Court Opinion

ID: 4385029
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2019-04-08 18:02:07.712615+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:50:18.492650
License: Public Domain

Filed 4/8/19

                           CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

               COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

                                     DIVISION ONE

                                STATE OF CALIFORNIA

COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO DEPARTMENT                     D073403
OF CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES,

        Appellant,
                                                   (Super. Ct. No. DF242973)
        v.

C.P.,

        Respondent.

        APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of San Diego County, Terrie E.

Roberts, Commissioner. Reversed and remanded with directions.

        Xavier Becerra, Attorney General, Julie Weng-Gutierrez, Assistant Attorney

General, Linda M. Gonzalez and Ricardo Enriquez, Deputy Attorneys General, for

Appellant.

        No appearance for Respondent.

        In January 2013, the family court ordered respondent C.P. to pay monthly child

support. From September 12, 2013, through August 22, 2017, C.P. was incarcerated in

federal prison. Less than a month after his release, C.P. promptly filed a request for the
court to adjust the child support arrears that accrued during his incarceration—which the

parties and the family court handled under current Family Code 1 section 4007.5.

(Stats. 2015, ch. 629, § 2, eff. Oct. 8, 2015; subsequent references to current § 4007.5 are

to this section of the legislation.) The court granted C.P.'s request over the objection of

appellant San Diego County Department of Child Support Services (Department)

(§ 17406), which is the appellant and is represented by the Attorney General in this

appeal (§ 17407). 2

       The family court erred as a matter of law in granting C.P.'s request. Given the

unambiguous language in current section 4007.5 and the timing of C.P.'s child support

order, incarceration, and request for adjustment of arrears, the statutory relief awarded is

unavailable to C.P. under current section 4007.5. As we explain, subdivision (f)

expressly provides that the statute applies only to child support orders issued on or after

October 8, 2015, and C.P.'s child support order under consideration was issued in January

2013. As we further explain, contrary to the family court's stated reasons, at the time of

1      Further undesignated statutory references are to the Family Code.

2        "In all actions involving . . . support, . . . the local child support agency and the
Attorney General represent the public interest in establishing, modifying, and enforcing
support obligations." (§ 17406, subd. (a).) The Attorney General tells us that the
Department "is the local child support agency (LCSA) in San Diego County tasked with
. . . establishing, enforcing, and modifying child support" in cases of "children born out of
wedlock." (See § 17400, subd. (a), quoted in fn. 4, post.)
         "If the Attorney General is of the opinion that a support order or support-related
order is erroneous and presents a question of law warranting an appeal, . . . in the public
interest the Attorney General may: [¶] (1) Perfect . . . an appeal to the proper appellate
court if the order was issued by a court of this state. . . ." (§ 17407, subd. (a).)

                                              2
the repeal of former section 4007.5 (Stats. 2010, ch. 495, § 1; subsequent references to

former § 4007.5 are to this section of the legislation), C.P. did not have a vested statutory

right to have his support order adjusted, and current section 4007.5 does not contain a

saving clause pursuant to which former section 4007.5 could have provided statutory

protection for incarcerated child support obligors like C.P. 3

       However, C.P.'s request can be read to have sought the adjustment in child support

arrears under former section 4007.5, which was repealed as of July 1, 2015

(id., subd. (i)); but the parties did not brief and the trial court did not consider whether

former section 4007.5 contains a saving clause that provides C.P. with a statutory basis

on which to have obtained the requested relief.

       Accordingly, we will reverse the order granting C.P.'s request and remand with

directions to consider, as appropriate based on briefing to be requested, whether former

section 4007.5 includes a saving clause that allows its application to C.P.'s request and,

if so, whether C.P. has made a sufficient showing for the relief he seeks.

