¶ 1. Mother appeals an order of the family court, establishing father’s child support obligation. We affirm in part and remand for further proceedings regarding the starting date of father’s support obligation.
¶2. The following facts are not disputed. Mother and father were married in Vermont in 1999, and lived in Vermont immediately following their marriagе. The parties had one child together, born in Vermont on September 23, 2000. Approximately two weeks after the child’s birth, the parties separated, and mother left Vermont for New York. While in New York, mother brought a proceeding to obtain custody of the child. Father did not appear in that proceeding, and on April 3, 2001, the New York court awarded mother sole custody, with such visitation for father as “the parties shall mutually agree.”
¶ 3. On July 9, 2001, father initiated divorce proceedings in Vermont, seeking a divorce, division of the marital property and spousal maintenance. The complaint stated that “jurisdiction of all matters relating to the minor child [shall] rеmain vested in the State of New York.” By this time, mother had moved to Florida. Mother answered the divorce petition agreeing with the statement of New York jurisdiction and declined to request child support in the divorce action. At a case manager’s conference, she confirmed that she did not want a child support ordеr. On December 21, 2001, the Chittenden Family Court issued a final order, granting father a divorce and dividing the marital property. Thereafter, on its own initiative, see 15 V.S.A. § 658(a), (b), the court scheduled a child support hearing, but canceled it with a scheduling order bearing the handwritten notation: “[Vermont] does not have jurisdiction] over child.”
¶ 4. On August 1, 2003, father filed a motion in the divorce proceeding to “establish child support & specify parent-child contact.” The motion alleged that mother was preventing father’s visitation with the child in Florida and had filed a petition in a Florida court, seeking termination of father’s parental rights based on his nonpayment of child support. The cоurt dismissed the request for parent-child contact concluding that jurisdiction over that request was in the Florida courts. It referred the child-support request to the magistrate, who denied the motion for a child-support order, apparently concluding that Florida had exclusive jurisdiction over child support. On appeal, thе family court ruled that Vermont could exercise jurisdiction under the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act (UIFSA), 15B V.S.A. §201(3), (6), because mother had resided in Vermont with the child and the child was conceived in Vermont. The court further ruled that Vermont’s jurisdiction had not been ousted under 28 U.S.C. § 1738B because of the residence of mother and the child in Florida for over six months. The court remanded to the magistrate to determine whether to exercise jurisdiction.
¶ 5. Although both parties brought the history of the proceedings to the attention of the court, there is no indication that mother argued to the family court that it could not take jurisdiction over the petition because of the preclusive effect of the divorce petition or the cancellation of the 2001 child-support hearing. In fact, the judge stated: “Other than the federal statute which does not apply, [mother] has cited no law which bars Vermont’s jurisdiction over the child support matter.”
¶ 6. On remand, the magistrate decided to exercise jurisdiction, despite the fact that mother initiated a child-support proceeding in
Florida after the remand. Mother moved to reconsider, for the first
¶ 7. On appeal, the family court ruled that the child-support order could be retroactive to a date on or after August 1, 2003, the date on which father filed the motion to establish child support, and remanded to the magistrate to set the date. On remand, the magistrate set the commencement date on August 1, 2003 and calculated the arrearage accordingly. Mother appealed from the order of the family court on retroactivity and the follow-up order of the magistrate calculating the arrearage.
¶ 8. On appeal, mother’s first argument is that thе family court was precluded from issuing a child-support order because of the allegation in the divorce complaint that jurisdiction over matters relating to the child “remain vested in New York” and the order of the family court cancelling the child-support hearing because Vermont “does not have jurisdiction over thе child.” Mother argues that consideration of child support is barred by claim preclusion and a stipulation of no jurisdiction that resulted from the language of the divorce complaint and its admission by mother. As we said above, the family court never addressed these arguments. Except in a motion to reconsider made well after the family court had already found jurisdiction, we can find no instance where mother made these arguments to the family court. Even if the motion for reconsideration could be considered to have preserved the issue, mother failed to appeal the denial of the motion to the family court judge. See
Williams v. Williams,
¶ 9. Mother has not appealed the validity of the family court’s jurisdictional ruling othеr than arguing that the court was precluded from making the ruling. Thus, by rejecting the preclusion arguments for lack of preservation, we affirm the family court’s decision that it had jurisdiction to make a child-support order in this case.
