IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
Docket No. 40683
BARBARA CROSBY VEENSTRA, a/k/a ) 2014 Unpublished Opinion No. 354
BARBARA C. JANSSON, )
) Filed: February 7, 2014
Plaintiff, )
) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk
v. )
) THIS IS AN UNPUBLISHED
ALBERT PETE VEENSTRA, III, ) OPINION AND SHALL NOT
) BE CITED AS AUTHORITY
Defendant-Appellant, )
)
and )
)
IDAHO DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH & )
WELFARE, CHILD SUPPORT SERVICES, )
)
Intervenor-Respondent. )
)
Appeal from the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District, State of Idaho,
Gooding County. Hon. John K. Butler, District Judge; Hon. Casey U. Robinson,
Magistrate.
Appellate decision of district court affirming magistrate court’s order renewing
judgment for child support, affirmed.
Albert P. Veenstra, III, Boise, pro se appellant.
Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Attorney General; M. Scott Keim, Deputy Attorney
General, Boise, for respondent.
________________________________________________
LANSING, Judge
Albert Pete Veenstra, III, appeals from the district court’s decision on intermediate appeal
affirming the magistrate’s order granting the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare’s motion
to renew a child support judgment. We affirm.
1
I.
BACKGROUND
In 1991, a judgment was entered against Veenstra ordering him to pay child support for
his then three-year-old daughter. The Idaho Department of Health and Welfare, Bureau of Child
Support, has been involved in enforcing the child support obligation from its inception. 1
On October 17, 2011, the Department filed in the existing case a motion to renew the
judgment under Idaho Code §§ 10-1110 and 10-1111, as amended and modified by 2011 Idaho
Sessions Laws, ch. 104, § 5, and ch. 331, § 5. Veenstra responded with a number of filings,
including an objection and motion to dismiss. He contended primarily that the judgment had
already expired by operation of law and could not be renewed. At a hearing, the magistrate
rejected Veenstra’s objections and granted the Department’s motion. A renewed judgment was
filed May 16, 2012.
Veenstra appealed to the district court, raising various claims of error. The district court
affirmed the magistrate’s decision in all respects. Veenstra now further appeals.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
On review of a decision of the district court, rendered in its appellate capacity, we
examine the record from the magistrate court to determine whether there is substantial and
competent evidence to support the magistrate’s findings of fact and whether the magistrate’s
conclusions of law follow from those findings. Losser v. Bradstreet, 145 Idaho 670, 672, 183
P.3d 758, 760 (2008); State v. DeWitt, 145 Idaho 709, 711, 184 P.3d 215, 217 (Ct. App. 2008).
If those findings are so supported and the conclusions follow therefrom and if the district court
affirmed the magistrate’s decision, we affirm the district court’s decision as a matter of
procedure. Losser, 145 Idaho at 672, 183 P.3d at 760. Thus, this Court does not directly review
the decision of the magistrate court. Bailey v. Bailey, 153 Idaho 526, 529, 284 P.3d 970, 973
(2012). Rather, we are procedurally bound to affirm or reverse the decisions of the district court.
Id. Over questions of law, including statutory interpretation, we exercise free review. Fields v.
State, 149 Idaho 399, 400, 234 P.3d 723, 724 (2010); Rhoades v. State, 148 Idaho 247, 250, 220
1
See I.C. §§ 56-203A, 56-203B, 56-203C.
2
P.3d 1066, 1069 (2009); Downing v. State, 136 Idaho 367, 370, 33 P.3d 841, 844 (Ct. App.
2001).
III.
ANALYSIS
Veenstra first claims that res judicata and collateral estoppel prevented the Department
from relitigating the terms of his child support obligation. The district court held that because
Veenstra failed to raise the applicability of these doctrines before the magistrate, he was
precluded from doing so for the first time on intermediate appeal. The district court did not err;
issues not raised before the trial court are not to be considered for the first time on appeal.
Highland Enterprises, Inc. v. Barker, 133 Idaho 330, 341-42, 986 P.2d 996, 1007-08 (1999);
Schiewe v. Farwell, 125 Idaho 46, 49, 867 P.2d 920, 923 (1993). 2
Veenstra next contends that the magistrate erred by not granting his prehearing motion
seeking entry of default under Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 55(a)(1) on his motion to dismiss
because, he says, the Department did not “timely file an answer” to his “pleadings” within
twenty days. This claim of error is without merit because entry of default is allowed only
“[w]hen a party against whom a judgment for affirmative relief is sought has failed to plead or
otherwise defend as provided by these rules . . . .” I.R.C.P. 55(a)(1). By opposing the
Department’s motion, Veenstra was not seeking a “judgment for affirmative relief” within the
meaning of the rule as is the case when a plaintiff in a civil suit files a complaint against a
defendant or when the defendant responds with a counterclaim against the plaintiff. Neither a
motion nor a motion to dismiss a motion are “pleadings” by which a judgment may be sought as
that term is used in the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure. See generally I.R.C.P. 7(a) (types of
2
Moreover, the doctrines simply do not apply to this case. The doctrine of res judicata
encompasses both claim preclusion (true res judicata) and issue preclusion (collateral estoppel).
Ticor Title Co. v. Stanion, 144 Idaho 119, 123, 157 P.3d 613, 617 (2007); Hindmarsh v. Mock,
138 Idaho 92, 94, 57 P.3d 803, 805 (2002). Claim preclusion bars a subsequent action between
the same parties upon the same claim, and issue preclusion protects litigants from relitigating an
identical issue with the same party or its privy. Ticor, 144 Idaho at 123, 157 P.3d at 617;
Rodriguez v. Dep’t of Corr., 136 Idaho 90, 92, 29 P.3d 401, 403 (2001); Platz v. State, 154 Idaho
960, 971, 303 P.3d 647, 658 (Ct. App. 2013). Here, the Department’s motion seeking renewal of
the judgment did not seek to relitigate any of the terms of Veenstra’s child support obligation,
nor was the motion a subsequent action between the parties.
