MATTER OF DUNCAN

Decision Date23 February 2000
Citation165 Or. App. 624,996 P.2d 1010
PartiesIn the Matter of the Custody of Baillie Aurora Duncan, a Minor Child. Robb ALLOWAY, Father, Respondent, and Aimee Rene DUNCAN, Mother, Appellant.
CourtOregon Court of Appeals

Kurt C. Peterson, Los Angeles, CA, argued the cause for appellant. With him on the brief was Hall Law Firm.

Mark A. Gordon waived appearance for respondent.

Before LANDAU, Presiding Judge, and LINDER and BREWER, Judges.

BREWER, J.

In this child custody case, mother appeals from a contempt judgment imposing remedial sanctions for her violation of an ex parte status quo order that prohibited her from removing the parties' minor child from father's home.1 Mother contests the trial court's authority to enter the contempt judgment on several grounds, one of which is dispositive. Mother contends that the trial court did not have personal jurisdiction over her when she removed the child and that the alleged violation of the status quo order, therefore, could not serve as a basis for the contempt charge. We agree and reverse.

The parties are the unmarried parents of a child born in September 1997. From early 1998 until September 18, 1998, the parties and their child lived together at father's parents' home. On August 17, 1998, while the parties were still living together, father filed a petition in the trial court seeking custody of child. He also filed an ex parte motion for immediate temporary custody of child and sought an order requiring mother to show cause why the temporary order should not remain in effect during the pendency of the action. The trial court did not award temporary custody to father but, instead, entered an order "Establishing Status Quo and * * * to Show Cause." That order directed that child remain in residence at father's parents' house and that the parties not "interfere with [child's] current routine." The trial court also ordered mother to appear and show cause why the status quo order should not remain in effect throughout the pendency of the case. Mother was personally served on the same day with copies of the custody petition, the motion for temporary custody and supporting affidavit, and the status quo and show cause order. Mother was not, however, served at that time with summons in accordance with ORCP 7 D.

On September 18, mother moved out of father's parents' home and took child with her. On the same day, mother filed a motion to dismiss the custody proceeding and to quash service of all orders therein. Among other arguments, mother asserted that, because she had not been served with summons, the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction over her.

On November 13, the trial court denied mother's motion to dismiss but granted her motion to quash service of the custody petition because she had not been served with summons. However, the court denied mother's motion to quash service of the status quo and show cause order, reasoning that it was authorized to enter the order despite the lack of summons. On November 30, father filed a motion and the court entered an order directing mother to show cause why she should not be held in contempt for her removal of child on September 18.2 On December 9, father filed a motion for alternate service of the summons and petition seeking custody and of the contempt and show cause order. Father's supporting affidavits alleged that, despite repeated efforts, he had been unable to locate mother following her departure on September 18. The trial court found that father had shown, as required by ORCP 7 D(6)(a),3 that service could not be made on mother by any method specified in ORCP or any other statute and that service on mother's attorney was the method most reasonably calculated to apprise mother of the existence and pendency of the action. Based on those findings, the court granted father's motion and ordered that service be made on mother's attorney. On December 10, mother's attorney was served with true copies of summons and the petition for custody, the show cause contempt order and supporting documents, and the order allowing alternate service and supporting affidavit.

On December 21, mother moved to quash the order allowing alternate service. She also moved to quash the contempt show cause order because it had not been personally served on her. The trial court denied both motions following a hearing held on December 22, 1998, that was consolidated with the contempt hearing. The trial court also found mother in contempt for wilfully removing child on September 18 in violation of the status quo order.4 In the ensuing judgment of contempt, the court found that mother was personally served with and was aware of the status quo order for approximately one month before she removed child. The judgment required mother to purge the contempt by complying with a specific parenting time schedule and awarded attorney fees and costs to father. Mother appeals from the contempt judgment.

As noted, mother argues that the contempt judgment is invalid because the trial court lacked personal jurisdiction to enforce the status quo order on which the judgment was based. Mother argues that no personal jurisdiction existed because she had not, when she removed child, been served with summons in the custody proceeding. The trial court concluded that, despite father's failure to have mother served with summons, it had personal jurisdiction over mother because it had subject matter jurisdiction in the custody proceeding and because mother was personally served with the status quo order.

The trial court correctly noted that this action was commenced when father filed his petition for custody. See ORCP 3 (action is commenced on filing of complaint). It is also correct, as the trial court observed, that the court's authority to issue a temporary ex parte order arose on commencement of the action. ORS 109.103; Forte v. Page, 172 Or. 645, 651-52, 143 P.2d 669 (1943); Breese v. Bramwell, 102 Or. 76, 78, 201 P. 729 (1921). That authority did not depend on service of summons. Id.

However, the decisive question in this case is not whether ...

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3 cases
  • Shriners Hosps. for Children v. Woods
    • United States
    • Oregon Court of Appeals
    • August 3, 2016
    ... ... Nevertheless, in this case, reliance on either point was mistaken as a matter of law.In Hutchins, we explained that there is no timeliness requirement for moving to set aside a void judgment. 188 Or.App. at 468, 72 P.3d 638. In ... More specifically, actual notice of the pendency of an action is insufficient to excuse noncompliance with ORCP 7. Alloway and Duncan , 165 Or.App. 624, 629, 996 P.2d 1010 (2000) (citing Murphy v. Price , 131 Or.App. 693, 699, 886 P.2d 1047 (1994), rev. den. , 321 Or. 137, 894 P.2d ... ...
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    • United States
    • Oregon Court of Appeals
    • February 23, 2000
  • Robison v. Theele
    • United States
    • Kentucky Court of Appeals
    • April 24, 2015
    ... ... On January 25, 2011, Chip responded with his own demand for sole custody or joint custody. The matter was not resolved until May 17, 2012, in a separation agreement that was incorporated into their decree of dissolution on May 30, 2012. Therefore, ... Alloway and Duncan, 165 Or.App. 624, 996 P.2d 1010 (2000). That was the only similar pleading we could find in the entire United States as to an order so ... ...

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