In the
Missouri Court of Appeals
Western District
STATE OF MISSOURI, DEPARTMENT
OF SOCIAL SERVICES, FAMILY
SUPPORT DIVISION, WD78218
Appellant, OPINION FILED:
v. November 10, 2015
THOMAS EDWARD DILLOW,
Respondent.
Appeal from the Circuit Court of Cole County, Missouri
The Honorable Daniel Richard Green, Judge
Before Division Two:
Mark D. Pfeiffer, P.J., Lisa White Hardwick, and James Edward Welsh, JJ.
The Family Support Division of the Missouri Department of Social Services (Division)
appeals the circuit court's judgment granting Thomas Edward Dillow's motion to abate his child
support arrearages. The Division contends that the circuit court erred in abating Dillow's child
support arrearages because he failed to satisfy the requirements of section 452.340, RSMo Cum.
Supp. 2013, for abating child support. We reverse the circuit court's judgment and remand to
enter judgment consistent with this opinion.
Mother filed a “Petition for Declaration of Paternity, Support and for Reimbursement of
Necessary Support” against Dillow on October 12, 1995. The circuit court found that the
summons was served upon a household member at Dillow's residence. A commissioner held a
hearing on December 12, 1995, at which Dillow did not appear. The Commissioner found that
Dillow was the father of the child and found that Dillow was obligated to pay child support in the
amount of $570.00 per month. On February 1, 1996, the circuit court adopted the
Commissioner's Findings and Recommendations as a final order of the court.
At some point after the circuit court's order on February 1, 1996, Dillow rekindled his
relationship with Mother for about six months. He claimed that Mother never told him about the
child support order during this time. He said that he did not know about the child support order
until he was arrested in February 2001 for felony nonsupport. In March 2001, Dillow pled guilty
and was released on probation. Dillow started making child support payments but stopped
paying in March 2002. In August 2002, a probation warrant was issued. Thereafter, Dillow was
sentenced to four years in the Department of Corrections and served time in the Department of
Corrections from April 2004 to December 2005. After Dillow was released, he began making
child support payments again. At some point he stopped making payments, and, in 2007, he was
charged again with felony nonsupport. Dillow was sentenced again to the Department of
Corrections. Then, in 2009, he got out of the Department of Corrections but did not start making
child support payments until November. In January 2011, the circuit court, at the Division's
request, modified the child support amount that Dillow was obligated to pay and ordered Dillow
to pay child support in the amount of $206.00 per month.
On January 22, 2014, Dillow filed a motion for abatement of child support arrearages
with the circuit court. In the motion, Dillow alleged that: (1) he was improperly served with the
original paternity petition; (2) he was unaware of the child support order issued in 1996 until he
was arrested in 2001 on felony nonsupport charges; (3) he was never notified of the residence or
contact information for the child or the child's mother; (4) he was denied any contact with the
2
child; (5) he has never had contact with the child and has no knowledge as to the whereabouts of
Mother; and (6) he was incarcerated in the Missouri Department of Corrections for a total of
three and a half years1 due to nonsupport of the child. In the motion, Dillow acknowledged that
he owed back child support arrearages in the amount of approximately $93,000.00. Dillow
requested that the circuit court abate his child support, order all arrearages to be abated and
cancelled, and asked "for further order as [the] court deem[ed] just and necessary."
In response to Dillow's motion for abatement, the Division asserted as an affirmative
defense that "between September 1999 and April 2006 the Family Support Division paid out
public assistance benefits in the form of Temporary Assistance to Need Families (TANF) for the
support of [the child.]" The Division alleged that, as of January 1, 2014, Dillow was "indebted to
the State of Missouri in the amount of $8,111.58 for TANF benefits paid out for the support of
[the child]."
The circuit court held a hearing on Dillow's motion. Mother did not attend the hearing.2
At the hearing, Dillow testified that he tried to write letters to contact Mother over the years. He
said that he did not know where she was and that the St. Charles County Child Support Office
would not give him her address. The Division said that it did not reveal Mother's whereabouts
because her case was classified as a "family violence case." Section 454.440.9(2), RSMo Cum.
Supp. 2013, prohibits the Division from "disclosing any information relating to the location of
1
In the circuit court's judgment, the circuit court concluded that Dillow was incarcerated for two and a half
years.
2
The Division notified Mother of Dillow's motion for abatement. Mother asked the court to continue a
hearing scheduled for June 23, 2014, so that she could obtain legal counsel. The circuit court continued the matter
until July 14, 2014, but Mother failed to appear on that date. The circuit court set the matter for August 8, 2014,
and notice was sent to Mother but was returned undeliverable with no forwarding address.
3
one party to another party . . . [i]f there is reason to believe that such disclosure of information
may result in physical or emotional harm to the other party."
The Division entered into evidence the Division's Support Calculation Summary, which
was a computer generated printout showing that, as of August 6, 2014, Dillow owed $90,001.27
and that $25,138.21 had been assigned to the Division for the state assistance that had been
provided.
