II. ARGUMENT
Q 1. Did the Magistrate and/or Superior
Court below err in that they violated the "law of the case" in
proceeding to find personal jurisdiction over defendant notwithstanding the utter
failure of plaintiffs to show any evidence on remand that Defendant father
had "actual or constructive notice" of the 2008 modification action
in accord with this honorable court's remand for that very purpose as
directed by this court's Dec. 8, 2010 order?
a. Plaintiffs
were unable on remand to evince any evidence that defendant had
“constructive or actual notice” of the 2008 support modification as directed in
this court's Dec. 8, 2010 order. This cause should therefore be dismissed
pursuant to the “law of the case” doctrine.
Initially, Appellant contends that in light of this court's
reversal and remand for the limited purpose of determining if plaintiffs could
show “evidence” of “constructive or actual” notice upon defendant of the 2008
filed modification or Feb. 23, 2009 modification proceedings, (see Dec. 8, 2010
order, PC at 31-32), and the failure of plaintiffs to do so on remand, it
is entirely inappropriate under the “law of the case” doctrine of
Morrisseau v. Fayette 164 Vt. 358, 670 A.2d 820 (1995) for the trial or
Superior Courts below to rely on either motions filed relating to Appellant's
Aug. 13, 2009 Emergency Motion and 2010 appeal[1]OR
motions filed relating to his 2011 Magistrate's Appeal to determine
"waiver" of Appellant's personal jurisdiction issues under the “law
of the case,” (see Nov. 14, 2011 dvd tr. at 1:04:22, 1:06:01,
1:10:40, 1:25:20, 2:19:56, 2:20:20, Appellant's Amended Magistrates Appeal
Memorandum, pp. 8-13, in record, cf. Aug. 1, 2012 order, PC 7-8, May 10, 2012
order, PC 17, last ¶), when the underlying service of process for the support
modification proceedings in 2009 had already been reversed by this honorable
court, (see Dec. 8, 2010 order, PC 30-32, cf. Morrisseau v. Fayette,
supra).
However, instead of taking the
logical next step of dismissing the modification action, as would seemingly
be required under this court's Dec. 8, 2010 remand directive upon failure of
plaintiffs on remand to show proper notice on defendant, the Magistrate court
below, and by extension Superior Court in affirming the trial court's ruling, blatantly
disregarded the plain implication of the court's Dec. 8, 2010 order and in
“Twilight Zone” fashion ruled that as long as it can be shown as long as three
years later that this party eventually became “aware” of the litigation— as evidenced by his “voluntary” participation in the ensuing
legal battles— had “minimum contacts” with Vermont, and was “served”
notice of the action in some manner subsequently, (regardless of whether
such “service” actually complied with any law or Court Rule governing
service as shall shortly be shown), the provisions of VRCP 3 and 4 need not
strictly apply in order to effect jurisdiction over the 2008 modification and
defendant personally, (see May 10, 2012 order, PC 16 ¶¶ 3-5).
As shown herein, this party cannot
believe this is a correct application of law for a host of reasons,
not the least of which is this court's holdings in the cases of Morrisseau
v. Fayette, 155 Vt. 371, 584 A.2d 1119, (1990), Fercenia v. Guiduli, 2003 VT 50
¶8, 175 VT 541, 830 A.2d 55 (mem) (2003), Beebe v. Eisemann, M.D., et al. 2012
VT 40 (Vermont Supreme Court, 2012, docket 2011-365), as well as settled service and notice
jurisprudence of this court, (see Brady v. Brauer, 148 Vt. 40, 529 A.2d 159,
{1987}, Bessette v. Dept of Corrections, 2005 Vt. Super, Lexis 137, In
re: Estate of Francis Duval, 133 VT 197 332 A.2d 802, (1975), (constructive
service by publication on out of town party not notice reasonably calculated to
apprise party of action under Mullane et al.); Smith v. Brattleboro Retreat Inc.,
147 VT 303, 515 A.2d 1056 (1986), (lack of service by registered mail left the
court without jurisdiction to hear the case); Emmons v. Emmons, 124 VT. 107,
197 A.2d 812 (1964) (absent voluntary submission only personal service in state
can confer jurisdiction, partially overruled in Von Ohlsen v. Von Ohlsen,137 VT
377, 406 A.2d 393 (1979); Howe v. Lisbon Savings Bank and Trust Co., 111 VT
201, 207; 14 A.2 3, 6 (1940), Aiken v. Malloy, 132 VT 200, 208-209, 315 A.2d
488, (1974) (public policy requires courts uphold preference for 'best possible
service,' cf. Society for Propagating the Gospel v Ballard, 4 VT 119 (1832),
and Driver v Driver, 515 A.2d 1058, (1986), "personal jurisdiction must be
somehow acquired, it cannot be merely ordered”)
Indeed, such a holding seems at odds
with sound public policy as it would encourage Plaintiffs to file actions
which they know or should reasonably know lack jurisdiction, even as it simultaneously
discourages Defendants from litigating to clear from the dockets of the
courts of this state orders and judgments otherwise void. [2]
Moreover, on the merits— and apart from the time-bending
analysis of the Magistrate finding waiver in June of 2011 contrary to this
court's 2010 order and the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure as shown
subsequently herein— in spite of three evidentiary hearings over the space of
three years in proceedings below plaintiffs were unable on remand to evince
one shred of evidence that defendant had “constructive or actual notice” of the
2008 support modification as directed by this court's Dec. 8, 2010 order.
Accordingly,
under settled Vermont law, Plaintiff's 2008 modification action should be
forthwith dismissed, (Morrisseau, supra, Fercenia, supra, Beebe v.
Eisemann, supra, Driver v. Driver, supra, Smith v. Brattleboro, supra, Brady v
Brauer, supra).
Q 2. Did the failure of Plaintiff/Appellees below to properly
serve Defendant/Appellant with the modification process in this case in accord
with the requirements of any applicable rule of the V.R.F.P. or V.R.C.P.
at any time from the inception of this case in 2000 to now act to
deprive the trial court below of personal, physical jurisdiction over Defendant
father under settled Vermont caselaw?
a. The Magistrate's ruling re
the “service” here found as sufficient by the courts below was effected
contrary to settled law and multiple requirements of the Vermont Rules of Civil
Procedure. It was thus fatally defective to effect jurisdiction over defendant
and should be rejected by this honorable Court.
i. The responsibility
for service lies with Plaintiffs under settled Vermont law. Moreover, said
service is jurisdictional. Its failure here thus requires the
modification be dismissed.
Under
settled Vermont law, proper service is not only the responsibility of
Plaintiffs, (see Weisburgh v. McClure
Newspapers, Inc., 136 Vt. 594, 396 A.2d
1388, (1979) “V.R.C.P. 4 places the
responsibility for seeing to service squarely upon the plaintiff." Weisburgh,
supra, 136 Vt. at 597, accord Brady v. Brauer, 148 Vt. 40, 529 A.2d 159, {1987}),
but it is also "jurisdictional," i.e., such failure
of service results in a failure of the court's jurisdiction,[3]which,
even had Defendant/Appellant not objected on this basis in his Aug. 2009
Emergency Motion— which as shown above he did—
arguably cannot be "waived" absent a knowing and intentional
relinquishment in any case:
Service of
process has the twin functions of not only notifying the defendant of the
complaint and its terms, but also to physically gain jurisdiction over the
Defendant. (citations omitted). By
failing to serve defendant, the Plaintiffs not only failed to serve notice;
they failed to effect jurisdiction.
LePage v. Bay Creek Partnership, Chittenden Superior Court,
No. S1021-03, (2003), bold and italics added for emphasis. Cf. Bessette v.
Dept of Corrections, 2005 Vt. Super, Lexis 137, Vt Dept of Taxes v.
Marshall, No. S0819-04 CnC, Primus v. Conservation Commission of the
Town of Southington 2007 Conn. App. Lexis 2004, 101 Conn App. 238, 920 A.2d
1031 (2007) 4.A. C.Wright & A. Miller, Federal Procedure & Practice
511 §1094, (2002), Brady, supra, Weisburgh, supra.
Nevertheless, the trial court— as well as now the Superior court— has utterly failed to
acknowledge the effect Plaintiffs' failure to procure proper service must
necessarily have on this case under settled Vermont law and hardly addressed
the relevant state and federal law[4]in
spite of Appellant and Appellees devoting significant portions of their prior
Memorandums of Law to this very issue, (see Appellant's Amended Memorandum
of Law, pp. 13-17, 28-30, and 51-58, record), contrary to its duty to review
issues of law “de novo” as an appellate court, (see Canton v. Young, supra, and
State v. Pollander, supra), and properly apply the law to the facts of the
case under Begins v. Begins, 168 Vt. 298, 721 A.2d 469 (1998) (cf. Spaulding v. Butler, supra).[5]
Therefore,
having never effected “physical jurisdiction” over defendant, this honorable
court must reverse as a matter of law, (see Bessette, supra, Vt. Dept of
Taxes, supra, Primus, supra, 4.A. C.Wright & A. Miller, Federal Procedure & Practice 511,
supra, Brady, supra, Weisburgh, supra, Aiken, supra, Beebe, supra, LePage,
supra, Driver v. Driver, supra, Pasquale v. Genovese, supra, In re Estate of
Duval, supra, Howe v. Lisbon Savings, supra, Smith v. Brattleboro, supra,
Emmons, supra, Avery, supra).
ii.
The service by “ordinary mail” here found as adequate by the trial court and
affirmed by the Superior Court on appeal was not in compliance with Rule 5(a)'s
own terms, which requires service under Rule 4's provisions for “new or
additional claims.” The rulings below must therefore be reversed.
While the trial court did find that plaintiffs had
served defendant by “ordinary mail” pursuant to Rule 5(a) of the Vermont Rules
of Civil Procedure, as noted above, even such “ordinary mail” service was not
accomplished in line with Rule 5's own provisions, which state:
Except
as otherwise provided in these rules, every paper relating to discovery
required to be served upon a party unless a Superior Judge otherwise orders,
every written motion other than one which may be heard ex parte, and every
written notice, appearance, demand, offer of judgment, and similar paper shall
be served upon each of the parties. No service
need be made on parties in default for failure to appear except as provided in
Rule 62(b) and except that pleadings asserting new or additional claims for
relief against them shall be served upon them in the manner provided for
service of summons in Rule 4.
V.R.C.P. 5(a), (italics added for emphasis).
This
is a critically pertinent issue, as defendant submits that in
the absence of any prior lawful service of process of the underlying matter
in accord with the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure clear on the face of the
record from this case's very inception in Vermont, (see Aug. 1, 2012
order, PC 8 ¶2), plaintiffs'
ten-year belated 2008 support modification action
constitutes a new or "additional claim" against him under V.R.C.P.
5(a) so as to require adherence to V.R.C.P. 4's more rigorous service
requirements, (while the Superior
court never reached the merits of this issue or the sufficiency of service
generally due to its erroneous “law of the case” ruling and subsequent adoption
of the “waiver” ruling of the trial court, (See Aug. 1, 2012 order, PC 8 ¶5),
Appellant submits prior rulings of this court are apropos.
