MOORE, Judge.
Deborah Ruth Herzog ("the former wife") appeals from a judgment of the Coffee Circuit Court ("the trial court") modifying the monthly child-support obligation of Kevin P. Stonerook ("the former husband").
The former husband testified that he and the former wife are both service members in the United States Army who were stationed in Hawaii at the time of the entry of their uncontested divorce judgment on September 14, 2009 ("the Hawaii divorce judgment"). According to the former husband, the same Hawaii court that entered the Hawaii divorce judgment modified that judgment on January 22, 2010 ("the Hawaii amended judgment). Pursuant to the terms of the Hawaii amended judgment, the former husband agreed to pay child support to the former wife, who was designated as the primary physical
The former husband testified that, in June or August 2010, the former wife and the children relocated to Alabama. The former wife testified that, in March 2012, she received notice from the Army that she was being reassigned to a station in Pennsylvania, and, according to the former wife, she notified the former husband regarding that reassignment.
On April 5, 2012, the former husband petitioned to register the Hawaii divorce judgment and the Hawaii amended judgment in the trial court, asserting that he had been reassigned to Missouri and that the former wife had been reassigned to Fort Rucker, Alabama. The former husband sought a modification of his child-support obligation for the parties' three minor children, arguing that the child-support award should be recalculated based on the parties' current income information. The former husband asserted that he was attaching to his petition for registration and modification two copies of the Hawaii divorce judgment, including one certified copy, and two copies of the Hawaii amended judgment, including one certified copy. The former husband also asserted in his petition that he had paid child support as ordered and that he owed no child-support arrearage. The former husband's filings in the trial court were not verified filings; rather, they were signed by only his attorney.
On May 11, 2012, the former wife's attorney filed a limited notice of appearance in the trial court for the purpose of filing an objection to the former husband's petition and a motion to dismiss. In her objection and her motion to dismiss, the former wife argued that the former husband's petition was due to be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction. The former husband filed a response to the former wife's objection and her motion to dismiss. On August 24, 2012, following a hearing, the trial court entered an order finding that the former husband "has properly proceeded to register the relevant support orders from the State of Hawaii and that jurisdiction, personal and subject matter, is proper in Alabama"; the trial court then overruled the former wife's objection and denied her motion to dismiss.
On October 5, 2012, the former wife filed an answer and a counterclaim seeking, among other things, the right to claim all three of the parties' children as dependents for income-tax purposes each year; to modify the age of majority of the children from 18 years to 19 years, the age of majority in Alabama; and to hold the former husband in contempt of court for his alleged failure to pay medical and other bills incurred by the parties' children.
On May 1, 2013, following the hearing, the trial court entered a judgment in which it, among other things, denied the former wife's renewed oral motion to dismiss the former husband's petition for lack of jurisdiction; modified the former husband's child-support obligation to $1,323.15 per month, which, it noted, had been calculated pursuant to Rule 32, Ala. R. Jud. Admin.; denied the former wife's request to modify the age of majority for child-support purposes from the age of majority under Hawaii
The former wife raises several issues on appeal. Because we find the former wife's argument regarding the trial court's lack of subject-matter jurisdiction dispositive, however, we pretermit discussion of the former wife's remaining arguments on appeal.
Arvin N. Am. Auto., Inc. v. Rodgers, 71 So.3d 669, 672 (Ala.Civ.App.2011).
Section 30-3A-609, Ala.Code 1975, a part of the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act ("the UIFSA"), § 30-3A-101 et seq., Ala.Code 1975, provides:
(Emphasis added.) Section 30-3A-602, Ala.Code 1975, which is located in Part 1 of Article 6 of the UIFSA, outlines the procedure to be followed to register the support order of another state and provides, in pertinent part:
A court of this state may modify a child-support order issued by another state only after that child-support order has been properly registered. See § 30-3A-610, Ala.Code 1975. "Only strict compliance with [the UIFSA] registration procedure confers subject-matter jurisdiction upon an Alabama circuit court to ... modify a foreign child-support judgment." Ex parte Ortiz, 108 So.3d 1046, 1050 (Ala.Civ.App. 2012).
Because the former husband sought to modify both the Hawaii divorce judgment and the Hawaii amended judgment (sometimes
In an order dated August 24, 2012, the trial court determined that the former husband "has properly proceeded to register the relevant support orders from the State of Hawaii and that jurisdiction, personal and subject matter, is proper in Alabama." However, "[o]ur review of the registration issue is de novo." L.V. v. I.H., 123 So.3d 954, 958 (Ala.Civ.App. 2013). Based on our independent review of the filings, we conclude that the former husband did not strictly comply with § 30-3A-602.
Even treating the petition filed by the former husband as the required letter of transmittal, see L.V. v. I.H., supra, and even assuming that the former husband actually filed the requisite number of copies of the Hawaii judgments as he claims, it remains that the former husband did not file a sworn statement regarding any arrearage. Instead, the former husband merely alleged in his unverified petition that he was not in arrears on any child support.
In his brief to this court, the former husband asserts that he substantially complied with § 30-3A-602(a)(3) because, he says, his pleading notified the former wife that he was contending that no arrearage was due and the former wife made no counterclaim for any arrearage. However, the former wife did, in fact, file a counterclaim for a rule nisi based on past-due unpaid medical expenses. Section 30-3A-101(22), Ala.Code 1975, specifically defines a "support order" to include a "judgment... for the benefit of a child ... which provides for ... health care," so healthcare expenses are a form of child support. To have properly registered the Hawaii judgments, the former husband was required to file a sworn statement of any unpaid health-care expenses due under those judgments, but he did not. The former husband may have maintained that, at the time he filed his pleadings, he was unaware of those expenses or that he did not believe he owed those expenses; however, the burden remained upon him to state those contentions in a sworn statement as opposed to merely asserting in his unverified petition that he did not owe any arrearage.
In Williams v. Williams, 91 So.3d 56, 61-62 (Ala.Civ.App.2012), the father in that case had pointed out that "other jurisdictions have held that, in the absence of prejudice to the opposing party, a failure to properly register a foreign judgment does not deprive a court of jurisdiction to modify that judgment under the UIFSA." This court proceeded to observe that "this court, like the appellate courts of many other states, ... has consistently held that a foreign child-support order must be registered before an Alabama circuit court
Because strict compliance with the UIFSA is required, we conclude that a parent attempting to register a foreign judgment must file a sworn statement of any arrearage due, including any unpaid health-care expenses. If that parent asserts that no arrearage exists, the parent must state that contention under oath in the sworn statement. A mere assertion in an unverified pleading that no arrearage is due does not qualify as a sworn statement for the purposes of § 30-3A-602(a)(3).
Because the former husband did not file the requisite sworn statement, he failed to strictly comply with § 30-3A-602 in registering, in their entirety, the Hawaii divorce judgment and the Hawaii amended judgment. Because the Hawaii divorce judgment and the Hawaii amended judgment were not registered in strict compliance with the UIFSA, the former husband's petition for modification did not trigger the subject-matter jurisdiction of the trial court. See S.A.T. v. E.D., 972 So.2d 804, 807 (Ala.Civ.App.2007). Thus, the trial court did not have subject-matter jurisdiction to modify either the Hawaii divorce judgment or the Hawaii amended judgment, and the trial court's modification judgment is therefore void. Mattes, 60 So.3d at 891. "A void judgment will not support an appeal." Id. We, therefore, dismiss the former wife's appeal, albeit with instructions to the trial court to vacate its May 1, 2013, judgment.
APPEAL DISMISSED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
THOMPSON, P.J., and PITTMAN, THOMAS, and DONALDSON, JJ., concur.