Lead Opinion
Edward W. Adcock, appellant, appeals an order entered July 8, 2009, denying his statute of limitations defense and awarding a judgment in favor of Mildred A. Houchens, appellee,
BACKGROUND
The facts relevant to this analysis are uncontested. The parties were divorced by decree of the Corporation Court of the City of Alexandria on October 20, 1966. In that decree, appellant was ordered to pay $30 per week child support for three minor children. Child support would continue “until all such children attain their majorities or became otherwise emancipated or further decree of this court.” Appellant’s child support obligation terminated on June 24,1982, when the youngest child attained his majority.
On June 14, 2006, appellee applied for the services of the Division of Child Support Enforcement (hereafter DCSE) to enforce the October 20, 1966 child support order. DCSE, by motion filed July 7, 2008, moved the circuit court to establish arrearage and interest for unpaid child support.
Appellant filed a motion for summary judgment on February 20, 2009, arguing the statute of limitations barred recovery. After hearing evidence and argument, the trial court denied appellant’s motion for summary judgment and entered judgment against appellant for $73,629.10, finding the twenty-year statute of limitations did not bar enforcement of the 1966 child support order.
This appeal follows.
ANALYSIS
Appellant contends the twenty-year statute of limitations set forth in Code § 8.01-251
Appellant notes that Code § 16.1-278.15(c) provides:
In any determination of support obligation under this section, the support obligation as it becomes due and unpaid creates a judgment by operation of law. Such judgment becomes a lien against real estate only when docketed in the county or city where such real estate is located. Nothing herein shall be construed to alter or amend the process of attachment of any lien on personal property.
Appellant therefore concludes that because the child support order is a judgment, the twenty-year statute of limitations of Code § 8.01-251(A) bars enforcement of the 1966 child support order. He contends the twenty-year period began to run on June 24, 1982, when his youngest child reached the age of majority and his child support obligation ended.
“In determining whether the trial court made an error of law, *we review the trial court’s statutory interpretations and legal conclusions de novo.’ ” Rollins v. Commonwealth,
Our inquiry, then, is whether the twenty-year statute of limitations of Code § 8.01-251(A) applies to an unliquidated, ongoing child support order, such as we have here, or if the statute is limited to a liquidated money judgment. Appellant contends there is no distinction for the purpose of Code § 8.01-251(A).
In Bennett, we held the limitations under Code § 8.01-252
We noted the distinction between “support orders that adjudicate an ongoing, unliquidated spousal support obligation and those that adjudicate a sum certain or liquidated amount due and owing for spousal support.” Id. at 140,
Bennett made it abundantly clear that “no time limitation is placed upon the obligee spouse within which to obtain a judgment for accumulated arrearages.” Id. at 144,
Appellant argues the Bennett analysis, addressing the difference between an unliquidated support order and a liquidated money judgment, is dicta. We disagree. Rather, this distinction is essential to the central ratio decidendi of the opinion. See Deiter v. Commonwealth,
Appellant further attacks Bennett, contending we misapplied Taylor v. Taylor,
The fact that New Jersey law may not vest support payments is unrelated to the Bennett analysis. It has no bearing on whether the support order is liquidated or unliquidated. The fact that in New Jersey a support order or arrearage may be modified does not alter the Bennett analysis. Appellant’s argument is premised on the fact that the Bennett Court considered the New Jersey law on non-vesting. However, a review of Bennett refutes this premise. Bennett does not mention the New Jersey law of non-vesting. Thus, it could not have been a consideration in the Bennett analysis.
Further, Bennett has a much wider scope than appellant suggests. While the issue before us in Bennett was whether the ten-year statute of limitations (now twenty-year) of Code § 8.01-252 barred the enforcement in Virginia of a New Jersey support order under URESA, the analysis and decision have broader implications.
The discussion of the liquidated and unliquidated judgment, while in a URESA context, was not limited to a URESA proceeding. Bennett addressed the nature of Virginia spousal support orders. This Court acknowledged that the initial entry of a spousal support order “establishes the monetary amount of an ongoing support obligation. It is in that sense an order requiring the payment of money and is a judgment embraced within the provisions of Code § 8.01-426.” Bennett,
However, we opined an ongoing support order “is not, and cannot be, a judgment for a sum certain or liquidated amount of money. Time and circumstances of the parties will determine ultimately the total amount to be paid under an initial, or subsequently modified, spousal support order.” Id. Thus, our analysis of the distinction between an ongoing, unliquidated
Appellant contends a support judgment does not have to be reduced to a liquidated amount for enforcement procedures to be initiated. Appellant refers to DCSE’s collection of $6,507.57 in arrearage prior to the entry of the liquidated judgment.
While Bennett addresses spousal support, we see no principled reason why the analysis does not apply to child support. Rather, logic suggests that the analysis would apply to both.
Code § 8.01-458, creating a lien on real estate by a support order, makes no distinction between child and spousal support. Rather, it addresses the implications of “any judgment for money rendered in this Commonwealth by any state or federal court or by confession of judgment.” Code § 16.1-278.15 addresses child and spousal support together, and subsection (c), creating a judgment for due and unpaid support, encompasses both spousal and child support, drawing no distinction
The dissent acknowledges that Bennett controls this case, but opines that the principles of Bennett “do not necessarily dictate the result reached by the majority.” The dissent then attempts to distinguish Bennett. However, the dissent’s effort to distinguish Bennett is based on two faulty premises.