In
In re: C.P., Juvenile, Vermont Supreme Court Nos.
2012–057, 2012–191, (decided December 7, 2012), this court examined
whether the trial court's defective jurisdiction over a previous CHINS
determination could be collaterally attacked in a subsequent appeal of a TPR
proceeding under the UCCJA. The court found the dispositive factor to be
whether “the termination proceeding initiated a new stage of the proceeding,”
(id., ¶23), and concluded,
In view of our finality conclusion with respect to a
CHINS merits adjudication, disposition is necessarily a separate proceeding,
irrespective of whether termination is sought at that time. It is separately
defined by statute and requires separate procedures.
In re C.P., at ¶24 Vermont
Supreme Court Nos. 2012–057, 2012–191 (1999).
Thus,
in light of the Aug. 1, 2012 rulings of the Superior court which emphasized the
differences between a custody and support action under Vermont law,
e.g., “the Aug. 15, 2000 Order was not not a child support order; it was a
custody order,” Aug. 1, 2012 order, PC 9, Part III, cf. id., PC 7-8—
holdings subsequently
adopted in their entirety by the Sept. 14, 2012 order— it seems
obvious the 2008 modification must necessarily be considered a “new
or additional claim” under VRCP Rule 5(a).
Indeed, like the CHINS proceeding at issue in C.P.,
supra, custody actions are “separately defined by statute” from support
modification proceedings, and require “separate procedures” under Vermont law, (see Vt. UIFSA at 15B VSA §§ 101-904, compare to 15 VSA
§1033 et seq.).
It thus seems clear as a matter
of law that plaintiffs here were required to serve
defendant pursuant to Rule 4's service
and notice provisions, and that the trial court's allowing plaintiff's to serve
defendant by “ordinary mail” pursuant to VRCP 5(a) was therefore clearly
erroneous. Accordingly, this court must reverse, (Aiken,
supra, R.W., supra, Beebe, supra, Brady, supra, Maurer, supra).
iii. Plaintiffs here failed to timely serve defendant
within 60 days of the trial court's March 10, 2011 order as clearly required by
V.R.C.P. 3. Accordingly, no valid action has ever been commenced, and the
modification below must be dismissed as a matter of law.
In
Morrisseau v. Estate of Fayette, 155 Vt. 371, 584 A.2d 1119, (1990),
this Supreme Court upheld the dismissal of a suit by the trial court because it
was "undisputed that the complaint was not served to defendants within the
thirty days then required by the rule" and because it was "also
undisputed that plaintiff did not request an extension of time under V.R.C.P.
6(b)," Morrisseau v. Estate of Fayette, id., at 372, 584 A.2d at
1119-20, cf. Beebe v. Eisemann, supra, Bessette v. Dept. of
Corrections, 2007 VT 42, 182 VT 1, 928 A.2d 514 (2007), (an "action is
valid as long as service occurs in a timely fashion," id. ¶11, citing Weisburgh
v. McClure Newspapers Inc, 136 Vt. 594, 595; 396 A.2d 1388, 1389 (1979)
(construing 12 V.S.A. Sec 466).
The subsequent Bessette ruling of the court further
specifically stated, "Neither Plaintiff's diligence, nor the
appropriateness of the Rule 6(b) extension, is at issue here," (notably not
the case here where Plaintiffs' waited almost three years to properly serve
Defendant the present modification at issue here— over a decade if one counts from the Aug. 15, 2000
conception of this matter in Vermont!— and Appellant is clearly and directly challenging
the arbitrary and seemingly unlimited power exercised by the court below
to sua sponte "enlarge" the time for service indefinitely by judicial
fiat without regard to proper compliance with any appropriate Rule of
Civil Procedure, see argument subsequently herein and Putney School,
Inc. v. Schaaf, 157 Vt. 396, 407 (1991), "plenary power is not
arbitrary power," id., Part II. ¶4, cf. Fortier v. Byrnes, 165 Vt. 189,
678 A.2d 890, (1996), Miller v. Miller, 84 Vt. 464, 965 A.2d 524, (2008).
Therefore,
as plaintiffs here never procured, (or even sought!) from the trial court an
extension of time under V.R.C.P. 3 in which to serve defendant the June 15,
2011 ordinary mail “service” as contemplated by the Magistrate's March 10, 2011
order, it seems clear that such “service,” coming more than three months after
the Magistrate ordered the same in her March 10, 2011 order, (see March 10,
2011 order, p.5, in record, cf. May 10, 2012 order, p. 5, par.2), was on the
face of the record insufficient as a matter of law to commence the
modification, even in 2011, (see Bessette, an "action is valid as long
as service occurs in a timely fashion"). Accordingly, this court must
reverse, (Bessette, supra, cf. Fercenia v. Guiduli, surpa, Morrisseau, supra.
iv. Plaintiff's failed to show “due
diligence” that they attempted to personally serve defendant with the support
modification prior to serving him by “ordinary mail" or file the required
affidavit as required by
Vermont law prior to their proceeding to serve defendant pursuant to VRCP 5(a).
Settled precedents of this honorable
Court are clear that before a plaintiff can serve a defendant by “publication”
or postal service, they must first do their “due diligence” to attempt
personal service, (see Aiken v. Malloy, 132 VT 200, 208-209, 315
A.2d 488, (1974) (public policy requires courts uphold preference for 'best
possible service,' cf. Society for Propagating the Gospel v Ballard, 4 VT 119
(1832), Driver v Driver, 515 A.2d 1058, (1986), "personal jurisdiction
must be somehow acquired, it cannot be merely ordered”).
In In
re R.W., 2011 VT 124, (2011), this honorable Supreme Court, in reversing
the trial court's termination of a father's rights for lack of notice on
father, stated,
Because further hearings will be required to resolve the issue of father's parental rights, we need not consider whether DCF conducted due diligence prior to serving father by publication with notice of the first termination hearing. The putative father's attempt to participate at the last hearing suggests that he is available and that his whereabouts are reasonably discoverable. Thus, on remand, DCF must exercise due diligence anew in attempting actual notice to father before resorting to service by publication. V.R.C.P. 4(g)(1); see Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 317 (1950) (explaining that service by publication is not preferred but may be used if defendant's whereabouts cannot be ascertained with due diligence). This includes seeking the assistance of mother and other known relatives who may have contact information for father. See In re D.F., 2007 SD 14, ¶¶ 9–10, 727 N.W.2d 481 (explaining that due diligence depends on circumstances of a particular case but should include inquiry of relatives).
Appellant submits that such principles are the backbone of V.R.C.P. Rule 4 which reads in part:In re R.W., 2011 VT 124, (2011) Vermont Supreme Court No. 2011–006, (issued November 18, 2011), ¶50, italics added for emphasis.
V.R.C.P. Rule 4(e) and 4(f)(1)(B), italics and bold added, cf. V.R.F.P. 4(b)(2)(B).Where service cannot with due diligence be made personally within or outside the state, service of the summons and complaint may be made by mail upon a person described in subdivision (e) in the following cases:
Rule 4(f)(1) Service by Mail. (B) Such service shall be by delivery to the defendant outside the state by registered or certified mail, with restricted delivery and return receipt requested. Service by registered or certified mail under this paragraph shall be complete when the registered or certified mail is delivered and the return receipt signed or when acceptance is refused, provided that the plaintiff shall file with the court an affidavit setting forth the efforts made to obtain personal service and either the return receipt or, if acceptance was refused, an affidavit that upon notice of such refusal a copy of the summons and complaint was sent to the defendant by ordinary first class mail.
As stated
by the Rule, service by certified or registered mail is only allowed after
due diligence to procure personal service is attempted by plaintiffs, and must
be accompanied by an affidavit “setting forth the efforts made to
obtain personal service, and either the return receipt or, if acceptance was
refused, an affidavit that upon notice of such refusal a copy of the summons
and complaint was sent to the defendant by ordinary first class mail,” id.
4(f)(1)(B) cf. V.R.F.P. 4(j)(2)(B).
Here
however, plaintiff's made no such “due diligence” to personally serve defendant
or to file an affidavit accompanying the “return of service” ultimately
filed by plaintiff's regarding their June 15, 2011 “service” affirming that
they did so before attempting service by ordinary mail, (to say nothing of
certified or registered!). In fact, Appellees don't dispute they have never
attempted personal service in this matter at any time going back
to this case's inception in 2000![6]
While
plaintiff's were ostensibly proceeding pursuant to the March 10, 2011 order of
the Magistrate ruling that, “pursuant to the Vermont Supreme Court's order on
remand, OCS must first properly serve Mr. Pahnke with its motion to
modify the Michigan child support order, originally filed in Sept. of 2008.”
(March 10, 2011 order, PC 26-27), nothing in the Rules of Civil Procedure
authorize the trial court to “sua sponte” just “order” or declare service to be
accomplished absent strict adherence to some Rule of Civil Procedure,
(see Driver v. Driver, supra, citing Avery v. Bender, 126 Vt. 342, 345; 230
A.2d 786, 788 (1967) (court cannot merely “order” service). Indeed, doing so
starkly contradicts this court's holding in In re R.W., supra, that
plaintiffs must show “due diligence” that they attempted to serve
Defendant personally prior to pursuing other modes of service, (In
re R.W., supra).
Nevertheless,
the trial court in this case proceeded to find that service by “ordinary mail”
under Rule 5(a) here was sufficient to bind defendant in this matter in spite
of a host of contrary authority and plaintiff's utter
failure to offer any authority in support thereof, (see Brady, supra, Weisburgh, supra, cf. Pasquale v.
Genovese, 392 A.2d 395, (1978), ("jurisdiction in the abstract not
sufficient without service of process"). Indeed, in spite of this party's
efforts searching online he can find none.
Rather,
the weight of authority is starkly against plaintiffs and the court's rulings
below, See Aiken v. Malloy, supra, Morrisseau v. Fayette, 155 Vt. 371, 584
A.2d 1119, (1990), Fercenia v. Guiduli, 2003 VT 50 ¶8, 175 VT 541, 830 A.2d 55
(mem) (2003), Bessette v. Dept of Corrections, 2005 Vt. Super, Lexis 137, Vt
Dept of Taxes v. Marshall, No. S0819-04 CnC, Primus v. Conservation Commission
of the Town of Southington 2007 Conn. App. Lexis 2004, 101 Conn App. 238, 920
A.2d 1031 (2007) 4.A. C.Wright & A. Miller, Federal Procedure &
Practice 511 §1094, (2002), Beebe v.
Eisemann, M.D., et al. 2012 VT 40 (Vermont Supreme Court, 2012, docket
2011-365), In re: Estate of Francis Duval, 133 VT 197 332 A.2d 802, (1975),
(constructive service by publication on out of town party not notice reasonably
calculated to apprise party of action under Mullane et al.); Smith v.
Brattleboro Retreat Inc., 147 VT 303, 515 A.2d 1056 (1986), (lack of service by
registered mail left the court without jurisdiction to hear the case); Emmons v.
