F.Y v. J.L.

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                               APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
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                                                        SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
                                                        APPELLATE DIVISION
                                                        DOCKET NO. A-2096-19

F.Y.,

          Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

J.L.,

     Defendant-Respondent.
________________________

                   Submitted February 9, 2021 – Decided March 5, 2021

                   Before Judges Fisher and Moynihan.

                   On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey,
                   Chancery Division, Family Part, Essex County, Docket
                   No. FD-07-3158-19.

                   Aihong You, attorney for appellant.

                   Ren Rong Pan, attorney for respondent.

PER CURIAM

          The parties were married in China in 2000. They have one child, Kahn (a

fictitious name), who was born in 2006. In 2009, they divorced; their issues
were resolved by way of a marital settlement agreement (MSA), which became

part of a "certificate of divorce" issued by Chinese authorities. There appears

to be no dispute that the MSA provided plaintiff F.Y. (Fang, a fictitious name)

with sole custody of Kahn and all the parties' marital assets, estimated in our

currency at $3,000,000, leaving defendant J.L. (Jae, a fictitious name) 1 – in his

words – "financially naked." In giving her sole custody, the MSA also obligated

Fang to solely provide for the child's support.

      Jae remarried; he and his second wife have two children. They moved to

this country in 2017 and took up residence in New Jersey. Fang and Kahn

remained in China.

      Kahn came to live with Jae and his new family in Short Hills in May 2018.

Less than a year later, Kahn flew back to China; Jae told Fang he did not want

Kahn back. Believing Kahn would not get a sufficient education in China due

to her financial situation, Fang and Kahn traveled to New Jersey in April 2019,

and Fang tried to get Jae to take Kahn back. Jae refused to take custody of Kahn

or otherwise provide support for him.

      Fang did not seek relief in the People's Court in China; she instead filed a

complaint in our courts in May 2019, claiming Kahn should benefit from Jae's



1
  We use initials and fictitious names to protect the parties' privacy interests.
See R. 1:38-3(d)(1).
                                    2                                     A-2096-19
financial success. Fang's complaint demanded, among other things, an order

granting her sole legal and physical custody of the child and obligating Jae to

pay her child support. In his responsive pleading, Jae alleged Fang breached the

MSA, which he claims obligated Fang alone to support the child, and that he

should be reimbursed for funds expended on Kahn's behalf while he resided with

him in New Jersey.

      The trial judge dismissed Fang's action without prejudice. The judge

closely analyzed the requirements of the Uniform Child Custody Jurisdiction

and Enforcement Act (UCCJEA),  N.J.S.A. 2A:34-53 to -95, and the Uniform

Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA),  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.124 to -30.201, in

concluding in a thorough fourteen-page written opinion that the court lacked

jurisdiction over Fang's requests for the modification of the custody and child

support agreements contained in the parties' MSA. The judge later denied Fang's

motion for reconsideration for reasons expressed in another well-reasoned

written opinion.

      Fang appeals both orders, arguing:

            I. IN DETERMINING THAT THE [MSA] IS THE
            CONTROLLING SUPPORT ORDER, WHICH WILL
            BE REGISTERED FOR THIS COURT TO ENFORCE,
            THE LOWER COURT FAILED TO IDENTIFY THE
            DETAILS UPON WHICH IT MADE SUCH
            DETERMINATION (Not Raised Below).


                                    3                                    A-2096-19
            II. THE [MSA] IS NOT QUALIFIED AS A
            CONTROLLING ORDER UNDER THE UCCJEA
            AND UIFSA.

                  A. China And U.S. Do Not Have Any
                  Reciprocal Arrangement To Enforce Any
                  Support Orders Entered By The Other's
                  Courts.

                  B. Under The Doctrine Of Comity, The
                  Law Of This State Does Not Recognize
                  Zero Support Amount For A Child.

                  C. China Did Not Have The Procedures For
                  The Issuance And Enforcement Of Support
                  Orders Which Are Substantially Similar To
                  The Procedures In This State.