On January 16, 2015, the circuit court entered its amended judgment decreeing that the
amount of Dillow's child support arrearages was zero and that his State debt was also zero.3 The
court found that Dillow's child support arrearages should be abated because: (1) Mother failed to
provide some means of contact for Dillow to exercise visitation or have any contact with the
child and failed to show good cause why she should not have provided visitation or contact with
the child; (2) Dillow served two and a half years in the Department of Correction for his failure
to pay support and has been punished for his failure to comply with the order and thus any
arrearages incurred prior to and up through his dates of incarceration should be waived; (3)
Dillow was not aware of the support order entered in 1995, and Mother's "use of the domestic
violence claim” to keep her address from Dillow was "an abuse of the statute and intent of the
law;" and (4) the Division did not present evidence of the amount, types, and specific recipient of
state assistance provided on behalf of the minor child or Mother. The Division appeals.
In its sole point on appeal, the Division contends that the circuit court erred in abating
Dillow's child support arrearages because he failed to satisfy the requirements of section
452.340, RSMo Cum. Supp. 2013, for abating child support. In response, Dillow asserts that the
3
The circuit court also found that Dillow's child support obligation terminated as of December 2013 due to
the child's emancipation.
4
Division has no standing to assert a claim on appeal in regard to child support arrearages above
and beyond that claimed to be owed as State debt and has no standing to assert any claim that he
owes any debt to the State because the Division failed to prove the amount, types, and specific
recipient of assistance for which the State was seeking reimbursement.
"Standing requires that a party have a personal stake arising from a threatened or actual
injury." Schweich v. Nixon, 408 S.W.3d 769, 774 (Mo. banc 2013). The evidence established
that Mother had assigned to the Division the child support arrearages for the State assistance that
she had been provided. Father's motion for abatement most certainly threatened the Division's
financial interest in those arrearages. When a parent assigns the right to collect payment of child
support to the Division, the Division is a necessary party to the case. Division of Child Support
Enforcement v. Shelton, 25 S.W.3d 165, 166 (Mo. App. 2000). The Division, therefore, had
standing in this case to defend its rights to the assigned arrearages.
We agree with Dillow, however, that the Division has no standing to assert a claim to
child support arrearages above and beyond that claimed to be owed as State debt. Mother did not
attend the hearing on the motion for abatement, even though she entered her appearance in the
matter, and she did not appeal from the circuit court's judgment in this matter. Thus, our decision
that follows in regard to the propriety of the circuit court's action in abating Dillow's child
support arrearages is limited to the State's interest in the child support arrearages.
The Division argues that, pursuant to section 452.340, the circuit court may abate child
support under two circumstances only: (1) for those periods of time over thirty days where the
custodial parent "has voluntarily relinquished custody of a child to the parent ordered to pay
child support," section 452.340.2, or (2) when the custodial parent "without good cause, fail[s] to
provide visitation or physical and legal or physical or legal custody to the other parent pursuant
5
to the terms of a judgment of dissolution, legal separation or modifications thereof," section
452.340.7. Because "'the circumstances under which child support may be abated are controlled
by statute, . . . abatement is . . . impliedly forbidden under all other circumstances.'" Peine v.
Peine, 200 S.W.3d 567, 574 (Mo. App. 2006) (quoting Anderson v. Aronberg, 927 S.W.2d 931,
936 (Mo.App.1996)). In other words, section 452.340 precludes the court from abating child
support arrearages unless the statute is stringently followed. Kessinger v. Kessinger, 829 S.W.2d
658, 660 (Mo. App. 1992). "Abatement is not self-executing. It can only take place upon a
finding of a court that the statutory prerequisites have been met." Id. "By specifying the
circumstances under which a child support obligation will abate, the legislature has impliedly
forbidden abatement under all other circumstances." Schubert v. Tolivar, 905 S.W.2d 924, 927
(Mo. App. 1995).
Dillow neither pleaded nor presented evidence that Mother voluntarily relinquished
custody of a child to him or that Mother failed to provide visitation pursuant to the terms of a
judgment of dissolution or legal separation or modifications thereof. Although Dillow
complained about his lack of visitation with the child, "'[t]he language of [section 452.340.7]
limits its application to decrees of dissolution, legal separation or modifications thereof.'" Cule v.
Cule, 457 S.W.3d 858, 864 (Mo. App. 2015) (quoting Gulmen v. Gulmen, 851 S.W.2d 37, 39-40
(Mo.App.1993)). We have no order of visitation "pursuant to the terms of a judgment of
dissolution, legal separation or modifications thereof" before us. § 452.370.7. As we have
already mentioned, "[b]y specifying the circumstances under which a child support obligation
will abate, the legislature has impliedly forbidden abatement under all other circumstances."