Emmons, 124 VT. 107, 197 A.2d 812 (1964) (absent voluntary submission only
personal service in state can confer jurisdiction, partially overruled in Von
Ohlsen v. Von Ohlsen,137 VT 377, 406 A.2d 393 (1979); Cf. Howe v. Lisbon
Savings Bank and Trust Co., 111 VT 201, 207; 14 A.2 3, 6 (1940) ("for a
court to try a matter, it must have jurisdiction over subject matter, of the
process, and of the person")
Given, then, plaintiffs failure on remand to properly serve
defendant or demonstrate proper notice of the support modification
and the inability of the Magistrate to lawfully just “order” jurisdiction under
Avery v. Bender, supra, or sua sponte “declare” that plaintiffs could— contrary to the plain
requirements of the Vermont Rules of Civil Procedure and as long as three years
after the fact— simply skip due diligence and serve defendant via “regular
mail,” (and in blatant disregard for this court's Dec. 8, 2010 order of
remand), it seems clear on the face of the record that no proper service
of process sufficient to uphold a finding of personal jurisdiction in this case
has ever been effected, (Beebe, supra, Weisburgh, supra, cf.
Gates v. Gates, supra).
Moreover, in light of the
Magistrate's initial March 10. 2011 ruling ordering that “OCS must first properly
serve Mr. Pahnke with its motion to modify” PC 26-27, the trial court's
subsequently allowing service pursuant by “ordinary mail” pursuant to Rule
5(a)'s provisions[7]
clearly violated the trial court's duty for the evidence to support its
findings and/or its findings to support its conclusions regarding service and
the alleged “waiver” thereof contrary to Maurer v. Maurer, supra and Spaulding
v. Butler, supra.
Therefore, as plain error on the
face of the record, the trial court's rulings in this regard, and the
Superior Court's affirmal of them, should be rejected by this honorable court. [8]
v. The magistrate misconstrued the law and nature of
defendant's motions for relief to find “waiver.”
In its May 10, 2012 order, the Magistrate court below ruled that "It is unquestioned that Mr. Pahnke has never been served with the Motion to Modify Child Support by certified mail or personal service," (see May 10, 2012 order of Magistrate, PC 16 ¶3), and, "The court first notes that OCS failed to serve Mr. Pahnke in the proper manner, that is, pursuant to V.R.F.P. 4(b)(2)(B)..." id. but went on to ultimately find that plaintiffs had properly "served" defendant in June of 2011 by “regular mail” pursuant to V.R.C.P. 5 and that defendant father had "waived" his insufficiency of service/personal jurisdiction claims by allegedly "not raising them" in three motions relating to the previous— and subsequently dismissed— Magistrate's Appeal, (see Sept. 14, 2012 order of Superior Court, PC 2¶3, May 10, 2012 order of the Magistrate court, PC 17¶2, in record), and three motions relating to his first appeal to this Honorable Supreme Court in 2010, (i.e., defendant father's original Aug. 13, 2009 Motion for Emergency Relief (Rule 60(b) motion), his Nov. 2, 2009 Motion to Reconsider denial of his motion, and his subsequent 2010 appeal to this Supreme Court, (see Aug. 1, 2012 ruling of Superior Court Family Div. Judge, PC 8, last ¶). [9]
In its May 10, 2012 order, the Magistrate court below ruled that "It is unquestioned that Mr. Pahnke has never been served with the Motion to Modify Child Support by certified mail or personal service," (see May 10, 2012 order of Magistrate, PC 16 ¶3), and, "The court first notes that OCS failed to serve Mr. Pahnke in the proper manner, that is, pursuant to V.R.F.P. 4(b)(2)(B)..." id. but went on to ultimately find that plaintiffs had properly "served" defendant in June of 2011 by “regular mail” pursuant to V.R.C.P. 5 and that defendant father had "waived" his insufficiency of service/personal jurisdiction claims by allegedly "not raising them" in three motions relating to the previous— and subsequently dismissed— Magistrate's Appeal, (see Sept. 14, 2012 order of Superior Court, PC 2¶3, May 10, 2012 order of the Magistrate court, PC 17¶2, in record), and three motions relating to his first appeal to this Honorable Supreme Court in 2010, (i.e., defendant father's original Aug. 13, 2009 Motion for Emergency Relief (Rule 60(b) motion), his Nov. 2, 2009 Motion to Reconsider denial of his motion, and his subsequent 2010 appeal to this Supreme Court, (see Aug. 1, 2012 ruling of Superior Court Family Div. Judge, PC 8, last ¶). [9]
At
the core of the Magistrate's May 10, 2012 holding is the court's citation of
V.R.C.P. 12(h)(1), which states that "A defense of lack of jurisdiction
over the person... is waived... if it is neither made by motion
under this rule nor included in a responsive pleading or an amendment
thereof," (see May 10, 2012 order, record, PC 17-18). Reasoning that defendant's
“first responsive pleading” was his Aug. 2009 Emergency Motion for Relief from
Judgment, the court concluded, “Having failed to challenge the court's
jurisdiction in his Rule 60(b) motion for emergency relief, Mr. Pahnke cannot
now challenge the Family Division's personal jurisdiction.” (id. PC 18¶3 ).
As
noted above, these rulings were affirmed in toto by the Superior Court in its
Aug. 1, 2012 order denying defendant's Nov. 7, 2011 Rule 60(b)(4) Motion for
Relief from the Aug. 15, 2000 order of the Family court assuming jurisdiction
of this case from Michigan and modifying custody, (see Aug. 1, 2012 order, PC
8), and were in turn adopted by the Hon. Linda Levitt of the Superior Court
Family Division in denying Appellant's Magistrate's Appeal, (see Sept. 14, 2012
ruling on the Magistrate's Appeal, PC 2 ¶2).
However,
in addition to the fact that defendant's Aug. 13, 2009 Emergency Motion was not
a “responsive pleading” but was, in fact a Rule 60(b) Motion as this court
(and the trial court!) has previously recognized, (see PC 17 last par and Dec. 8, 2010 order of Vermont Supreme
Court, PC 30, respectively),[10]such
rulings of the Magistrate are plainly erroneous on the face of the record
as they unfairly “shift” the calculus of the parties by changing the time
frame for the sufficiency of service inquiry ordered by this court in its Dec.
8, 2010 order.
Indeed,
as a matter of record, none of the motions of defendant's referenced by the
Magistrate had anything to do with the modification
“served” on June 15, 2011, nor could they, as they all had
to do with the then-pending (and subsequently dismissed) Magistrate's Appeal lodged
previously![11] Along
those lines Appellant submits the trial court improperly subjected relief
under Rule 60(b) to the provisions of V.R.C.P. 12(h)(1) (and see fn 10
herein).
Accordingly, and for all of the
above, Appellant submits that the Magistrate's (and Superior Court's) holdings
that he “waived” his right to raise his insufficiency-of-service/personal
jurisdiction claims are factually and legally erroneous on the face of
the record and thus an abuse of discretion as the courts findings
below clearly don't support its conclusions and are contradicted by the
evidence contrary to Maurer v. Maurer, supra, Spaulding v. Butler,
supra, cf. Brown v. Whitcomb, 150 Vt. 106, 109; 550 A.2d 1 at p. 3
(1988).[12]
vi. Due to the “jurisdictional” nature of proper service
of process under settled Vermont law, insufficient service of process depriving
the court of jurisdiction cannot be “waived” absent a knowing, intentional
relinquishment” and/or strict compliance with the provisions of V.R.C.P. 4(l).
Moreover, the record is clear that defendant did, in fact, raise his service
claims in his very first Aug. 13, 2009 Motion.
This
court ruled in Hixson v. Plump 167 Vt. 202, 704
A.2d 1159 (1997) that a “waiver” is the
“intentional relinquishment or abandonment of a known right and may be
evidenced by express words or conduct."
Chimney Hills Owners' Ass'n v. Antignani, 136 Vt. 446, 453, 392 A.2d
423, 427 (1978) and involves both “knowledge and intent." Liberty Mutual Ins. Co. v. Cleveland, 127
Vt. 99, 103, 241 A.2d 60, 63 (1968).
Accordingly, at the outset defendant
would suggest that because “service of process” is jurisdictional, and at best
the “waiver” alleged by plaintiffs and the courts below was unknowing and
unintended, (see Liberty Mutual, supra), such “waiver” can not be
effective in the circumstances here as a matter of law, (at least not
absent strict compliance with Rule 4(l)'s requirements governing the same).
Indeed,
under the circumstances here defendant cannot possibly see how he could
have “knowingly” waived his “sufficiency of service” jurisdictional claims when
he has continually litigated them beginning from the time of his Emergency
Motion of Aug. 13, 2009—on which this court has already ruled in his favor—[13] and continuing through his 2011-filed Rule 60(b) Motions![14]
In point
of fact, contrary to the Magistrate's findings the record is clear that Appellant
did, in fact, raise his insufficiency-of-service-related jurisdictional claims
in his very first Aug. 13, 2009 Emergency Rule 60 Motion for Relief from the
Feb. 23, 2009 order(s)!
Therefore, there being no
legal service and/or jurisdiction on respondent re: this
significant modification of his obligations in the above-styled action, the
magistrate's default judgment... and all other current enforcements,
administrative actions, and other consequences flowing from this lack of legal
service should be vacated.
Appellant/Defendant's
Aug. 13, 2009 "Emergency Motion/Appeal to Set Aside..." p.2 ¶3, in
record, as cited at p. 29 fn 19 of his Magistrate's Appeal Memorandum, as
amended,[15]
(italics and bold added for clarity
and emphasis).
Keeping in
mind the latitude that should be shown pro-se litigant's under this court's
settled precedents,[16]it seems
clear that— however, concisely pro se father raised this issue initially— defendant did raise the “insufficiency of service”
issue with enough specificity that it should have apprised the trial court of
the nature of his service-related jurisdictional claims.[17]
Nor can it
be disputed that the trial court took notice of these claims at the very
same Nov. 14, 2011 hearing in which the trial court claims they were “waived,” (see
Nov. 14, 2011 dvd tr. at 1:04:22, 1:06:38, 1:10:40, 2:19:56, 2:20:06, 2:20:20).
Consequently, given that in the
circumstances of this case defendant's "service of process" and
personal jurisdiction claims were closely related, (May 10, 2012 order,
PC 17 ¶2), and defendant's insufficiency claim was apparent to the court in the
hearings before it,[18](see
dvd transcript of March 12, 2012 hearing at 3:08:36), as well as that the Rules
of Civil Procedure are to be construed “liberally,” (see Price v. Leland,
149 Vt. 518, 546 A.2d 793, 795 (1988), (“when construing and administering
rules of civil procedure, we must do so liberally, in a way that
" 'secure[s] the just, speedy, and inexpensive determination of every
action,' " id. at 520, quoting V.R.C.P. 1, italics added for emphasis),
it defies credulity that defendant could be said to have “waived” his
insufficiency of service/jurisdictional claims in any manner whatsoever.
vii. Plaintiffs are themselves precluded from prevailing
on their “waiver” argument by virtue of their own failure to timely raise it in
their “first responsive pleading” under VRCP 12(h)(1). Moreover, in light of
plaintiffs' consequent waiver of this issue and dismissal on other grounds of
defendant's 2011 Magistrate's appeal after defendant had fully briefed
plaintiffs' preclusion on this issue, the trial court's sua sponte
“resurrecting” plaintiffs' “waiver” argument on remand proceedings unfairly
prejudiced Defendant contrary to the principles enunciated in Putney School
v. Schaaf, supra.