                I.     FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

       On January 23, 2013, at the request of the Department (§§ 17400, 4 17406 (see

fn. 2, ante)), the family court filed a section 17430 Judgment Regarding Parental

3      " 'A saving clause is generally used in a repealing act to preserve rights and claims
that would otherwise be lost.' " (Beverly Hilton Hotel v. Workers' Comp. Appeals Bd.
(2009) 176 Cal.App.4th 1597, 1608 (Beverly Hilton Hotel), quoting Bourquez v. Superior
Court (2007) 156 Cal.App.4th 1275, 1284.)

4     "(a) Each county shall maintain a local child support agency . . . that shall have the
responsibility for promptly and effectively establishing, modifying, and enforcing child
                                               3
Obligations (Judgment) that required C.P. to pay monthly child support of $308. C.P.

was incarcerated out of state from September 12, 2013, until August 22, 2017, during

which time he did not have the ability to pay support.

       During C.P.'s incarceration, the Department requested and in May 2016 received

from the family court an order temporarily modifying C.P.'s monthly child support

obligation to $0 as of April 1, 2016. Although the Department's motion is not in the

record on appeal, the Attorney General tells us that the Department did not know of, and

thus did not base its request on, C.P.'s incarceration; rather, the Department sought the

child support modification order solely "because [the Department] had not received any

payments [from C.P.] for more than 12 months."

       Within weeks of being released from prison, in September 2017 C.P. filed a

"Request for Adjustment of Child Support Arrears Due to Incarceration or Involuntary

Institutionalization" (Request). C.P. presented his Request on Judicial Council form

FL-676—a mandatory form that is required for use under current section 4007.5. (See

current § 4007.5, subd. (g) ["The Department of Child Support Services shall, by

January 1, 2016, and in consultation with the Judicial Council, develop forms to

implement this section."].) In his Request, C.P. sought the adjustment of his child

support arrears based on the following showing: C.P. was incarcerated for more than 90

support obligations . . . . The local child support agency shall take appropriate action . . .
to establish, modify, and enforce child support . . . . [¶] (b)(1) . . . [A]ttorneys employed
within the local child support agency may direct, control, and prosecute civil actions and
proceedings in the name of the county in support of child support activities of the
Department of Child Support Services and the local child support agency. . . ."
(§ 17400.)

                                              4
consecutive days during the time period from September 12, 2013, through August 22,

2017; C.P. did not have the financial ability to pay child support during this time period;

C.P.'s incarceration did not result from a conviction for failure to pay child support or for

domestic violence against the supported person or the child; and "[the] child support

order was made or changed on or after October 8, 2015."

       The Department opposed C.P.'s Request. The Department argued as follows:

Because current section 4007.5 applies only to child support orders issued or modified on

or after October 8, 2015, the current May 2016 order suspending support was the only

order at issue; and since, under the May 2016 order, ongoing monthly child support was

set at $0, there are no "account balances" (i.e., arrears) to adjust under the order. 5

       The family court heard oral argument in October 2017. The court granted C.P.'s

Request and adjusted child support to $0 for the time of C.P.'s incarceration, resulting in

no arrears for the time period from September 12, 2013, through March 31, 2016. At the

hearing, the court orally explained that obligors like C.P. who were incarcerated at the

time former section 4007.5 was repealed did not lose their "vested rights" by failing to

seek relief prior to the repeal. On the following grounds, the court also ruled that current

section 4007.5 contains an implied saving clause, extending the protections of former

section 4007.5: The "entire purpose" of the current legislation is "to continue protecting

the people who are incarcerated from having arrears accrued against them while they are

5      Prior to its argument, the Department noted that the previous support order
contained in the January 2013 Judgment was not implicated by C.P.'s Request.

                                               5
incarcerated and clearly don't have the ability to pay"; and the Legislature enacted current

section 4007.5 as urgency legislation "to immediately get this relief back in place."