            III. THIS COURT HAS SUBJECT MATTER
            JURISDICTION TO ISSUE A CONTROLL[I]NG
            CUSTODY AND SUPPORT ORDER UNDER THE
            UCCJEA AND UIFSA.

We find no merit in these arguments 2 and affirm substantially for the reasons set

forth in Judge Christopher S. Romanyshyn's written opinions, adding only the

following comments.

      We start by recognizing that the only real dispute concerns child support.

Fang does not require an order granting her custody because she already has

custody of Kahn pursuant to the MSA and the certificate of divorce entered in



2
   To the extent we do not discuss all Fang's arguments it is because we find
those unmentioned arguments to be without sufficient merit to warrant
discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(1)(E).
                                     4                                 A-2096-19
China and because Jae neither argues otherwise nor seeks custody. We, thus,

reject Fang's arguments to the extent she seeks our review of the judge's

determinations about the UCCJEA, which relates to the modification and

enforcement of child custody orders entered beyond our boundaries.

      The controversy before us concerns only whether our courts may exert

jurisdiction to modify a child support agreement endorsed by a foreign tribunal

that indisputably had jurisdiction over both parents and the child at the time. In

this regard, we first observe that the MSA is not a mere agreement between two

parties. In 2009, the MSA received the imprimatur of the Chinese government,

as Fang acknowledged; in her submissions in the trial court Fang represented

that, after entering into the MSA, she and Jae

            went to the Bureau of Civil Affairs of Chaoyang
            District on December 28, 20[0]9. After . . . submit[ting]
            the agreement, without any discussion or question
            having been asked about the contents of the agreement,
            the staff issued the[] divorce certificate in a couple of
            minutes.

This process does not appear to be unusual. Article 31 of the Marriage Law of

the People's Republic of China states that "[d]ivorce shall be allowed if both

husband and wife are willing to divorce"; in that circumstance, the parties need

only both "apply to the marriage registration authority," which then issues a

certificate of divorce "after confirming that both parties are indeed willing to

divorce and have made proper arrangement for their children and have properly
                                     5                                     A-2096-19
disposed of their property." So, the trial court here was not being asked to

enforce or modify a mere agreement but a divorce decree entered in accord with

the laws of the parties' homeland.

      In seeking the modification of the parties' divorce decree, the trial court

was obligated to consider the application of the UIFSA, which is a model act

adopted not only in this State but by every other state and territory in the union,

Marshak v. Weser,  390 N.J. Super. 387, 390 (App. Div. 2007), for the purpose

of advancing "unity and structure in each state's approach to the modification

and enforcement of child support orders," Sharp v. Sharp,  336 N.J. Super. 492,

503 (App. Div. 2001). The Act's approach starts with the designation of one

order as the "controlling child support order" and requires, as well, the

identification of the tribunal possessing exclusive jurisdiction to modify the

controlling order. Lall v. Shivani,  448 N.J. Super. 38, 45 (App. Div. 2016).

      In this case, there is no difficulty identifying the "controlling child support

order" because there is only one such order: the MSA provision that declared

Jae would have no child support obligation.         See  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.135(a)

(recognizing that "if only one tribunal has issued a child support order, the order

of that tribunal controls and shall be recognized"). That also makes China the

exclusive jurisdiction under the UIFSA. See  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.133(e). And

until circumstances change to a point where our courts may obtain the authority

                                      6                                       A-2096-19
to modify under the UIFSA, the existing provisions of the MSA, which were

endorsed by the certificate of divorce in China,3 remain applicable. See  N.J.S.A.

2A:4-30.170(c).

      In that instance, the authority to modify the exclusive jurisdiction's

controlling child support order under  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.178 first requires a

determination that another of UIFSA's sections –  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.180(a) –

does not apply. By enacting that provision, the Legislature declared that our

courts have the authority to enforce and modify a child support order of another

jurisdiction if all the parties "reside in this State and the child does not reside in

the issuing state."  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.180(a). While the judge found the child

was no longer residing in China – he had moved to his father's New Jersey home

the year before and had been registered to attend school here even though he had

briefly returned to China – the judge also found that Fang was a visitor to New

Jersey – not a resident – since she had only just arrived and was in the country

on a visitor's visa.