Schubert, 905 S.W.2d at 927. Thus, the circuit court erred in finding that abatement of the child
support arrearages was justified because Mother failed to provide some means of contact for
6
Dillow to exercise visitation or have any contact with the child and failed to show good cause
why she should not have provided visitation or contact with the child as required by section
452.340. Moreover, to the extent that the circuit court found that Mother's use of the "domestic
violence claim to keep her address from [Dillow] was an abuse of the statute and the intent of the
law," we again note that section 452.340.7 limits its application to decrees of dissolution, legal
separation, or modifications thereof.4
Dillow does not contest that he sought abatement of his child support arrearages pursuant
to section 452.340, he merely contends that the Division has no standing to assert any claim that
he owes any debt to the State because the Division failed to prove the amount, types, and specific
recipient of assistance for which the State was seeking reimbursement. Dillow fails to
understand, however, that, as the party seeking abatement of his child support arrearages under
section 452.340, he bore the burden of proof. Brown v. Brown, 370 S.W.3d 684, 688 (Mo. App.
2012). Thus, to the extent that the circuit court found that abatement was proper because "the
Division did not present evidence of the amount, types, and specific recipient of state assistance
provided on behalf of the minor child or Mother," it was an improper shifting of the burden of
proof.5 Dillow bore the burden of establishing that his circumstances fell within section 452.340
to be entitled to abatement of his child support arrearages. This he could not and did not do.
4
The paternity judgment awarded no visitation. So, even if we were to declare that the paternity judgment
somehow falls within section 452.340.7's parameters of "decrees of dissolution, legal separation or modifications,"
section 452.340.7 still would not apply because the paternity judgment awarded no visitation rights. Under section
452.340.7, the circuit court could abate Dillow's child support arrearages if it found that mother had failed, without
good cause, to provide visitation "pursuant to the terms of a judgment of dissolution, legal separation or
modifications thereof."
5
"For example, it was undisputed that unchallenged judgments existed establishing the original child
support amount and modifications thereto. Those support payments, thus, constitute substantial and competent
evidence of the monthly amount required to be paid by Dillow. In an abatement proceeding, then, it was Dillow's
burden of proving that the circumstances were such that he was entitled to an abatement of those undisputed
amounts...not that the Division had to prove he was not entitled to credits."
7
We acknowledge that case law supports that, under certain circumstances, the circuit
court may apply "equitable principles to fashion a remedy" with regard to child support
arrearages. State ex rel. Div. of Family Servs. v. Isadore, 893 S.W.2d 872, 876 (Mo. App. 1995).
Indeed, although courts "'are restrained from deciding an unpleaded factual issue, a court of
equity can grant any relief warranted by pleaded issues whether or not it was specifically
included in the prayer for relief,' but only 'when such relief is fully supported by facts which
were either pleaded or tried by consent.'" Colbert v. State Family Support Div., 264 S.W.3d 699,
702 (Mo. App. 2008) (quoting Feinberg v. Feinberg, 924 S.W.2d 328, 330 (Mo. App. 1996). The
facts in this case, however, do not support the application of equitable principles to fashion a
remedy with regard to Dillow's child support arrearages.
The circuit court found that, because Dillow served two and a half years in the
Department of Corrections, abatement of his child support arrearages was justified. Unlike what
the circuit court held, the fact that Dillow was punished for his failure to comply with the child
support order by having to serve two and a half years in the Department of Corrections does not
establish that "any arrearages incurred prior to and up through his dates of incarceration should
be waived." Holding Dillow responsible to pay child support is not an additional punishment for
the criminal nonsupport case in which Dillow was incarcerated. Supporting one's child is not
punishment. The arrearages occurred due to Dillow's failure to pay court-ordered support when
it became due and requiring him to pay those arrearages is not punishment but is a responsibility
that he has as the child's father. "[T]he primary purpose of child support is to provide for the
child's welfare." Gerlach v. Adair, 211 S.W.3d 663, 669 (Mo. App. 2007).
Further, the fact that Dillow claims that he did not become aware of the 1996 child
support order until 2001 does not support abatement of his child support arrearages. The
8
evidence showed that in 1995 Dillow was served with the “Petition for Declaration of Paternity,
Support and for Reimbursement of Necessary Support” at Dillow's last known address on
October 18, 1995. The circuit court found that service was obtained upon a household member
at what was believed to be the residence of Dillow. However, Dillow claimed, and the circuit
court found Dillow credible, that he was not made aware of the order of child support until he
was arrested in 2001. Dillow, however, did not seek to set aside the judgment entered on
“Petition for Declaration of Paternity, Support and for Reimbursement of Necessary Support,”6
and the circuit court did not set aside the judgment as void under Rule74.06(b)(4) for lack of
personal jurisdiction.
Because no substantial evidence supported the circuit court's judgment and because the
circuit court erroneously declared or applied the law in regard to abatement of child support, we
reverse the circuit court's judgment abating Dillow's child support arrearages owed to the State
and its finding that Dillow's debt owed to the State was zero. We remand to the circuit court to
enter judgment consistent with this opinion.
/s/ JAMES EDWARD WELSH
James Edward Welsh, Judge
All concur.
6
Indeed, at the hearing, Dillow's attorney in questioning Dillow said "we're a little past the time limit to
challenge the service, but the point is you didn't know about it, is that correct?"
9