It is indisputable on the face of
the record that Plaintiff's in this matter failed to raise this “waiver”
claim below until the 2011 Magistrate's Appeal, contrary to V.R.C.P. 12(h)(1)
and V.R.C.P. 78(b).
Indeed,
they did not raise it in any response to Appellant's original Aug. 13,
2009 Emergency Motion, nor cross-appeal on this basis in 2010.
Neither did they raise it in
response to this party's “Special Appearance/Motion to Vacate and Dismiss” in
the trial court after the Dec. 8, 2010 remand by this honorable court, or see
fit to mention this “defense” in their Feb. 9, 2011 Memorandum of Law before
the trial court in response to defendant's Jan. 31, 2011 Motion to Dismiss.
In fact, it was not until
plaintiffs' June 15, 2011 Memorandum of Law on defendant's “interlocutory” (and
subsequently dismissed) Magistrate's Appeal that plaintiffs, (or the trial
court for that matter), even whispered a hint of objection to
defendant's raising the insufficiency of service issue on “waiver” (or any
other!) grounds![19]
Appellant
therefore contends that Plaintiffs themselves have waived their right to
prevail on the “waiver” issue because they themselves failed to raise it in
their “first responsive pleading” contrary to V.R.C.P. 12(h)(1).
Moreover, Appellant asserts that to rule as the
Magistrate did in this case impermissibly
revived plaintiffs' defective modification action and gave them a “gratuitous
second chance” to “fix” their fatal defect of lack of proper service
contrary to the Vt Rules of Civil Procedure and this honorable court's ruling
in Putney School v. Schaaf, supra, in which this court held:
As a result of the court's Aug. 12th order, Putney reasonably relied on CNA to cover its liability... subject only to an appeal of the issues litigated... Prejudice to Putney is obvious; after Putney settled a lawsuit subject to the trial court's judgment... the court allowed CNA to spring a new ground to avoid the risk and thereby changed the calculus Putney used in settling the Schaaf claim. On the other hand, CNA, which had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue of coverage, sought a gratuitous second chance in violation of principles of finality and judicial economy... the court abused its discretion by granting its request.
Putney School, Inc. v. Schaaf, 157 Vt. 396, 407 (1991) , at Part II. ¶5, italics added.
Consequently, Appellant
submits that in the same way as the trial court in Putney “violated
principles of finality” and fairness by “chang[ing] the calculus” on which
defendant Putney had relied in settling the claim there at issue, so did the
trial court's refusing to enforce this court's settled Dec. 8, 2010 order
result in prejudice to defendant father here— as if he had
known his continued litigations regarding plaintiffs' lack of proper service
and the prior void orders below would only enable plaintiffs to remedy their
defect and would subsequently be considered by the trial court to constitute
“waiver” of defendant's service-related claims by virtue of further “awareness”
of the modification action through his involvement in the ensuing appeal and
relief from judgment proceedings below— defendant
might well have chosen not to file his interlocutory appeal of the March
10, 2011 order of the Magistrate (or any further Motions for Relief from
Judgment) but instead bide his time to appeal his insufficiency of service
claims until after entry of the “final order.”
Indeed, due to the trial court's
time-bending ruling on “waiver” defendant is now subjected to the same sort of “changing
calculus” as was disallowed in Putney for simply exercising his right to
appeal in 2011 on matters that under this court's prior Dec. 8, 2010 order (as
well as the July 26, 2011 order of the Superior Court, see in record), should
have been settled long ago.
Accordingly, this court should reverse the rulings to
the contrary of the court(s) below as they erroneously
“revived” plaintiffs' long foreclosed “waiver” argument which otherwise was
precluded them under settled law (see VRCP 12(h)(1), cf. VRCP 78(b), Putney,
supra, at 407).
viii. The trial court's ruling that defendant waived his
right to raise his insufficiency of service jurisdictional claims by failing to
timely raise it in an “independent” Rule 60(b) motion is plainly erroneous on
the face of the record and should thus be reversed by this court.
As above noted the Superior court
judge in its Aug. 1, 2012 and Sept. 14, 2012 orders affirmed in their entirety
the key holdings of the Magistrate's May 10, 2012 order that defendant was
required to timely and “squarely” raise his insufficiency of service
jurisdictional claim in an “independent” Rule 60(b) Motion, i.e.,“Mr. Pahnke
has also waived any objection he may have had to the court's personal
jurisdiction by failing to include the objection in three motions— his August 13, 2009 Motion for
Emergency Relief, (essentially a Rule 60(b) motion), his November 2, 2009
Motion to reconsider, and a filing [appeal] with the Vermont Supreme Court.”
(May 10, 2012 order, PC 17, last par. cf. PC 16).
In support of this ruling, the trial
court cited Ladder Man, Inc. v. Mfr's Distrib. Servs., Inc., No. 99-4217,
2000, WL 1679439, at *2 (6th Cir. Oct. 31, 2000), Swaim v. Molton Co., 73 F.3d
711, 718 (7th Cir. 1996), In re:
Worldwide Web Sys., Inc., 328 F.3d 1291, 1300 (11th Cir. 2003), and State v.
All Real Property, 2004 UT App 232 ¶14, 95 P.3d 1211 (Utah Ct. App. 2004),
noting that, while such a rule of law has not been addressed by this court, in
the federal courts such holdings “have been applied where a party makes a Rule
60b motion which omits a certain defense and then makes a later motion in the
same court raising that defense,” May 10, 2012 order, PC 18).
However,
as noted above, the Magistrate herself elsewhere classifies defendant's
Aug. 13, 2009 motion as “essentially a Rule 60(b) Motion,” (see May 10, 2012
order, PC 17, last par.), and notes this parties extensive and continual
history of challenging the sufficiency of the service in the history of this
case, (id. PC 16¶¶3, 4 cf. PC 17 ¶2). Further, as shown herein, Appellant did
in fact raise his insufficiency of service/ jurisdictional claims in his
Aug. 13, 2009 Emergency Motion, (record). Accordingly,
the Magistrate court's findings fail to support its conclusions and are not
supported by the evidence contrary to Maurer v. Maurer, supra,
(trial court's findings must be supported by the evidence, and its conclusions
must be supported by the findings or this court will reverse). They must
therefore be reversed as a matter of law, (Maurer, supra, Begins v. Begins,
supra, Spaulding, supra).
ix.
The courts below's rulings that defendant should have filed a motion under
V.R.C.P. 12(h)(1) particularly challenging the “sufficiency” of service or
“motion to quash” in order to preserve his service/jurisdictional claims
violates the mandate of the Rules of Civil Procedure to construe pleadings
“liberally” as well as the deference to be shown to pro se litigants.
As above
noted, in spite of the Magistrate court clearly being apprised of the nature of
defendant's jurisdictional claims regarding “insufficiency of service” in
hearings before it, (see cd/dvd of March 12, 2012 hearing at 3:07:28, 3:08:36,
Nov. 14, 2011 dvd tr. at 1:04:22, 1:06:01, 1:06:38, 1:10:40, 1:24:50, 2:20:06,
2:20:20), the court ultimately went on to rule in its May 10, 2012 order
"none of Mr. Pahnke's motions were in the form of a motion to dismiss for
insufficient service of process or a motion to quash service..."
concluding, "[t]he court therefore believes My Pahnke has waived any claim
that the June 15, 2011 service by OCS of the Motion to Modify was insufficient
by failing to raise the issue in his July 22, 2011 motions." id., PC 17¶2.
However,
to the extent that such an interpretation of Court Rules requires defendant
father to have raised his insufficiency-of-service claim using “magic words” or
in a certain “form,” appellant submits it not only violates the spirit, if
not the letter, of the basic premise behind the Rules of Civil Procedure,
see Price v. Leland, supra, (“Rules of Civil
Procedure are to be construed 'liberally' ” id. at 520, quoting V.R.C.P. 1), but
more salient here violates long-standing principles of this court regarding
the leniency that should be shown pro se parties.
Indeed, such a “hyper-technical”
application of court rules to block resolution of Appellant's claims on the
merits clearly runs afoul of this court's settled precedents regarding pro-se
litigants, (see Beyel v. Degan, 142 Vt. 617, 619, 458 A.2d 1137, 1138 (1983),
(court will consider issues raised by pro-se litigant even though litigant
failed to properly or clearly brief issue), Bingham v. Tenney, 154 Vt. 96,
101-02, 573 A.2d 1185, 1187-88 (1990) (reversing denial of relief from
summary judgment when pro se party opposed summary judgment with contested
facts but failed to file an affidavit), and Vahlteich v. Knott, 139 Vt. 588,
590-91, 433 A.2d 287, 288-89 (1981) (reversing denial [*8]
of relief from judgment against a pro se litigant who failed to answer a
complaint because a co-defendant's answer purported to speak for both
defendants), and should therefore not be countenanced by this Court.
Moreover, post-July 26, 2011, (and
throughout the additional hearings below), Appellant father was clearly
relying on the July 26, 2011 order of the Superior court for preservation of
his jurisdictional claims, (see Putney, supra, cf. dvd transcript of Nov. 14, 2011 hearing at
1:04:22, 1:06:38, 1:10:40, 2:19:56, 2:20:06, 2:20:20), a reliance that was not
corrected by the Magistrate court in subsequent hearings in spite of the court
itself noting the salience of this issue so as to give defendant a chance to
directly address it (see dvd transcript of March 12, 2012 hearing at
3:07:28, 3:08:36). Such conduct must,
therefore, as a matter of law, either constitute clear legal error on the face
of the record on the level of Putney, supra, or, in the very least,
act to “collaterally estop” plaintiffs and/or the courts below from
successfully prevailing on such arguments now.[20]
Indeed, this court has an obligation to insure that pro se litigants are not 'taken advantage of by strict application of rules of procedure.' Town of Washington v. Emmons, 2007 Vt. 22, ¶7, 181Vt. 586, 925 A.2d 1002 (mem) lest a mockery be made of what at least one of this court's members have called a sacred “promise to protect the rights of pro se litigants,” In re Estate of Knott, 149 Vt. 245, 247; 542 A.2d 297, 298 (1988) (Dooley, justice, dissenting).
Q 3. Did the Superior Court family division judge commit plain and clear error on the face of the record by upholding the Magistrate Court's ruling that Appellant/ Defendant "waived" his right to raise his "insufficiency of service"/personal jurisdiction claims under the “law of the case”?
