Note: Decisions of a three-justice panel are not to be considered as precedent before any tribunal.



                                           ENTRY ORDER

                           SUPREME COURT DOCKET NO. 2014-424

                                          MAY TERM, 2015

 Adam George                                           }    APPEALED FROM:
 (Office of Child Support)                             }
                                                       }
                                                       }    Superior Court, Chittenden Unit,
    v.                                                 }    Family Division
                                                       }
                                                       }
 Bahji Adams                                           }    DOCKET NO. 200-3-13 Cndm

                                                            Trial Judge: Martin A. Maley

                          In the above-entitled cause, the Clerk will enter:

        Mother appeals pro se from a family court order denying her V.R.C.P. 60(b) motion for
relief from enforcement of an out-of-state support order, and denying her motion for
reimbursement of garnished wages. We affirm.

        Although this matter has a lengthy procedural history, the material facts as recounted by
the trial court may be briefly summarized. The parties were divorced in November 2007
pursuant to a final divorce judgment of the Georgia Superior Court. The court awarded sole
legal and physical custody of the parties’ child to father, and ordered mother to pay child support
in the amount of $601 per month.

        Mother filed a number of subsequent unsuccessful motions in Georgia to set aside the
judgment based, in part, on her claim that the court had violated the Americans with Disabilities
Act (ADA) by failing to accommodate psychological disabilities she allegedly suffered as the
result of a 2003 car accident. She also filed suit in federal district court against the Georgia state
courts and state officials claiming that they had violated her rights under the ADA and her right
to due process. Adams v. Georgia, No. 1:07-CV-2924-WSD-CCH, 2008 WL 649179 (N.D. Ga.
Mar. 5, 2008). The federal court dismissed the suit, finding that mother had failed to “provide
any credible or specific facts to support her allegations,” and that her claims of disability,
discrimination, and due process violations were “entirely without merit” and “frivolous.” Id. at
*3-4.

        Mother later moved to Vermont. Father, in response, registered the Georgia order with
the Office of Child Support (OCS), which then filed the foreign judgment for confirmation with
the family division in March 2013. See 15B V.S.A. § 602(a) & (b) (providing that support order
of another state may be registered in Vermont by sending it to the office of child support, which
“shall cause the order to be filed as a foreign judgment”). Mother filed objections to the
enforcement of the order in April, and appeared with counsel at a hearing before a magistrate in
May 2013. The magistrate then issued a brief order noting that mother had agreed to registration
of the order but had reserved her arguments against its enforcement for a subsequent hearing.

        In June 2013, the court held a hearing to address mother’s objections to enforcement of
the order. Although mother appeared with counsel, as she later acknowledged in her Rule 60(b)
motion, “the claims that she had raised in her April 2013 pleading, and any other possible claims
opposing enforcement, were not aired.” Accordingly, on June 18, 2013, the magistrate issued an
order finding that mother “did not raise any defenses to confirmation or enforcement” of the
Georgia order, confirmed the support obligation of $601 per month, and authorized garnishment
of her wages.

        Mother filed a number of subsequent motions over the next year, two of which are now
before us. In March 2014, mother filed a V.R.C.P. 60(b) motion for relief from the magistrate’s
order confirming the registered out-of-state judgment. The following month, she filed a motion
for “reimbursement of excess garnishment.” The magistrate denied both motions. Mother
appealed, and the family division affirmed the magistrate’s orders in a written decision issued in
October 2014. This pro se appeal by mother followed.

        Mother contends the court erred in denying her Rule 60(b) motion, asserting that the
ruling was “yet . . . one more discriminatory measure” in violation of the ADA and due process.
Our review is limited. “The decision on a Rule 60(b) motion is committed to the sound
discretion of the trial court and will stand on review unless the record clearly and affirmatively
indicates that such discretion was withheld or otherwise abused.” Bingham v. Tenney, 154 Vt.
96, 99 (1990). Such a motion “is not intended to function as a substitute for a timely appeal.”
Tetreault v. Tetreault, 148 Vt. 448, 451 (1987).

        As the trial court found, and the record summarized above shows, mother was afforded a
full opportunity to challenge the validity and enforcement of the Georgia order, as provided by
15B V.S.A. § 606 (providing that a party may request a hearing to contest the “validity or
enforcement of a registered order”) and § 607 (delineating the defenses available to “[a] party
contesting the validity or enforcement of a registered order or seeking to vacate the
registration”). She appeared at the hearing with counsel, but did not raise the claims that she
now asserts render the out-of-state judgment void, and did not appeal the order confirming the
Georgia judgment. Having failed to do so, she is specifically precluded by statute from raising
any subsequent collateral attack. See id. § 608 (“Confirmation of a registered order, whether by
operation of law or after notice and hearing, precludes further contest of the order before the
tribunal with respect to any matter that could have been asserted at the time of registration.”).
Even if she were not so barred, moreover, the trial court here was correct in concluding that
mother had advanced no adequate grounds for invalidating the Georgia order, noting that her due
process and ADA claims were unsupported and had been rejected by a federal court as “entirely
without merit.” We thus discern no basis to disturb the court’s ruling.

       Mother also asserts that the court erred in denying her motion for reimbursement of
garnished wages. She claims that her rights were violated during certain months in 2013 when
more than $601 was garnished on a monthly basis. As the court accurately explained, however,
the amount withheld in mother’s bi-weekly paychecks was necessarily based on the “annualized
amount of child support,” 15 V.S.A. § 785(a)(1), which resulted in some months being slightly

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under $601 and some months slightly over. Accordingly, we find no grounds to disturb the
judgment.

      Affirmed.




                                          BY THE COURT:


                                          _______________________________________
                                          Paul L. Reiber, Chief Justice

                                          _______________________________________
                                          John A. Dooley, Associate Justice

                                          _______________________________________
                                          Marilyn S. Skoglund, Associate Justice




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