       The Department timely appealed from the October 2017 order granting C.P.'s

Request. 6

                                    II. DISCUSSION 7

       As we explain, because, by its express terms, current section 4007.5 does not

apply to C.P.'s Request, the family court erred in granting relief. As we further explain,

at the time of the repeal of former section 4007.5, C.P. did not have a vested right to the

statutory relief he sought, and the Legislature did not include a saving clause when it

enacted current section 4007.5. However, as we finally explain, because C.P.'s Request

can be read to seek the adjustment in child support arrears under former section 4007.5,

and because the parties have not briefed and the family court has not considered whether

former section 4007.5 contains a saving clause, the family court should determine this

issue in the first instance on remand.

6      Thus, the only child support obligation at issue in this appeal is the October 2017
adjustment to C.P.'s arrears, not the May 2016 modification of C.P.'s monthly support
obligation to $0.

7       C.P. has not participated in the appeal. Where, as here, there is no respondent's
brief, we "decide the appeal on the record, the opening brief, and any oral argument by
the appellant." (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.220(a)(2).) We do not consider the failure to
file a respondent's brief as an admission of error. To the contrary, the Department (as
appellant) has the burden of establishing reversible error, and we review the Department's
presentation—here, an opening brief, a clerk's transcript, and a reporter's transcript—and
determine whether the Department met its burden. (Gonzalez v. Munoz (2007) 156
Cal.App.4th 413, 419, fn. 2.)

                                             6
A.     Law

       This case presents a pure question of statutory interpretation, which is subject to

independent review. (Lopez v. Sony Electronics, Inc. (2018) 5 Cal.5th 627, 633.)

       " ' "When we interpret a statute, '[o]ur fundamental task . . . is to determine the

Legislature's intent so as to effectuate the law's purpose. We first examine the statutory

language, giving it a plain and commonsense meaning. We do not examine that language

in isolation, but in the context of the statutory framework as a whole in order to

determine its scope and purpose and to harmonize the various parts of the enactment. If

the language is clear, courts must generally follow its plain meaning unless a literal

interpretation would result in absurd consequences the Legislature did not intend. If the

statutory language permits more than one reasonable interpretation, courts may consider

other aids, such as the statute's purpose, legislative history, and public policy.' " ' " (Meza

v. Portfolio Recovery Associates, LLC (2019) 6 Cal.5th 844, 856-857.) In particular, we

" ' " 'giv[e] significance to every word, phrase, sentence, and part of an act in pursuance

of the legislative purpose.' " ' " (Ibid.)

       Under the Family Code, "child support" refers to "a support obligation owing on

behalf of a child" and "includes maintenance and education" as well as "past due support

or arrearage when it exists." (§ 150.) Whereas court-ordered child support may

terminate upon the happening of any of a number of contingencies (§ 4007, subd. (a)),

there are also situations in which the obligation to pay child support is temporarily stayed

(Hogoboom & King, Cal. Practice Guide: Family Law (The Rutter Group 2018)

¶¶ 6:740 to 6:745, pp. 6-414 to 6-417). At issue in the present appeal is one of these

                                              7
latter situations—i.e., where, upon an appropriate showing, a child support obligation

may be stayed temporarily during the obligor's incarceration.

       Current section 4007.5 applies only to child support orders "issued or modified" on

or after October 8, 2015. (§ 4007.5, subd. (f). 8) Any party, as well as a LCSA, may

petition the family court to determine the amount of child support or arrears following an

authorized suspension of support under subdivision (a). 9 (§ 4007.5, subd. (d).)

B.     Analysis

       1.     Current Section 4007.5 Does Not Apply to C.P.'s Request

       By its express terms, current section 4007.5 applies only to child support orders

"issued or modified on or after" October 8, 2015. (§ 4007.5, subd. (f); see fn. 8, ante.)