In
addition to the obvious impropriety of the Superior court failing to review
this matter of law “de novo” as required under Canton v. Young, supra, and
State v. Pollander, supra, the Aug. 1, 2012 order of the
Superior Court Judge affirmed the denial by the Magistrate of defendant's
Motions for Relief from judgment and refusal to grant his Motions for relief or
to dismiss due to insufficiency of service and the resulting lack of
jurisdiction by essentially adopting the Magistrate's position in the May 10,
2012 order regarding “waiver” of defendant's service related jurisdictional
claims, ruling, “this court has previously determined that Father waived
any objection he may have had to the court's personal jurisdiction by failing
to include the objection in three motions, his August 13, 2009 Motion for
Emergency Relief, his November 2, 2009 Motion to Reconsider, and a filing
[appeal] with the Vermont Supreme Court...This argument is therefore barred by
the doctrine of law of the case” (See Aug. 1, 2012 order of the Superior Court,
PC 8, last ¶, as adopted by the Sept. 14, 2012 order, PC 2 ¶2, “Discussion”).
However,
leaving aside it was the Superior court's duty
sitting as an appellate court to properly apply the law to the facts and
procedural history of the case in rendering its judgment, (Brown v.
Whitcomb, supra, cf. State v. Pollander, supra, Secretary of Natural resources
v. Irish, supra), while the Superior Court correctly cited the legal
doctrine of “law of the case,” it misapplied said doctrine in the procedural
history of this case by misconstruing its own role in the context of the
Magistrate's appeal according to the very decision of this court
which it cited! (See Callahan v. Callahan, No. 2009-127, slip
op. at 1 (Vt. Aug. 6, 2009, unpublished mem. (courts are “preclud[ed] from
reexamining issues previously decided in the same case by the same court
or a higher appellate court.” id., italics added for emphasis, cf. Morrisseau v. Estate of Fayette, 164 Vt. 358, 670 A.2d 820
(1995) (law of the case doctrine “ 'posits
that when a court decides upon a rule of law, that decision should continue to
govern the same issues in subsequent stages in the same case.' ” (id. at 164
Vt. 364, quoting Christianson v. Colt Industries Operating Corp., 486 U.S. 800,
816, 108 S.Ct. 2166, 100 L.Ed.2d 811 {1988})).
Indeed,
contrary to the Superior Court's conclusion, it was not itself but in
fact the Magistrate court in its May 10, 2012 order that concluded that
defendant had “waived” his service of process jurisdictional claims,
(appeal of which was properly then on Magistrate's Appeal before the Superior
Court Judge). Therefore the Superior Court wasn't, in fact, a “same or higher
court” which had “previously decided” this issue, see Morrisseau, supra,
(only issues which have already been decided by the same or higher court
are precluded from being resolved on appeal, id.).
In fact, excepting defendant's address of
these issues in the previous Magistrate's appeal (which was dismissed on July
26, 2011 without resolution on the merits), the Aug. 1, 2012 order was the first
time the Superior Court itself had ever ruled on these arguments sitting
in judgment as an appellate court; Accordingly, the Superior
Court's conclusion that it was impermissible to review the May 10, 2012 ruling
of the Magistrate that defendant had “waived” his insufficiency-of-service
jurisdictional claims was plain error on the face of the record and
must be reversed (see Maurer v. Maurer, 178 Vt. 489; 872 A.2d 326
(2005) (appellate court "will reverse if the court's findings are not
supported by the evidence, or if its conclusions are not supported by the
findings," citing Spaulding v. Butler, 172 Vt. 467 at 475, 782 A.2d
1167 at 1174 (2001) 172 Vt. 467 at 475, 782 A.2d 1167 at 1174 (2001) (“findings
of court below must support its conclusions of law”), Brown v. Whitcomb, 150
Vt. 106, 109, 550 A.2d 1 at p. 3 (1988), (when a court below's findings
don't support it's legal conclusions or it wrongly applies the law to the facts
of the case this court will reverse).
Q 4. Did the Magistrate and/or Superior Court err in its conclusion that Appellant “waived” his right to raise his insufficiency of service/personal jurisdiction claims by virtue of this pro se litigant failing to continually remind the court of his “Special Appearance” challenge to the court's jurisdiction?
Q 4. Did the Magistrate and/or Superior Court err in its conclusion that Appellant “waived” his right to raise his insufficiency of service/personal jurisdiction claims by virtue of this pro se litigant failing to continually remind the court of his “Special Appearance” challenge to the court's jurisdiction?
The
Magistrate court below also ruled that in order to preserve his service-related
claims regarding lack of personal jurisdiction by the court over him defendant
had to “repeatedly assert” his “special appearance” status duly raised in his
Jan. 31, 2011 “Special Appearance/ Motion to Dismiss,” (see in record). Indeed,
the court particularly noted defendant's failure to do so in finding “waiver”
by holding, "No such notice of "Special Appearance" was
filed with the Notice of Appeal," (May
10, 2012 order, PC 14 ¶3), and concluding that defendant "fail[ed]
to include the [personal jurisdiction] objection in three [subsequent]
motions..." PC 17, last ¶.
However, this ruling is distinctly
contrary to the case of Hospital Corp of American v. District Ct., 112 Nev.
1159, 924 P.2d 725 (1996), in which it was held,
So long as the personal jurisdiction issue is properly presented to the District Court, [initially], a Defendant does not waive the rights to challenge jurisdiction by making an appearance at trial and arguing the case on the merits.
Hospital Corp v. District Ct., supra, at 1161,
n. 2, 924 P.2d at 726, n. 2 (1996).
Moreover, federal precedent is clear
that under Rule 12(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure not only may a
defense of lack of jurisdiction or insufficient service be made by motion or
responsive pleading, but "no defense is waived by being joined
with any other defenses or objections in a responsive pleading or motion,"
see Gasset v. Snappy Car Rental, 111 NV 1416, 906 P.2d 258 (1995).
Further, since in the present case
it is indisputable on the face of the record that defendant timely filed
his “Special Appearance/Motion to Dismiss” on remand from this court, (a
procedural fact which he continued to rely on in proceedings before the
Magistrate, see dvd transcript of Nov. 14, 2011 hearing at 1:04:22, 1:06:38),
even going so far as to specifically orally move to renew his “Special
Appearance” at the Nov. 14, 2011 on remand from the subsequently-dismissed
2011 Magistrates Appeal and in his Rule 60(b) Motions with no objection or
correction by the court or parties, (id. at 1:04:22), defendant submits that not only has he clearly satisfied the
rule in Hospital Corp., supra, but, once again, the Magistrate's
factual findings clearly fail to support its legal conclusions
contrary to Maurer, supra, and Spaulding, supra, and failed to
apply the proper law contrary to Brown v. Whitcomb, supra.
Moreover, leaving aside the matter of first impression whether in
light of the jurisdictional nature of service one can ever “waive”
his right to lawful notice absent compliance with the provisions of the Vermont
Rules of Civil Procedure regarding the same,[21] (see
V.R.C.P. 4(l) ), defendant respectfully submits that his subsequent litigation
of the court's void orders and jurisdiction— no matter how extensive— is equivalent to the “appearing at trial and arguing the
case on the merits” noted under Hospital Corp., supra, as
particularly exempt from “waiver,” and more saliently, that such litigations always
and exclusively centered around the lack of the court's jurisdiction over him
premised on a lack of sufficient service. [22]
Finally, the Superior Court had already
ruled in its July 26, 2011 order dismissing the prior Magistrate's appeal for
being premature, that, “defendant can raise his personal
jurisdiction issues if and when he appeals any final order of the
Magistrate...” (see July 26, 2011 order, in record). Therefore any
failure of defendant to “continually remind” the court of his challenge to the
court's jurisdiction should not be deemed to have “waived” his service-related jurisdictional claims.[23]
Q 5.
Did the Superior Court's ruling on Personal Jurisdiction and the Nov. 7,
2011 Rule 60(b)(4) Motion for relief from the Aug. 15, 2000 order of the family
court modifying custody and establishing this case in Vermont under the UCCJA
and/or UIFSA misconstrue both the law and Appellant's argument regarding the
effect of the lack of initial service and subject jurisdiction at any time
in this case to the matter of personal and subject jurisdiction for the 2008
support modification going forward?
The Superior Court judge ruled, in
its reasoning and conclusions in the Aug. 1, 2012 order regarding the Aug. 15,
2000 “emergency” change of custody order challenged by Appellant's Nov. 7, 2011
Rule 60(b)(4) Motion subsequently adopted by Superior Court's Sept 14, 2012
order in the Magistrate's Appeal, that in order for the Vermont courts to
“properly” make a permanent custody determination it must have had “home state
jurisdiction” and that “a permanent custody change cannot be premised on
emergency jurisdiction [under which mother had proceeded]” (Aug. 1, 2012 order
p.3¶3), even as it simultaneously found “it is not clear that the
youngest children had been in Vermont at least six months by August 2000,” and
“The record in this case contains no indication that Father was provided...
notice [as required by 15 VSA Sec. 1033&1034(b)]” (id.), concluding,
“Indeed, it appears Mother failed to meet the deadline and that she filed proof
that Father received the modified order, not notice of the hearing,”
(Aug 1, 2012 order, p.5¶2, italics and bold added).
The
Superior Court moreover noted that “custody determinations, as distinguished
from support actions... are proceedings in rem or proceedings affecting
status,” (Aug. 1, 2012 order at p. 4 ¶4), seemingly acknowledged that— at least for support modification purposes— notice, if not formal service, is required in order to
effect “personal jurisdiction” over a defendant for purposes of support
modification, (see Aug. 1, 2012 order, p. 5 ¶2).
Nevertheless,
the Superior Court ultimately went on to reject this party's Nov. 7, 2011
Rule60 (b)(4) Motion for Relief from the Aug. 15, 2000 order modifying custody
in this case, inexplicably ruling,“Mother's noncompliance [with Vermont law
re service], if any, does not effect the Court's jurisdictional analysis under
the UCCJA...” (Id. p. 5 par.2).
The Superior court reached this
conclusion by reasoning, “Personal jurisdiction is not needed to modify
a custody award made by a court in another state if the requirements of the
UCCJA are met.” id., p.4 ¶4, and, that therefore, appellant's jurisdictional
“argument must fail because the the August 15, 2000 Order was not a child support
order; it was a child custody order.” (id. p. 6, Part III.)
However, in addition to the
Superior Court applying the law as it is in Vermont now under the UCCJEA
as opposed to the UCCJA that governed in 2000, (id. at p. 4 ¶4), it is clear
the Superior Court only cites Vermont and other law in regard to “traditional”
minimum contacts analysis, and not law regarding the effect on
jurisdiction of the lack of notice under the UCCJA at the time of the change of
custody in Vermont.
Appellant asserts this is clear and plain error, as it
demonstrates the failure of the Aug. 1, 2012 Superior Court order to
discern the difference between jurisdictional arguments premised on a lack of
“minimum contacts,” from those advanced by Appellant premised on a lack of
proper service, (see the Aug. 1, 2012 order at p. 4 ¶4 citing In re
Termination of Parental Rights to Thomas J.R., 2003 WI 61, ¶30, 663 N.W.2d 734,
as well as 15 V.S.A. §1071(c)
and 15 V.S.A. Section 1040
referencing “status” determinations of custody, cf. LePage v. Bay Creek
Development Corp., supra, In re R.W., supra.[24]
Clearly, if notice was required
by the UCCJA to be “served, mailed, delivered or published at least 20 days
before any hearing in this state,” it's deprival couldn't fail to “affect” the
validity of the Aug. 15, 2000 order, (see id. at p. 5, par.2, cf.15 V.S.A.