The dissent contends first, that child support and spousal support orders lead to different statute of limitations analyses, and second, that emancipation of the child converts an unliquidated child support order to a fixed sum certain. The dissent attempts to distinguish Bennett primarily because it addresses an ongoing spousal support award and not child support that has terminated by operation of law. The dissent therefore concludes that while the ongoing award is unliquidated, the child support award becomes fixed and ascertainable when it terminates by operation of law.
The dissent attempts to differentiate spousal support and child support because “there is a significant fundamental difference” as to when spousal support and child support terminate by operation of law. The dissent contends that child support terminates when the child attains the age of majority. However, at some point, both child support and spousal support terminate and cease to be an “ongoing” award. Spousal support terminates by operation of law when either party dies or the obligee remarries. See Code § 20-109. Further, it is important to note that under certain circumstances, child support does not necessarily terminate upon the age of majority; for example, if the child is severely
Finally, the dissent concludes that emancipation automatically converts any child support arrearage from an unliquidated, ongoing order to a fixed and ascertainable sum certain. Thus, it concludes, the statute of limitations begins to run when the arrearage is fixed and ascertainable.
The dissent takes the Bennett language, “a judgment for a sum certain or liquidated amount” out of context. Bennett, in analyzing when the statute of limitations begins to run, clearly speaks of a liquidated judgment. We noted the distinction between “support orders that adjudicate an ongoing unliquidated spousal support obligation and those that adjudicate a sum certain or liquidated amount due and owing.” The dissent ignores this distinction.
We, therefore, reject the dissent’s equating “ascertainable” with “liquidated.” They are two distinct concepts. To “ascertain” is “to discover through examination or experimentation; find out” or “to make certain and definite.” The American Heritage Dictionary, New College Edition 76 (1982). A “sum certain” is defined as “any amount that is fixed, settled, or exact.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1573 (9th ed. 2009). The latter is the same as a liquidated amount.
We must, then, inquire how emancipation of a child instantly converts an undetermined amount of arrearage to a fixed amount, one that is exact, without further court intervention. The fact that child support is no longer “ongoing” does not “fix” the amount due. The dissent concludes that upon emancipation, any arrearage due is a “sum certain” because it can be readily computed. While the amount may be “readily computed,” it does not follow that the sum is fixed. The amount becomes a “sum certain” only when the trial court enters an order liquidating the obligation. The Bennett analysis, again, is premised on a fixed or liquidated judgment.
The dissent further maintains an ongoing support order cannot be liquidated because future payments are still owed.
In summary, we conclude that the twenty-year statute of limitations in Code § 8.01-251 only applies to a liquidated money judgment. In this case, the child support order was ongoing, rather than a liquidated money judgment. Therefore, the statute of limitations provided in Code § 8.01-251 does not bar enforcement of the award.
CONCLUSION
The trial court properly ruled that the statute of limitations did not bar the recovery of past due child support payments and accrued interest. Finding no error, we therefore affirm the trial court.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Because the Division of Child Support Enforcement acts only as Houchens’ agent in these proceedings, Houchens and Division of Child Support Enforcement will be collectively referred to as appellee.
. Appellant does not contest the computation of the arrearage nor the accrued amount of interest.
. Code § 8.01-251(A) provides:
No execution shall be issued and no action brought on a judgment, including a judgment in favor of the Commonwealth and a judgment rendered in another state or country, after 20 years from the date of such judgment or domestication of such judgment, unless the period is extended as provided in this section.
. Since appellant does not argue that the equitable doctrine of laches bars the enforcement of the support order, we will not address that issue.
. Appellant contends a West Virginia case, Zanke v. Zanke,
. Code § 8.01-252, as enacted at the time oí Bennett, stated:
Every action upon a judgment rendered in another state or country shall be barred, if such action would there be barred by the laws of such state or country, and in no event shall an action be brought upon any such judgment rendered more than ten years before the commencement of the action was repealed (Acts 2005, cc. 139, 203) and re-enacted in § 8.01-251(A) with a 20-year limitation.
. In 1994, Virginia repealed Code §§ 20-88.12 to -88.31, the Revised Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act (RURESA), and enacted Code §§ 20-88.32 to -88.82, the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA). Both acts, as well as the original URESA, were intended to provide “a means to establish and enforce child support obligations and spousal support obligations across state lines.” John J. Sampson and Paul M. Kurtz, UIFSA: An Interstate Support Act for the 21st Century, 27 Family Law Quarterly 85, 86 (1993).