       The original child support order is contained in the Judgment filed in January

2013—more than two and a half years before the potential application of current

section 4007.5. Although the family court (temporarily) modified monthly child support

to $0 in May 2016—i.e., at a time when current section 4007.5 was in force and, thus,

8      Actually, section 4007.5, subdivision (f) provides that section 4007.5 applies to
child support orders issued or modified "on or after the enactment of this section." In this
regard, the Legislature filed the bill with the Secretary of State on October 8, 2015, along
with the following statement from the Legislature: "This act is an urgency statute . . . and
shall go into immediate effect." (Stats. 2015, ch. 629, § 3, italics added.)

9      Alternatively, although inapplicable here, a LCSA may, according to specified
statutory conditions, administratively adjust account balances for any child support order
suspended under section 4007.5, subdivision (a). (§ 4007.5, subd. (c)(1).) If either the
support obligor or obligee objects, however, the LCSA may not adjust the order; instead,
the agency must obtain court approval to adjust the arrears. (§ 4007.5, subd. (c)(2).)

                                             8
potentially applicable—C.P. did not accrue any arrears after that date, since his monthly

support obligation had become $0.

       By its plain meaning, therefore, current section 4007.5 does not apply to the

January 2013 Judgment, and C.P. did not accrue any arrears under the May 2016

modification order. Thus, current section 4007.5—the statute under which the parties

and the family court proceeded—does not authorize the relief C.P. sought and the family

court granted.

       2.     The Family Court Erred

       At the hearing on C.P.'s Request, the family court explained: Despite the express

language in former subdivision (i) repealing former section 4007.5, obligors like C.P.

who were incarcerated at the time former section 4007.5 was repealed did not lose their

"vested rights" by failing to seek relief prior to its repeal; and, in any event, current

section 4007.5 contains an implied saving clause, extending the benefits of former

section 4007.5. The court's stated reasons included the following: "I just don't believe

that . . ." when "the Legislature let [former section 4007.5] expire, . . . it also took away

vested rights already obtained by someone who had those rights based on the prior law,

who was still incarcerated"; "The entire purpose of the legislation [(current § 4007.5)]

was done to continue protecting the people who are incarcerated from having arrears

accrue against them while they are incarcerated and . . . don't have the ability to pay"; in

passing current section 4007.5, the Legislature "was acting with an urgency . . . to

immediately get this relief back in place"; and, finally, current section 4007.5 "not only

. . . included [former section 4007.5], but . . . expanded it."

                                               9
       In so ruling, the family court erred. More than a century ago, our Supreme Court

explained: "[W]here a right is created solely by a statute, and is dependent upon the

statute alone, and such right is still inchoate, and not reduced to possession, or perfected

by final judgment, the repeal of the statute destroys the remedy, unless the repealing

statute contains a saving clause." (Napa State Hospital v. Flaherty (1901) 134 Cal. 315,

317.) As we discuss, neither situation is present here; C.P. did not have any vested rights

at the time of former section 4007.5's repeal, and current section 4007.5 does not contain

an express or implied saving clause.

       A statutory right (like that available under former § 4007.5) becomes vested—and,

thus, protected in the event the statute is repealed—only if the right is converted into a

final judgment before the repeal. (Governing Board v. Mann (1977) 18 Cal.3d 819, 822

(Mann).) Thus, a party in litigation may acquire a vested right only "when the award is

final and any appeals have been concluded by a final judgment." (Beverly Hilton Hotel,

supra, 176 Cal.App.4th at p. 1606; accord, Mann, supra, 18 Cal.3d at p. 822 [" ' 'If final

relief has not been granted before the repeal goes into effect it cannot be granted

afterwards, even if a judgment has been entered and the cause is pending on appeal." ' "].)

In the present case, at the time of the repeal of the statute under which C.P. sought relief,

there was no final judgment suspending C.P.'s child support obligation or adjusting C.P.'s

arrears: C.P. filed his Request on September 2017, which is more than two years after

the repeal of the statute that provided the right he was seeking to enforce. Accordingly,

C.P. had not acquired a vested right under former section 4007.5 by the time of its repeal

                                             10
on July 1, 2015 (Mann, supra, 18 Cal.3d at p. 822; Beverly Hilton Hotel, supra, 176

Cal.App.4th at pp. 1606-1607); and the family court erred in ruling otherwise.