Sec.1034(b), which states notice to an out-of-state parent is required, see
also Town of Randolph v. White, 166 Vt. 280, 283 (1997), Mullane v.
Hanover, supra.
Indeed, the Superior Court's
conclusion contradicts its own findings indicating that personal jurisdiction
for purposes of support modification are not “in rem” proceedings and are
ostensibly thus due a higher standard of notice than mere “status” changes in
custody, (See Aug.1, 2012 order, PC. 7).[25]
Most saliently, Appellant submits
that if there were no subject jurisdiction over this matter in 2000
due to a lack of notice at that time, there is no “ancillary
jurisdiction” going forward so as to effect personal jurisdiction over
defendant for purposes of the 2008 support “modification” going forward! (See
Gates v. Gates, 122 Vt. 371, 373; 173 A.2d 161, 162 {1961}).
Accordingly,
Appellant submits the Aug. 1, 2012 order clearly errs and that, further, it was
clear and plain error for the
Family Division's Sept. 14, 2012 order to simply “adopt” the Aug. 1, 2012 order instead of independently addressing father's
jurisdictional arguments under UIFSA and Vermont law re: the support
modification and Feb. 23, 2009 “zero out” order which the 9/14/2012 order
failed to address (see Canton v. Young, Spaulding v. Butler, supra).[26]
Q 6. Did the Superior Court family division judge's affirmance of the Magistrate's ruling denying Appellant's father's Oct. 31, 2011 Rule 60(b) Motion to set aside the companion default order “zeroing out” Appellee mother's already-accrued-yet-unpaid support arrears owed father pursuant to the Oct. 8, 1997 Ingham Michigan Circuit Court decree of divorce violate the UIFSA and/or the U.S. Constitution's “Full Faith and Credit clause?”
Q 6. Did the Superior Court family division judge's affirmance of the Magistrate's ruling denying Appellant's father's Oct. 31, 2011 Rule 60(b) Motion to set aside the companion default order “zeroing out” Appellee mother's already-accrued-yet-unpaid support arrears owed father pursuant to the Oct. 8, 1997 Ingham Michigan Circuit Court decree of divorce violate the UIFSA and/or the U.S. Constitution's “Full Faith and Credit clause?”
Initially, Appellant submits that to
refuse to set aside the “companion” Feb 23, 2009 “default order” of the trial
court “zeroing out” plaintiff's arrearages owed defendant under the Michigan
decree stemming from the time he had custody of the minor children— and notably prior to
either registration or modification in Vermont of the Michigan decree— makes no sense in either law
or logic, as the Feb 23, 2009 "companion default order" which the
Magistrate refused to set aside was entered on the same exact day, between
the same exact parties, and under the exact same "tack service"
ultimately found improper under VRCP 4(d) by this Court with regards to its
“sister order” imposing support obligations on defendant father for the first
time in almost a decade in this case.
More to the point however, it is
a blatant violation of settled federal and State law for a trial court to
retroactively set aside support arrears accrued and unpaid for any
reason, (see 42 USC § 666
(a)(9)(C), 15 VSA §660(e), Isham v. Isham, 152 Vt. 637, 639 (1989), MCL
552.603(2), cf. Malone v. Malone, Michigan Court of Appeals, Docket
No. 272327, decided June 03, 2008, Towne v. Towne, supra, Lyon v. Lyon,
supra, Isham v. Isham, supra.
Indeed, the Supreme Court in May v. Anderson, 345 U.S. 528,
73 S.Ct. 840, 97 L.Ed. 1221 (1953), firmly established that under the 'Full
Faith and Credit Clause' of the U.S. Constitution state are required to
honor the final orders of their sister states, (id.).
Such principles have been broadly
recognized by the state courts, including Vermont's Supreme Court, which has
held,
This
retroactive modification does not extend to child support payments due and
unpaid as of the date of the filing of a motion to modify, as this could
unconstitutionally violate a party's vested property right. See Shuff v. Fulte, 344 Ill. App. 157,
165, 100 N.E.2d 502, 506 (1951); cf.
Forte v. Forte, 143 Vt. 518, 520, 468 A.2d 561, 562 (1983) ( 15
V.S.A. § 606 removes trial court's discretion in ordering payment of
arrearages for less than the actual amount due).
Towne v. Towne, 150 Vt. 286 at 288, 552 A.2d 404, (1988).
Cf. Lyon v. Lyon, 143 Vt. 458, (1983), Poston v.
Poston 160 Vt. 591, 624 A.2d 853 (1992); Roddy v. Roddy, 168 Vt. at 347, 721
A.2d at 127, B & E Corp. v. Bessery, 130 Vt. 597, 601, 298 A.2d 544, 546
(1972), Waple v. Waple, 179 Mich.App. 673, 675–677, 446 N.W.2d 536 (1989),
Malone v. Malone, Michigan Court of Appeals, Docket No. 272327, decided June
03, 2008, cf. O'Connell v. Ellen
Corcoran, 2003 NY Int. 128, New York Court of Appeals, (2003).
Indeed,
these principles have come to be embodied via the prohibition on retroactively
modifying state child support obligations in not only federal but state law,
(see 28 USC §666(a)(9)(C), 15 VSA §660(e), MCL 552.603(2) ).
In the instant case however, the
Magistrate proceeded to "zero out" Plainitiff mother's prior,
accrued child support arrearages owed Defendant under the valid, Michigan
decree of divorce for the time he had custody of the children,[27]utterly
without regard to such considerations and the constitutional ramifications
thereof, and refused to grant Rule 60(b) relief when moved to by this
party, (in spite of the fact that the coterminous Feb. 23, 2009 default
order establishing child support in this case was previously vacated by this
Court's Dec. 8, 2010 order under the exact same circumstances!).
Indeed, while the trial court's May
10, 2012 order properly recognized “this court has no authority to modify
support retroactively to a time prior to modification,” (id. PC 13¶3), and
cited Lyon v. Lyon, 143 Vt. 458, 462 (1983), and Isham v. Isham,
supra, for the same principle, (id.), it then failed to apply the
same rule of law to Appellant's Rule 60(b) Motion for Relief from judgment
seeking vacation of the Feb. 23, 2009 "zero out" order.
However, in the words of this party's dear
mother, now 82 years old and afflicted with Alzheimer's but whose wisdom this
party will always treasure, “What's good for the goose is good for the gander.”
Indeed, the Magistrate fails to explain its overlooking that the principle
which it earnestly cites from Lyon, supra, et al. is itself violated
by failure to grant defendant's Oct. 31, 2011 Motion for Relief from
Judgment!
The Magistrate also found that
granting Appellant's Rule 60(b) Motion would make Plaintiff's "hollowly
comply with an order that Ms. Pahnke and OCS apparently failed to properly
modify in a timely fashion," (May 10, 2012 order, p. 14, last paragraph,
record).
While Appellant disputes that to
grant him Rule 60(b) relief from the void Feb. 23, 2009 companion order would
be “hollow,” (PC. 14 last ¶), as such arrearages owed defendant from plaintiff
Ms. Pahnke must be assumed to have been for the children's benefit
at least during the time during which the minor children were with him, but even if true it doesn't change the
fact that Vermont's UIFSA prohibits such retroactive “zeroing out” of already
accrued support arrears, (see 15 VSA §660(e)),[28]nor that
plaintiff mother never moved to modify in the Michigan CEJ (PC 22 ¶¶ 4-5).
The Magistrate also ruled that
because plaintiff allegedly was receiving public assistance under 33
V.S.A.§3902(e) (now repealed), granting relief was prohibited by Lambert v.
Beade, 2003 Vt 75 at ¶13 (1983). However, whatever the validity of
this position with regard to prospective accrual or collection of arrears at
the time for which a Vermont resident is receiving Vermont public assistance,
it cannot prohibit accrual of support arrears for purposes of a valid, foreign
order of support without running afoul of the Full Faith and Credit clause, to
which it must yield.
Indeed, most pertinent here— and leaving aside the failure of the Magistrate's duty to
properly apply the law contrary to Brown v. Whitcomb, supra— this ruling of the Magistrate blatantly
contradicts clear and settled precedent of the U.S. Supreme court, (see Estin v. Estin, 334 U.S.
541 at 547 (1948), May v. Anderson,
supra), which requires deference be shown “sister state's” final judgments
under the federal Constitution's 'Full Faith and Credit Clause,' (cf.
Appellant's brief before the Vermont Supreme Court, pp. 19-20). It should thus be reversed by this
honorable court.
Q 7. Did
the Magistrate and/or Superior Court below err in finding that the appropriate
date of retroactivity for the beginning of said support
"modification" could properly extend to prior to the time of
"service" on June 15, 2011 when any delay in imposition of a
Vermont order of support was due to plaintiffs failure to adhere to Vermont law
regarding service and notice and this honorable court had explicitly found in
its Dec. 8, 2010 order that the Jan. 12, 2009 "service" of the
modification was improper and already vacated the same?
In reversing the retroactivity
ruling of a trial court in Towne vs. Towne, 150 Vt. 286, 552 A.2d 404, 1988
Vt. LEXIS 158, (1988) this court ruled:
The trial court stated no rationale and made no findings as to
why it chose the October 30 date.
While choosing such a date would be within the trial court's discretion,
without any stated rationale or findings of fact on this issue, "[w]e are
left to speculate as to the basis upon which the trial court . . . reached its
decision. This we will not do."
Jensen v. Jensen, 139 Vt. 551, 553, 433 A.2d 258, 260 (1981); see also Mayer v.
Mayer, 144 Vt. 214, 217, 475 A.2d 238, 240 (1984) ("facts essential to the
disposition of the case must be stated.").
Therefore, we remand this case to the trial court for the narrow purpose
of determining the appropriate date [***8]
for a reduction in defendant's child support payments."
Towne v. Towne, supra, at 150 Vt. 288, italics and bold added, pp.
289.
Similarly, in the case at bar, Appellant can't see how the trial
court's failure here to adequately explain why Appellant's support obligations
shouldn't rather start from June 15, 2011 than the date of the Sept. 8, 2008
modification process already struck down by this honorable Supreme Court— when
“service” hadn't even occurred yet by the trial court's own estimation until
the "ordinary mail" notice of June 2011 and any delays were due to Plaintiffs'
dilatory actions— is not equally an abuse of discretion as in Towne, supra.
