FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT
:
STEVE CARTER
Attorney General of Indiana
FRANCES BARROW
Deputy Attorney General
Indianapolis, Indiana
IN RE: PATERNITY OF S.J.S. )
)
ANGELA MICHELLE SHEHAN, )
)
Appellant-Petitioner, )
)
vs. ) No. 03A05-0408-CV-441
)
DOUGLAS EUGENE HOGAN, )
)
Appellee-Respondent. )
OPINION FOR PUBLICATION
2. That an income withholding order for the respondent's child support obligation is in
place.
3. That in addition, the respondent has been informed that his tax refunds in
the total amount of $2,781.00 is being held and that the tax refunds
being held and not yet applied and the amount being applied will exceed
the arrearage amount.
4. That in addition the amount of $138.07 was withdrawn from the respondent's savings
account to be applied toward the arrearage in this cause.
5. That attaching funds from the respondent's bank accounts will work a hardship on
the respondent and the respondent's family.
(App. 10-11).
On July 1, 2004, the State filed its response and motion to dismiss
Hogan's motion to set aside the income withholding order sent to Evansville Teachers
FCU. In part, the State alleged:
3. On or about June 2, 2004, the Bartholomew County Prosecutor's OfficeChild Support Division
issued the Order/Notice to Withhold Income for Child Support . . . [to]
Evansville Teachers FCU . . . as information was received, pursuant to federal
and state statute, regarding monies in a bank account held by the Respondent.
At that time, the Respondent's child support arrearage was approximately $2,720.00.
As a result of said Order/Notice, on or about June 10, 2004, the
Clerk of Bartholomew County received a check in the amount of $138.07 from
Evansville Teachers FCU, which was then disbursed to the Petitioner and applied to
the Respondent's child support arrearage under this cause number.
(App. 12-13). The State noted that Hogan had received notice with regard
to previous income withholding orders, and noted that the relevant statutes provided for
separate procedures for contesting income withholding orders depending upon whether the orders were
issued by a court or the Title IV-D agency.
The CCS does not indicate that a hearing was held on the motion
to set aside. However, a CCS entry for July 15, 2004, indicates
that Hogan's motion to set aside was granted. In pertinent part, the
order provides:
Comes now the Court and grants Motion to Set Aside:
1. Assets are not income.
2. The attachment violates the 14th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
3. The attachment violates Article 1, section 12 of Indiana Constitution.
(App. 9).
The State brought this appeal.
Cox v. Anderson, 801 N.E.2d 775, 778-79 (Ind. Ct. App. 2004).
Included within the federal statutory system is a provision for the Federal Parent
Locator Service. See 42 U.S.C. § 653. The Service exists, inter
alia, "[f]or the purpose of establishing parentage or establishing, setting the amount of,
modifying, or enforcing child support obligations, . . . ." 42 U.S.C.
§ 653(a)(2). One express purpose of the Service is to obtain information
with regard to assets owned by individuals with child support obligations in order
for that information to be transmitted to Title IV-D agencies. The statute
provides, in part:
The Federal Parent Locator Service shall obtain and transmit to any authorized person
. . . .
(A) information on, or facilitating the discovery of, the location of any individual
(i) who is under an obligation to pay child support;
(ii) against whom such an obligation is sought;
(iii) to whom such an obligation is owed; or
(iv) who has or may have parental rights with respect to a child,
Id. (emphasis added).
Further, 42 U.S.C. § 666(a) establishes procedures required by states in order to
improve the effectiveness of child support enforcement, including:
(17) Financial institution data matches.
(A) In general. - Procedures under which the State agency shall
enter into agreements with financial institutions doing business in the State-
(i) to develop and operate, in coordination with such financial institutions, and the Federal
Parent Locator Service in the case of financial institutions doing business in two
or more States, a data match system . . . in which each
such financial institution is required to provide . . . the name, record
address, social security number or other taxpayer identification number, and other identifying information
for each noncustodial parent who maintains an account at such institution and who
owes past-due support, . . . and
(ii) in response to a notice of lien or levy, encumber or surrender, as
the case may be, assets held by such institution on behalf of any
noncustodial parent who is subject to a child support lien . . .
.
Id. (emphasis added).
In order to implement the various Title IV-D requirements imposed upon states by
the federal Social Security Act, Indiana's General Assembly established the Child Support Bureau.
Collier v. Collier, 702 N.E.2d 351, 353 (Ind. 1998). "The duties
of the Bureau are set out in Indiana Code § 12-17-2-21" and include
the obligation to
(4) Implement income withholding in any Title IV-D case:
(A) with an arrearage; and
(B) without an order issued by a court or an administrative agency.
Id. (quoting Ind. Code § 12-17-2-21(a)).
Indiana statutory provisions require financial institutions to provide information to child support divisions
of the counties when noncustodial parents are delinquent in child support and "hold
one (1) or more accounts with the financial institution." I.C. § 12-17-2-33.1(b)(1).
Further, pursuant to Indiana Code § 31-9-2-56, "income" is defined in accordance
with "the meaning set forth in IC 31-18-1-6." Indiana Code § 31-18-1-6
states: "'Income' means anything of value owed to an obligor."
It is patently clear from the foregoing federal and state law that "assets"
constitute "income" for the purposes of implementing Title IV-D. Here, the assets
within an account held by an obligor, in this case Hogan, constitute "income"
for the purposes of an income withholding order.
As noted by the State, when the facts are not in dispute and
an appeal presents only questions of law, we owe no deference to a
trial court's determination. See Carmichael v. Siegel, 754 N.E.2d 619, 625 (Ind.
Ct. App. 2001). We evaluate such questions de novo. Id.
Thus, the trial court erred by determining that assets do not constitute income.
The State also urges that the trial court's findings that attachment of the
account violated both the federal and Indiana constitutions was gratuitous and unnecessary to
the outcome. This is especially so where Hogan did not argue any
such violations in his motion to set aside the Notice/Order and the trial
court offered a nonconstitutional ground for its decision. We agree.
In Indiana Wholesale Wine & Liquor v. State, 695 N.E.2d 99 (Ind. 1998),
our supreme court stated:
The doctrine of judicial restraint in deciding the constitutionality of statutes traces its
genesis to Chief Justice Marshall, but it was Justice Brandeis's concurring opinion in
Ashwander v. Tennessee Valley Auth., 297 U.S. 288, 56 S.Ct. 466, 80 L.Ed.688
(1936), "that gave the principle so much of its enduring importance." In
Ashwander, Justice Brandeis set forth
"a series of [seven] rules under which [the
Court] ha[d] avoided passing upon a large part of all the constitutional questions
pressed upon it for decision." Two of the rules present themselves for
invocation in the case at hand. First, "[t]he [Supreme] Court will not
pass upon a constitutional question although properly presented by the record, if there
is also present some other ground upon which the case may be disposed
of . . . . Thus, if a case can be decided
on either of two grounds, one involving a constitutional question, the other a
question of statutory construction . . ., the Court will decide only the
latter." Second, "'[w]hen the validity of [a statute] is drawn in question,
and even if a serious doubt of constitutionality is raised, it is a
cardinal principle that [the Supreme Court] will first ascertain whether a construction of
the statute is fairly possible by which the question may be avoided.'"
Id. at 106 (citations omitted in part) (footnotes omitted).
Here, the trial court was not presented with constitutional bases for setting aside
the Notice/Order. Because the trial court offered a nonconstitutional basis for its
ruling, it need not have raised, sua sponte, the constitutional issues.
The trial court's judgment is reversed.
FRIEDLANDER, J., and MATHIAS, J., concur.