas
WILL PRYOR First Assistant Attorney General
MARY KELLER Deputy Attorney General for Litigation
RENEA HICKS State Solicitor
MADELEINE B. JOHNSON Chair, Opinion Committee
Prepared by Kymberly K. Oltrogge Assistant Attorney General