Indeed, the trial court's selection of the date of retroactivity is more than a
matter of rote.[29]
The only justification
the court below seems to provide is the fact that Plaintiff has "at all
times since August 2000 borne the financial responsibility for caring for the
parties' children," (May 10, 2012 order, p. 14, last ¶)[30], and an apparently earnest desire on the part of the court to
"recoup" support for the parties children, (who as of the June 15,
2011 date of “service” which the court below affirmed, were of the age of
majority and no longer subject to a support order pursuant to the clear terms
of the Michigan decree, see Oct. 8, 1997 divorce decree of the Ingham, Michigan
Circuit Court, in record, cf. May 10, 2012 order, PC 18-19 noting that the
duration of support are governed by Michigan law).
However,
as shown above the court does so in complete derogation of the relevant federal
and state precedents, (cf. Isham v. Isham, supra, Towne v. Towne, supra, Malone
v. Malone, supra, and 42 USC § 666 (a)(9)(C)
), and the practical impact its decisions will have
on the ability of Defendant to meet his many current obligations, (including
those to his current minor children who will in fact be negatively impacted by
the court below's rulings).
Moreover, as a matter of law, to allow his support
obligations to accrue from the date of filing in Sept. 2008 rather than the
time the Magistrate found "service" in June of 2011 would result in a
gross distortion of law itself rife with "Ex Post Facto" questions
seemingly barred by the doctrines of latches and/or collateral estoppel, (see
fn 20). Indeed, as noted above, in the circumstances here it allows defendant
to be "bound" to an obligation for which he legally hadn't yet
received service of process! (See order of the court below finding Plaintiffs
must first "properly serve" defendant before modification of support
could proceed, March 10, 2011 order of division Magistrate, PC 26-27).
Such a result against Defendant/Appellant
is not only grossly unfair in light of Plaintiffs' willful failure to properly
notice Defendant of their intention to procure such order of support in this
matter for the first time in almost a decade, but it would seemingly (and has!)
resulted in an immediate and excessively large arrearage owed Plaintiff from
Defendant which he can't possibly pay, in
seeming violation of prior precedents and the wise observances of this Supreme
Court:
There is a practical aspect to this
issue. A clearly excessive child
support order may lead, as here,
to collection difficulties and periodic
returns to court. In 1990, defendant was obligated to pay
approximately 56%
of his gross income in child
support. Once he fell behind, it was
virtually
impossible to make up the
arrearage. His income, as well as
plaintiff's,
was drained by the costs of the
child support litigation. A support
amount
that, on paper, appears generous
to the children becomes illusory if, for
reasons related to the excessive
size of the payments, collection must be
coerced on a regular
basis. The court that establishes a
child support
amount must be satisfied that it
is fair and reasonable, so that it can be
paid regularly, without further
intervention of the legal system.
Grimes v. Grimes, 159 Vt.
399, 406, 621 A.2d. 211, 214 (1992).
Therefore, absent complete dismissal
appellant respectfully requests this court make support only retroactive to the
time of service in accordance with the Magistrate's rulings thereon, (June 15,
2011).
III. CONCLUSION
AND PRAYER FOR RELIEF
Therefore,
for all of the foregoing, Appellant requests this court reverse
the March 10, 2011, May 10, 2012, Aug. 1, 2012, Sept. 14, 2012 orders of the
courts below, GRANT the Motions for relief from judgment of the Aug. 15, 2000
and Feb. 23, 2009 “companion” orders, and dismiss the
modification action of Plaintiffs and/or take whatever other action as the
needs of justice require in this case.
Respectfully submitted this 15th day of June 2013 by:
_________________________________
Jonathan A. Pahnke, Appellant/Defendant
jpahnke68@gmail.com Ph. 419-371-8324
[1] As subsequently detailed, the
trial court here ruled defendant had “waived” his right to raise his
insufficiency of service related jurisdictional claims. However, if the
Magistrate's rulings are correct that this party's appellate filings“waived”
his insufficiency of service claims it raises the question why this court even
bothered to reverse in 2010 when it could just as easily have dismissed
defendant's first appeal for the same reason at that time. Instead, however,
this court ruled, “In this case, we conclude that the trial court abused its
discretion in denying father’s Rule 60(b) motion for relief from judgment given
that a default judgment was entered without proper [i.e. “sufficient] service
upon father. It was the obligation of
mother and OCS to ensure proper service of process of father. See V.R.C.P. 4(i) (“The plaintiff’s attorney
shall, within the time during which the person served must respond to the
process, file the proof of service with the court.”). See Dec. 8, 2010 order of the Vermont Supreme
Court, bold and italics added for emphasis, PC 31.
[2]
The outcome of such perverse incentives can only further burden the courts
of this state with needless litigation and result in an undermining of the
esteem and confidence of the public in the fairness and efficiency of the
courts of the State of Vt.
[3] Moreover, it is Appellant's contention
that doing so unlawfully "shifts the burden of service" to Defendant
contrary to settled Vermont law, see Brady, supra, and Weisburgh, supra.
[4] The
courts below failed to substantively address the FFCCSOA and Vermont UIFSA as
they relate to establishment of both personal and subject jurisdiction
and the related critical issue of whether the FFCCSOA “supercedes” the UIFSA
for jurisdictional purposes under the “Supremacy Clause,” (see LeTellier v. LeTellier,
40 S.W.3d 490, 496–98 (Tenn. 2001)
(examining the history of
UIFSA and FFCCSOA and
concluding that Congress
did not intend
FFCCSOA to preempt UIFSA),
United States v. Bigford, 365 F.3d 859, (10th Cir.
2004) at fn 2, and compare
Vermont's UIFSA found at 15B VSA §§ 603, 611 and 613 with FFCCSOA at 28 U.S.C.
§ 1738 B. See also Appellee's Response
Memorandum in the prior Magistrate's Appeal, in which they stated, "15B
V.S.A. §611(a)(B)(2) would seem to disallow the modification to proceed at the
present time as Plaintiff, who is the petitioner in the present matter, is a
resident of Vermont and none of the parties have filed with the State of
Michigan their written consent to proceed with the modification,"
Appellee's June 15, 2011 Response Memorandum, p. 15 ¶2, but concluded “the
provisions of UIFSA pertaining to subject jurisdiction are preempted by
FFCCSOA by virture of the Supremacy Clause as codified at US Const. art. vi,
cl. 2.” (id. pp. 16, 17-18, supp. pc ). While such arguments were dutifully raised and briefed by both
Appellant and Appellees below and in this parties initial brief here, (see May
30, 2013 filed 47 page brief at pp. 37-41, Appellant's supplemental pc pages ), they have not been fully litigated here due
to defendant's earnest pleas with this honorable court to enlarge the size of
the brief so as to allow their inclusion being rejected by the court, (see June
3, 2013 order). This party thus respectfully requests, if these issues are
deemed salient to resolution of the instant appeals, that this honorable court
order additional briefing on these issues and/or now reconsider acceptance of
Appellant's prior brief filed electronically via email on May 24, 2013 (and
via paper form subsequently), cf. Appellant's prior Aug. 21, 2012 Amended
Magistrate's Memorandum below at pp. 59-77, rec .
[5]
As detailed subsequently
herein, Appellant submits that in light of the failure of plaintiff's to ever
properly commence this case via proper service and notice from 2000 to the
present, plaintiff's are deprived of relying on “ancillary jurisdiction” as
might ordinarily be the case under Gates v. Gates, 122 Vt. 371, 373; 173
A.2d 161, 162 (1961).
[6]
Indeed, Plaintiff's have openly conceded they don't believe service of process
is even necessary to effect jurisdiction, see Appellees' June 15, 2011 Mag.
Appeal Response Memorandum, p. 14 ¶2, in record. Moreover, the Superior Court family judge
found that proper service has never been accomplished in this case since
it's 2000 inception in Vermont, (“The record in this case contains no
indication that Father was provided such notice, but rather suggests that he
was provided with the modified order approximately one month after its
issuance,” (Aug. 1, 2012 order, PC 8¶2, in record), “Indeed, it appears that
Mother failed to meet the deadline...” id.
[7] Which,
as shown subsequently herein, didn't even comply with the provisions of
V.R.C.P. 5(a).
[8] Indeed,
this honorable court found no proper service or other reason to uphold the 2008
modification filing last time this matter was before the court in 2010,(which
seems mighty strange if this party had “waived” his right to challenge service,
see Dec. 8, 2010 order).
[9] The Superior court also entered this ruling
notwithstanding it being blatantly contrary to the prior July 26, 2011
ruling of Superior court Hon. Justice Thomas J. Devine who, sitting in
appellate fashion regarding the 2011 Magistrate's Appeal which the court
ultimately rejected as "premature"
(a ruling this court subsequently refused
to review due to an untimely notice of appeal). Indeed, rather than finding
Appellant had "waived" his service/personal jurisdiction claims, the
7-26-11 order assured this party he could have them resolved upon appeal of a
“final order” of the Magistrate! (see July 26, 2011 order of Superior Court
Judge Thomas J. Devine, in record).
While flattered by the Superior Court's subsequent citation of the
"law of the case" which this Appellant so strenuously argued below
vis a vis the disregard of this court's Dec. 8, 2010 order in this matter, the
Aug. 1, 2012 ruling is erroneous (and extremely ironic!) in its ensuing
citation of the "law of the case" doctrine without even considering
that the Magistrate court's refusal to address defendant's personal
jurisdiction/lack of service claims in light of this Supreme Court's Dec. 2010
ruling on this very matter violates the very same doctrine!
[10] Moreover, to the extent the
Magistrate subjects the “grand purposes” of Rule 60(b), to the more mundane
Rule 12 of the V.R.C.P. governing pre-trial practice in Superior Court it
clearly errs, as rather than Rule 12's terms it is the provisions of Rule 60(b)
itself that is to be used in properly determining if relief from
judgment should be granted, see In re: B.C. 169 Vt. 1, supra, In re Chester P. and Bertha G. Denio, supra, V.R.C.P.
60(b)(4)(6).
[11] In light of the similarity of defendant's service-related
claims noted by the Magistrate, (see May 10, 2012 order of court, PC 18¶2), as
well as the Superior Court's July 26, 2011 order, how can it reasonably be
claimed that defendant's re-raising the already-well-pled "insufficiency
of service" claims with particular regard to the June 15, 2011
"service" effected after his 2011 Magistrate's appeal was
lodged would have been perceived as anything less than redundant in light of
the Magistrate's pointing out the similarity of such claims and defendant's
extensive history of litigating them?("Since his August 13, 2009
pleadings, the issue of modification of the obligation of support of his
children has been before the magistrate court, the Family Court, and the
Supreme Court." Magistrate's May 10, 2012 order, PC 16 ¶4, cf. PC 17, ¶2).
[12] See dvd transcript of May 10, 2012 hearing “I will have to rule
as to whether or not that was sufficient, or not sufficient, in terms of having
you still served.” id. 3:08:36, cf. Nov. 14, 2011 dvd tr. at 1:04:22, 1:06:01,
1:06:38, 1:10:40, 1:24:50, 2:20:06, 2:20:20, Jan 31, 2011 dvd at 2:43:34,
2:43:46, 2:44:45, 2:44:55, March 12, 2012 dvd tr. at 2:45:15, 2:49:23, 2:49:49,
3:12:32, 3:12:58, 3:19:50 Cf. May10, 2012
order, p. 8, ¶ 2, record.).