       Independent of a vested right, when the Legislature repeals a statute but intends to

provide statutory benefits after the repeal, the Legislature may include a saving clause

either in the repealing act or in other legislation at the session of the Legislature effecting

the repeal. (Beverly Hilton Hotel, supra, 176 Cal.App.4th at pp. 1607-1608 [court

considered repealing legislation]; Younger v. Superior Court (1978) 21 Cal.3d 102, 110

[court considered "contemporaneous legislation"].) A saving clause may be express or

implied. (In re Pedro T. (1994) 8 Cal.4th 1041, 1048-1049 [an express saving clause is

not necessary, because courts have no authority to dictate the form of the expression of

legislative intent].) At a minimum, for a saving clause to be effective, the Legislature

must "demonstrate its intention with sufficient clarity that a reviewing court can discern

and effectuate it." (Pedro T., at p. 1049.) Here, the family court suggested that, when

enacting current section 4007.5, the Legislature intended to save former section 4007.5;

however, such a possibility is not supported by the legislation containing current

section 4007.5 or by the history surrounding its enactment. 10

       Initially, there is no express or implied clause saving former section 4007.5 in the

legislation enacting current section 4007.5. (Stats. 2015, ch. 629.) Moreover, on at least

10      Consideration of a saving clause in the legislation enacting current section 4007.5
is appropriate, because it contains an express repeal of former section 4007.5.
(Stats. 2015, ch. 629, § 1 ["Section 4007.5 of the Family Code is repealed."]).

                                              11
three bases, the Legislature communicated an intent not to save the statutory protections

previously provided by former section 4007.5.

        First, in the legislation enacting current section 4007.5, the Legislature expressly

included the repeal of former section 4007.5 (Stats. 2015, ch. 629, § 1), which was

arguably unnecessary in light of the sunset provision contained in former section 4007.5

(id., subd. (i)). 11

        Second, we are persuaded by the Legislature's explanation of the "urgency" that

necessitated the determination that current section 4007.5 "go into immediate effect":

"In order to limit the duration of the interruption in the protections provided by former

Section 4007.5 of the Family Code, it is necessary that this bill take effect immediately."

(Stats. 2015, ch. 629, § 3, italics added.) By this statement, the Legislature affirmatively

acknowledged that, between the repeal of former section 4007.5 and the enactment of

current section 4007.5, potentially affected parties necessarily would experience an

"interruption" in the statutory protections. 12

        Third, consistent with former section 4007.5, subdivision (g), early versions of the

bill that became current section 4007.5 expressly applied to "child support orders and

11     Since, as we explain at part II.C., post , we do not reach the issue whether former
section 4007.5's contains a saving clause, we express no opinion as to the potential effect
of the express repeal of former section 4007.5 contained in the legislation enacting
current section 4007.5.

12       Given this explanation in the enacting legislation of current section 4007.5
(Stats. 2015, ch. 629, § 3), the family court's disbelief that "the Legislature would intend
that . . . people incarcerated after July 1, 2015, lost these very substantive rights" is
unfounded.

                                              12
modifications issued on or after July 1, 2011." (Assem. Bill No. 610 (2015-2016 Reg.

Sess.) Feb. 24, 2015, § 2, italics added; Assem. Amend. to Assem. Bill No. 610 (2015-

2016 Reg. Sess.) Apr. 8, 2015, § 2, italics added. 13) However, the Legislature ultimately

amended those versions of the bill to apply only to child support orders "issued or

modified on or after" October 8, 2015. (§ 4007.5, subd. (f); see fn. 8, ante.)