      Because  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.180(a) wasn't applicable, the judge correctly

turned to  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.178, which states that our courts "may modify a child




3
  There is no significance to the fact that the parties' divorce was not the subject
of judicial proceedings. See  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.125(dd).
                                       7                                      A-2096-19
support order issued" elsewhere 4 if one of two separate set of circumstances

exist.

         The first set of circumstances – described in  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.178(a)(1)

– is present if:

               (a) neither the child, nor the obligee who is an
               individual, nor the obligor resides in the issuing state;

               (b) a petitioner who is a nonresident of this State seeks
               modification; and

               (c) the respondent is subject to the personal jurisdiction
               of the tribunal of this State.

Since the judge found that Kahn resides in New Jersey – and there being no

doubt that Jae is a New Jersey resident – the matter turns on Fang's status. It

seems clear that in these circumstances Fang continues to be a resident of China

because she was in this country, when applying for relief, only by way of a

visitor's visa; in that instance, subsection (a) would not allow for modification

jurisdiction. But, even if it could be said that Fang had by the time of the trial

court proceedings ceased being a resident of China, subsection (b) could not be

found because that provision requires that the petitioner be "a nonresident" of

New Jersey. In other words, when the judge ruled, Fang was a resident of either



4
  We assume, without deciding, that  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.178 and  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-
30.180 apply when the controlling support order sought to be modified emanated
from a foreign country and not just a state or territory of this country.
                                     8                                    A-2096-19
China or New Jersey. Our courts would lack jurisdiction to modify the Chinese

support order if Fang was a resident of China (because of subsection (a)) and if

she was a resident of New Jersey (because of subsection (b)).

      The second set of circumstances was partially established.  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-

30.178(a)(2) permits the assumption of jurisdiction to modify another

jurisdiction's support order if it is first shown that the child is a resident of New

Jersey (which the judge found to be so) "or a party . . . is subject to the personal

jurisdiction" of our courts (and Jae was). But this provision also requires that

"all of the parties . . . have filed consents in a record in the issuing tribunal" that

would authorize this State to modify the support order and assume "continuing,

exclusive jurisdiction." Ibid. There was no evidence of any party having filed

in China consent to allow our courts to modify the support order.

      Finding no recourse for Fang in these provisions, Judge Romanyshyn

considered the applicability of  N.J.S.A. 2A:4-30.182(c), which would permit the

modification of a foreign country's child support order if that foreign country's

tribunal "lacks or refuses to exercise jurisdiction to modify its child support

order."   As the judge demonstrated – more fully in his opinion denying

reconsideration – it was not shown that the courts of the People's Republic of

China would not entertain an application to modify the child support provision.




                                        9                                       A-2096-19
      Indeed, like here, it seems that attaining a marital settlement agreement

and a divorce in China does not necessarily preclude China's courts from

resolving disputes between divorced parties. Article 36 of China's Marriage

Law declares that a divorce does not end a parent's relationship with a child of

the marriage and that both parents retain the obligation to raise their children;

this article, however, declares that the children of divorced parents shall be

raised by their mother "during lactation," and after, if necessary, any custody

dispute "shall be settled by the people's court according to the specific

conditions of both parties and in light of protecting the rights and interests of

the children." Article 37 allows for the resolution of disputes about the support

of children if the parents cannot agree, and Article 38 provides for visitation by

the non-custodial parent that can also be determined by the people's court if the

parents cannot agree.

      The trial judge concluded from this in both his original decision and in the

written opinion denying reconsideration that avenues appeared to be open to

Fang to seek relief in China, or at least that she hadn't demonstrated those

avenues were closed. As a result, the judge correctly concluded, under the

circumstances as presented to him, that Fang failed to demonstrate that the court

could exercise jurisdiction to modify the child support provision contained in

the parties' MSA.

                                     10                                    A-2096-19
Affirmed.




            11   A-2096-19


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