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pleadings allowed). In short, the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure do not authorize any such thing
as a default judgment on a motion.
Veenstra next argues that the applicable statute did not allow renewal of the judgment for
child support because the judgment expired in September of 2010 and the Department’s motion
for renewal was not filed until October of 2011. The district court held that the magistrate did
not err in rejecting this argument because that express statutory language in the Idaho Session
Laws allowed the Department until December 30, 2011, to file its motion for renewal. Review
of this claim of error requires reference to I.C. §§ 10-1110 and 10-1111, as amended and
modified by 2011 Idaho Session Laws, ch. 104, § 5, and ch. 331, § 5. As amended in 2011 and
effective at the time of the filing of the Department’s motion, I.C. § 10-1110 provides, “A lien
arising from the delinquency of a payment due under a judgment for support of a child issued by
an Idaho court continues until five (5) years after the death or emancipation of the last child for
whom support is owed under the judgment unless the underlying judgment is renewed . . . .”
Also as amended in 2011, Idaho Code § 10-1111(2) provides:
Unless the judgment has been satisfied, and prior to the expiration of the
lien created in section 10-1110, Idaho Code, or any renewal thereof, a court that
has entered a judgment for child support may, upon motion, renew such
judgment. The renewed judgment may be enforced in the same manner as the
original judgment, and the lien established thereby shall continue for ten (10)
years from the date of the renewed judgment.
Idaho Code Ann. § 10-1111 (West).
If these statutory provisions are viewed in isolation, Veenstra would be correct as the
child for whom he was ordered to pay support reached the age of majority in September of 2005.
The lien of the judgment thus expired in September 2010, and the Department’s renewal motion
was not filed until October 2011. However, under Section 5 the same 2011 amendments (2011
Idaho Session Laws ch. 104, § 5, and ch. 331, § 5), the Idaho Legislature also enacted the
following provision:
An emergency existing therefor, which emergency is hereby declared to
exist, this act shall be in full force and effect on and after its passage and
approval, and retroactively to July 1, 1995, and shall apply to all orders currently
being enforced by the Idaho Department of Health and Welfare Child Support
Program such that any Idaho judgment for child support that would otherwise
have expired since July 1, 1995, may be renewed on or before December 30,
2011.
4
Idaho Session Laws, §§ 331 and 104 (emphasis added).
Veenstra advances a number of challenges to the application of the italicized portion of
the law in this case. He first contends that the magistrate erred by determining that the
Department’s motion was timely because, in his view, that section of the session law is not part
of the “statute” but instead constitutes mere “legislative minutes” that conflict with the plain
language of I.C. §§ 10-1110 and 10-1111. Contrary to Veenstra’s position, the enactment is part
of the statute. Article IV, Section 10 of the Idaho Constitution provides, in relevant part: “Every
bill passed by the Legislature shall, before it becomes a law, be presented to the governor. If he
approve[s], he shall sign it, and thereupon it shall become a law.” Further: “All general laws
enacted at any session of the legislature shall be printed in a volume known as the Session
Laws.” Idaho Code § 67-904(1). Thus, the Session Laws of the state of Idaho are the complete
and official record of Idaho statutes. Veenstra has shown no district court error in the rejection
of this contention.
Veenstra next contends that because the enactment allows renewal of an “Idaho judgment
for child support that would otherwise have expired since July 1, 1995,” it necessarily does not
allow renewal of child support judgments that have already expired. The district court rejected
this argument, holding that “if the language meant what the Appellant argues it does, then the
law would be meaningless.” We agree with the district court. When this Court must engage in
statutory construction because an ambiguity exists, it has the duty to ascertain the legislative
intent and give effect to that intent. State v. Beard, 135 Idaho 641, 646, 22 P.3d 116, 121 (Ct.
App. 2001). It is incumbent upon a court to give an ambiguous statute an interpretation that will
not render it a nullity, id., and effect must be given to all the words of the statute if possible, so
that none will be void, superfluous, or redundant. State v. Mercer, 143 Idaho 108, 109, 138 P.3d
308, 309 (2006). Because I.C. §§ 10-1110 and 10-1111 in isolation already allow renewal of
judgments that have not yet expired, if the exception for judgments being enforced by the
Department also applied only to judgments that have not yet expired, as Veenstra contends, then
the additional provision would be entirely redundant. Instead, the clear intent of the provision is
to provide a time window for the Department to move to renew judgments for child support that
expired at any time since July 1, 1995. Veenstra has shown no district court error in the rejection
of this argument.
5
Lastly, Veenstra focuses on language of the provision providing that child support
judgments “may be renewed on or before December 30, 2011,” and argues that because the
renewed judgment was not obtained until May 16, 2012, the renewal was untimely. Again, we
disagree. The statute of limitations for renewal of a judgment under I.C. § 10-1111 requires only
that the motion for renewal be filed within the time limit; it does not require that the court act on
the motion within the time limit. Smith v. Smith, 131 Idaho 800, 802, 964 P.2d 667, 669 (Ct.
App. 1998). Here, the Department’s October 17, 2011, motion was timely filed. Veenstra has
shown no district court error.
The district court’s appellate decision affirming the magistrate court’s order is affirmed.
Chief Judge GUTIERREZ and Judge GRATTON CONCUR.
6