       In summary, since the Legislature could have included a saving clause in current

section 4007.5 but did not, and instead expressly repealed former section 4007.5 while

recognizing an interruption in the statutory protections previously afforded by former

section 4007.5, the only intent we, as a reviewing court, can discern is that, in enacting

current section 4007.5, the Legislature intended to discontinue, not to save, rights under

former section 4007.5.

C.     Conclusion

       While the family court's ruling, including the stated reasons, was compassionate,

it was nonetheless erroneous on the record before the court. At the time the Legislature

repealed former section 4007.5, C.P. did not have a vested statutory right, and in enacting

current section 4007.5, the Legislature did not intend to save the statutory protections

previously available under former section 4007.5.

       That said, C.P.'s Request, even though presented on a form intended for use under

current section 4007.5, sufficiently put at issue a claim for an adjustment of arrears under

13      Notably, both of these versions of the bill were proposed months before the July 1,
2015 date of repeal contained in former section 4007.5, subdivision (i). This reconfirms
that, had the Legislature wanted to save former section 4007.5 in current section 4007.5,
the Legislature had the knowledge how and the ability to do so.

                                             13
former section 4007.5. 14 Indeed, the family court ruled, albeit incorrectly, that C.P. had

a vested right under former section 4007.5. What the family court did not consider,

however, is whether former section 4007.5, as opposed to current section 4007.5,

contained a saving clause that would allow C.P. the relief he sought in his Request. More

specifically, the family court did not consider whether former section 4007.5's "sunset

provision" constituted an implied saving clause that affected C.P.'s Request for an

adjustment of child support arrears. (See In re Pedro T., supra, 8 Cal.4th at pp. 1044-

1052 [sunset provision of earlier statute subject to a three-year legislative experiment

implied an intent to apply the statute to all convictions prior to date of repeal, even

though they were not final prior to the sunset date].)

       Accordingly, the family court should determine in the first instance, following

proceedings at which the parties may present their views, whether former

section 4007.5—under subdivision (i)'s sunset provision, or otherwise—contained a

saving clause; and, if so, whether C.P. is entitled to the relief he sought in his Request.

14      Most likely, this would not be the case for other applicants seeking relief under
former section 4007.5. The Judicial Council preprinted form for use under
section 4007.5 contains the affirmative statement: "My child support order was made or
changed on or after October 8, 2015." Such a representation is consistent with and
required by current section 4007.5. (Id., subd. (f); see fn. 8, ante.) In C.P.'s case, use of
this form was both accurate and proper because of the May 2016 modification order—
even though the arrears C.P. sought to be adjusted accrued under the January 2013
Judgment. If, ultimately, there is a determination that former section 4007.5 contains a
saving clause that allows application of the former statute to child support obligations
after the date of the former statute's repeal, most applicants will be unable to use the
current Judicial Council form FL-676 (rev. Jan. 1, 2017)—in which event, they may
either cross out the preprinted representation regarding the date of the child support order
(currently found at ¶ 4.c.) or draft their own case-specific application.

                                              14
Having not reached those issues in this appeal, we express no opinion as to the arguments

that might be presented or the rulings that will follow.

                                   III.   DISPOSITION

       The family court's October 24, 2017 order granting C.P.'s Request is reversed.

On remand, the family court is directed to enter an order denying the Request under

current section 4007.5, and to determine whether former section 4007.5 contained a

saving clause such that the former statute applies to C.P.'s Request. If former

section 4007.5 does not apply to C.P.'s Request on this basis, then the court shall deny the

Request; if former section 4007.5 does apply to C.P.'s Request on this basis, then the

court shall reconsider C.P.'s Request on its merits and determine whether C.P. made a

sufficient showing for relief under former section 4007.5. Because C.P. did not appear in

this appeal, the Department shall bear its own costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court,

rule 8.278(a)(5).)

                                                                                  IRION, J.

WE CONCUR:

BENKE, Acting P. J.

DATO, J.

                                             15