. While the record reveals that $6,507.57 was involuntarily collected from appellant by DCSE, the record does not indicate whether those sums collected were the result of withheld income pursuant to Code § 63.2-1924, seizure of real or personal property pursuant to Code § 63.2-1927, or any other enforcement provision under Title 19.1.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
Relying on Bennett v. Commonwealth,
Initially, I acknowledge that child support “payments are fixed according to the needs of the child or children,” Fearon
Statutes of limitation “serve an important and salutary purpose.” Burns v. Stafford County,227 Va. 354 , 359,315 S.E.2d 856 , 859 (1984). Indeed, without limitations on actions, defendants could find themselves at the mercy of unscrupulous plaintiffs who hoard evidence that supports their position while waiting for their prospective opponents to discard evidence that would help make a defense. In light of the policy that surrounds statutes of limitations, the bar of such statutes should not be lifted unless the legislature makes unmistakably clear that such is to occur in a given case. Where there exists any doubt, it should be resolved in favor of the operation of the statute of limitations. Id. Thus, courts are obligated to enforce statutes of limitation strictly and to construe any exception thereto narrowly.
Westminster Investing Corp. v. Lamps Unlimited,
Different jurisdictions have juxtaposed these competing principles in various ways where child support is at issue to accommodate the needs of the child as well as the fairness to the obligor parent. Some states allow “the statute of limitations ... to run as against each installment that becomes due,” others “provide that such a limitations period does not
The primary issue in Bennett was whether to apply the statute of limitations to a spousal support order whose final obligation remained uncertain so long as ongoing future periodic payments will continue to accrue. Under the facts presented to the Bennett panel, a spousal support order could take on two forms: (1) an “ongoing, unliquidated spousal support obligation [or (2) ] one that adjudicates a sum certain
Once the support obligation ceases it is no longer “ongoing,” but in order for the statute of limitations to begin to run the amount owed must also be “liquidated.” The majority mistakenly reads Bennett, in my opinion, to say that a liquidated amount can only be rendered by a judgment for arrearages calculated and rendered by the court. We explicitly held in Bennett that “Code § 8.01-252 [now Code § 8.01-251] embraces an order for a sum certain or liquidated amount for spousal [or child] support.”
However, once the child attains the age of majority, the “[t]ime and circumstances of the parties [have] determine[d] ultimately the total amount to be paid under [the] ... support order.” Bennett,
In summary, I believe the majority’s characterization of appellant’s obligation under the 1966 child support order as “an unliquidated, ongoing child support order” is inaccurate since the amount was a sum certain by operation of law when the child became emancipated. Appellant’s support obligation was not “ongoing” because, as the majority concedes, appellant was no longer required under the 1966 decree to pay child support as of June 24, 1982, when the youngest child attained the age of majority. Further, it cannot be said appellant’s obligation is “unliquidated.” Because appellant owed no more payments after June 24, 1982, and all previous payments were not subject to modification, appellant’s obligation under the support order was a sum certain or became a liquidated amount—that is “a figure readily computed, based on an agreement’s terms [or the court’s award].” Black’s Law Dictionary, supra, at 949. Accordingly, in my view, the statute of limitations should have begun to run on June 24, 1982. DCSE did not file its petition to enforce the 1966 child support order until July 7, 2008. Therefore, I would hold that the twenty-year limitation under Code § 8.01-251 barred recovery of all arrearages as of June 24,1982.
Finally, I observe that by allowing the statute of limitations to begin to run upon the emancipation of the minor child would not, in a very significant respect, treat child support payments differently from spousal support payments. Indeed, unless otherwise indicated in the support order, both child and spousal support automatically cease by operation of law upon the occurrence of certain events. Pursuant to Code § 20-109, a spousal support obligation “shall terminate upon the death of either party or remarriage of the spouse receiving support,” and similarly child support ceases upon the child reaching the age of majority except when the child is disabled or until he or she finishes high school. In my view, our holding in Bennett would not permit a spouse who has remarried to collect
For these reasons, I respectfully dissent from the majority’s affirmance of the trial court’s ruling.
. Notably, and in contrast to the facts in Bennett, a spousal support obligation becomes fixed and ascertainable as a sum certain when either the obligee spouse remarries or either spouse dies, Code § 20-109, and, in my view, the statutory bar of Code § 8.01-251 would prohibit any action to recover those past due amounts after twenty years from the date that the sum certain became fixed and ascertainable.
. I agree with the majority that under Bennett, of which I was a panel member, "our analysis of the distinction between an ongoing, unliquidated support order and a liquidated money judgment under Virginia law transcends a URESA proceeding.” Further, the majority correctly holds it is inconsequential for the present determination that the facts in Bennett involved another state’s law where support payments do not vest immediately upon becoming due.
. We need not address the propriety of the other options, as we have rejected creating a new statute of limitations period for each individual support payment as it vests and becomes due. Bennett,
. It would have been inappropriate to do so in that case because the wife filed her URESA petition less than ten years after she remarried. Thus, the termination of the spousal support obligation by operation of law did not fall under the purview of the statute of limitations period. See Commonwealth v. Harley,
. See Code § 20-124.2 (extending a child support obligation for a disabled child or until the child finishes high school).
. As I understand the majority’s construction and application of the Bennett holding, had she not sought a judgment for arrearages and had remarried, she could nevertheless seek to enforce the support obligation and collect the arrearage even after twenty years from having remarried. I do not understand Bennett to extend that far.