[13] As noted elsewhere, it would have
been curious indeed if this honorable court hadn't noticed this “waiver” in the
2010 appeal to this court.
[14]
Then too, the Superior court's July 26, 2011 order dismissing defendant's 2011
Magistrate's appeal for being premature, rather than finding “waiver” by
defendant of his service-related jurisdictional claims, explicitly stated
that defendant could re-raise his jurisdictional issues on appeal of the final
order of the Magistrate in this case! (A funny thing to rule if this party
had “waived” his service-related jurisdictional claims, which the Magistrate
notes haven't changed since the filing of his Emergency Motion for Relief, see
May 10, 2012 order of Magistrate, PC 17 ¶2, July 26, 2011 order of Sup. Court,
record).
[15]
Cf. "In spite of Appellees conceding that
Appellant could not have received service in this case, Appellees go on,
(particularly on the question of jurisdiction, dealt with substantively in Part
III of this reply brief), to copiously quote Appellant's Brief, Docketing
Statement, and Printed case in a seeming end run around the critical,
indisputable fact of the role the utter lack of service in this case plays vis
a vis jurisdiction with irrelevant claims in an attempt to distract the
court from the issues at hand" (Appellant's reply brief in 2010 Appeal to
Vermont Supreme Court, p. 1 ¶2, italics added for emphasis, see also id., p. 2
¶3, pp. 5-8). See also Appellant's Brief in
Vermont Supreme Court, p. 11, fn 16, Appellant's Reply Brief in previous and
subsequently-dismissed Magistrate's Appeal, p. 5 ¶3, p. 11, fn 8, as well as
defendant's Special Appearance/Motion to dismiss and Oct. 31, 2011 and Nov. 7,
2011 Rule 60(b) Motions for Relief from Judgment.
[16] See Beyel
v. Degan, 142 Vt. 617, 619, 458 A.2d 1137, 1138 (1983), (court will
consider issues raised by pro-se litigant even though litigant failed to
properly or clearly brief issue), Bingham v. Tenney, 154 Vt. 96, 101-02, 573
A.2d 1185, 1187-88 (1990) (reversing denial of relief from summary judgment
when pro se party opposed summary judgment with contested facts but failed to
file an affidavit), and Vahlteich v. Knott, 139 Vt. 588, 590-91, 433 A.2d
287, 288-89 (1981) (reversing denial
[*8] of relief from judgment
against a pro se litigant who failed to answer a complaint because a
co-defendant's answer purported to speak for both defendants).
[17] A fact presumably salient in this
court's Dec. 8, 2010 reversal. Otherwise, why didn't this court (or parties)
notice such “waiver” then and merely dismiss Appellant's 2010 appeal on that
basis? In any event, by failing to timely respond and raise this objection
plaintiff's have themselves “waived” their right to do so in the proceedings
below, (see V.R.C.P. 12(b), 78(b) ).
[18] Cf. “According
to the records on file there is a certificate of service, I believe signed by
Ms. Haselton, indicating that under Rule 5 of the V.R.C.P. she served you with
notice, the motion, and the attached affidavits in these proceedings; Are you
saying that that is insufficient?”(dvd transcript of March 12, 2012 hearing at
3:07:28.
[19] Nor did the Superior Court mention
it in the July 26, 2011 order of dismissal. Instead, it explicitly stated
defendant could raise his “jurisdictional” issues in any future appeal of the
“final order” of the Magistrate, (see July 26, 2011 order, record).
[20]
" '[T]he doctrine of estoppel is based upon the grounds of public policy,
fair dealing, good faith, and justice, and its purpose is to forbid one to
speak against his own act, representations or commitments to the injury of one
to whom they were directed and who reasonably relied thereon."' My
Sister's Place v. City of Burlington, 139 Vt. 602, 609, 433 A.2d 275, 279
(1981) (quoting Dutch Hill Inn, Inc. v. Patten, 131 Vt. 187, 193, 303 A.2d 811,
815 (1973), and cited in Humphrey v. Vermont Tap & Die Co. (96-187, filed 23-Apr-1997). “Essential to a finding of equitable estoppel is a
showing of prejudice.” (id.). Here,
the failure of plaintiff's to raise their “waiver” defense in their “first
responsive pleading” of Feb. 9, 2011 seriously prejudiced defendant in light of
the subsequent rulings of the trial court. It should therefore be rejected by
this court, (Humphrey, supra, My Sister's Place, supra, Dutch Hill Inn,
supra).
[21] A matter upon which this party would
respectfully request additional briefing be ordered if the court deems it
salient.
[22]
In this regard, while in the course of these last years of litigation defendant
certainly had to file many motions and papers such as for continuances, changes
of mailing address, extensions of time, and the like, which the Magistrate
court particularly notes, (see May 10, 2012 order, PC 16, par. 4), such filings
were merely incident to the main challenges to the court's jurisdiction, and
should not be able to be used, as the Magistrate does, to buttress “waiver.”
[23]
As under the “law of the case” defendant should have been able to rely on the
July 26, 2011 order of the Superior court.
[24] Cf. Northern Aircraft, Inc., 154 Vt. at 40, 572 A.2d at 1385
(both personal AND subject jurisdiction
are required in order for a court to lawfully exercise authority over a
person), accord United States v. Bigford, 365 F.3d 859 (10th Cir. 2004),
¶¶21-22, ¶42, fn 2, 15B V.S.A. §611(a)(B)(2), 15B VSA §611(a)(C)(2), 15B VSA
§611(a)(1)(B), 15B VSA §613(a),
15B VSA §603(b) and (c), 28 USC § 1738B [d], OCS/Pappas v.
O’Brien 2013 VT 11 (2010-398, filed March 1, 2013).
[25] It is also salient that
"residency" for purposes of jurisdiction under Vermont's UIFSA
encompasses much more than mere physical presence in the State. Indeed,
"Residency for purposes of divorce jurisdiction is more than mere presence
within the State... [it] is encompassed within the legal definition of
domicile," see Conley v. Crisafulli, 2010 Vt. 38, (May 2010),
citing Duval v. Duval, 149 vt. 506 at 510.
[26] Due to word count restrictions this
party is unable to comprehensively brief all jurisdictional issues relating to
UIFSA here, but respectfully refers this honorable court to his below-filed
Aug. 21, 2012 Magistrate's Appeal Brief in the record, (as amended), and
requests additional briefing on UIFSA and the FFCCSOA if this court deems it
dispositive.
[27]
Contrary to Magistrate's order, (see PC 24 ¶1), defendant never sought
“back child support” for 2000-2008, but only seeks reversal of the Feb. 23,
2009 “zero out” order re arrears which had already accrued under the
Michigan decree prior to the time of modification and/or registration in
Vermont (see 42 USC § 666 (a)(9)(C) and 15 VSA
§660(e), (cf. May 10, 2012 order at PC 23,
¶1).
[28] Moreover, courts are not afforded discretion
to disregard the law just because they might not like the outcome in certain
cases, but must apply it evenhandedly. Further, in light of the dilatory
tactics of plaintiffs and fact mother never moved to modify in the Ingham
Michigan CEJ or Vermont until 2008, she must bear the burden of
any anomalies that result.
[29]
It would seem the trial court's failure to explain its rationale for
choosing the same date for support to begin that it did before this
court's 2010 reversal violates the court's duty to “state the essential facts”
under Mayer v. Mayer, supra.
[30] In doing so the court below
misconstrues this party's laches and unclean hands claims and fails to explain
how this "concern" over the parties' providing for their childrens'
needs doesn't apply equally to the significant arrearages owed Defendant
under the Oct. 8, 1997 Michigan decree of divorce which the court below with a
flick of its wrist "disaappeared" (see Feb. 23, 2009 companion
"default" order "zeroing out" Plaintiff's arrears towards
Defendant, in record). Nor does the
court explain how disallowing any credit for Defendant's other significant
support obligations or establishing such extensive "instant"
arrearages owed Plaintiff from Defendant stemming from the Sept. 2008
modification “filing date” which Defendant can't possibly pay will further the
interests of the parties' now grown children, (see Grimes v. Grimes, 159 Vt. 399, 406, 621 A.2d. 211, 214 (1992), Mayer v. Mayer, supra, (court must
state essential facts its conclusions rely on).
[31] Although this party initially had difficulty
getting a word count due to “Poly Edit” lacking a native word count feature,
Appellant was able to comply with this court's June 3, 2013 order by finding
and downloading freeware word processor “Kingsoft Writer” (which did have a
“word count” feature) and separately copying, pasting and laboriously
reformatting his brief section by section. Appellant thanks the court for its
patience and extension of time to this indigent pro se party.
Hey father its me your son. Jonathan. I miss you and want to see you. I dont know where to begin. I want to move on from the past. I want a relationship with my father. I a want a parent. Someone who I can ask advice. someone to talk and maybe I can come see you one day. see where you live and see you. Well anyways Paula turned out to be a pretty shitty mom and doesn't have a relationship with me. I have no parent which makes me sad. I had no relationship with you as a child it made me feel cold, alone, and hurt. People would ask about you where you where why you aren't part of my life. And I wasn't sure what to say to them or how to respond. Made growing up very difficult. I tried to reach out to you before on Facebook. You never responded and you blocked me ouch. I don't want money or anything of materialistic value I want a relationship with my father. Something I never had the opportunity to enjoy and have which hurt pretty bad. I know it wasn't all your fault but now I'm an adult and i ache for a relationship with my father. I know you may be scared or hurt by my actions but I want to fix it. When I think about you there's a lot of bad memories but I also I think of Maine. The house there. I remember it. I loved that house in a way it felt like home. I remember Rachel or gloryanna catching a starfish. I remember you teaching us about them and how there arms will grow back. I remember you buying lobsters and having the dog lucky play with them. You made asparagus with the lobster i think. I remember the way the sun would set across the water beautiful. I also faintly remember the look you would get in your eyes when you told me you loved me. And i cant help but to want that again. I miss you I can't even really remember what you look like. I love you and miss you. I hope I'm not wasting my time I want to talk to you. So my email is jpjohn8@gmail.com I don't expect you to respond but I'm eagerly waiting I want to hear from you I don't care if you made mistakes before I want a father a parent. Please if someone could be begging on there hands and knees in a message that would be me I'm begging you don't ignore please talk to me I have so much to tell you and share please. Eagerly awaiting a response email. Love Jonathan
ReplyDeleteOh my son, is that really you and not some cruel hoax of a stranger? I am sooo sorry I never saw this comment until now. I sent you an email. I am so very sorry you feel you don't have a parent but I want you to know I am here for you!! I am praying it's not too late and kicking myself for forgetting my password and not looking at this blog for years. Your dad, Jonathan Pahnke
ReplyDeleteI also want you to know I never blocked you on facebook. I think someone hacked my account because I also forgot my password for that and tried so many times to reset it that it locked me out. Again, I am so very, very sorry you have waited for me all this time and can tell from what you post here it is you. Look forward to talking to you and hearing anything and everything you wish to share. Your dad, Jonathan Pahnke
ReplyDelete