¶ 10. Mother’s second argument on appeal is that father’s child-support obligation must be made retroаctive to the birth date of the child, September 23, 2000. * Father maintains that while a parent cannot waive a child’s right to future child support, a parent can waive the right to past child support prior to an order establishing the support obligation. As the family court judge below noted, “[t]he issue is . . . whether — and how far back — retroactive support may be ordered when an initial child support order is first established.”
¶ 12. Two lines of cases are relevant to our decision. The first, relied upon by the family court, involvеs the date of retroactivity of child-support orders, primarily in modification cases. We first held that modification of a child-support obligation could be retroactively applied in
Towne v. Towne,
¶ 13. The second line of cases limits the power of parents to make decisions about child support on behalf of the children. Thus, in the leading case of
White v. White,
¶ 14. In making its order in this case, the family court drew from the first line of cases, but not the second. It felt bound by Viskup and Klein II to limit retroactivity to the period after father brought the motion to establish a support order. We conclude that neither of those precedеnts require this result and that this case is controlled instead by the second line of decisions, as well by the principles underlying current statutes.
¶ 15. Although the trial court in Viskup established a right to child support after the conclusion of divorce proceedings, that case deals with modification of a preexisting order made possible by a change in the law, and thus is distinguishable from the case at bar. Thus, Viskup implements our ruling in Towne that modification can go back only to the date modification is sought, a holding now codified in 15 V.S.A. § 660(e).
¶ 16.
Klein II
is an initial-establishment case, but the retroactivity in that case arose from the reversal of the court’s child-support provision contained in the original divorce order. See
Chaker v. Chaker,
¶ 17. In fact, this case demonstrates that those policies must be different in some instances. A modification of child support must be initiated by a motion from a party; irrespective of the interests of the child, no modification can occur without such a request. 15 V.S.A. § 660(a). This initiation requirement is an exception to the general policy that parents cannot waive child support for their children, and it is consistent with the exception that retroactivity cannot go back before the date of the motion to modify. See id. § 660(e).
¶ 18. Parents do not control the initial child-support order in divorce cases. Under 15 V.S.A. § 658(a), the family court was required to include a child-support order as part of the adjudication of the divorce proceeding. See 15 V.S.A. § 658(a) (child-support order required in action “under [сhapter 11],” which includes divorce). This requirement is consistent with the general policy that parents cannot waive child support for their children.
¶ 19. The statutory command that the court establish a child-support order as part of the divorce adjudication would have been followed in this case except for the decision of the family court that it did not have jurisdiction to do so. The order on appeal before us superseded that 2002 decision and determined that the family court did have subject matter jurisdiction. In essence, this later order overruled the 2002 decision and demonstrated that it was wrong. In absence of the error, there
¶ 20. It is also clear that the 2002 decision was influenced by the position of the parents that they did not want a child-support order. In essence, by asserting a jurisdiction barrier in Vermont, and not seeking a child support order in New York or Florida, the parties waived the child’s right to child support. This result is at variance with our policy that such a рarental waiver is ineffective and cannot control the date on which the child support will commence.
¶21. Under these circumstances, we hold that an order initially establishing child support in a divorce case may be retroactive to the date that the divorce petition is filed even if there is a gap between the divorce order and the support order and/or between the divorce petition and any request of a party for a support order. By filing the divorce petition, father knew or should have known that he would be subject to a child-support order whether he desired it or not. Our retroactivity decision is consistent with thе requirement for a child-support order in a divorce adjudication as specified in 15 V.S.A. § 660(a).
¶ 22. Therefore, in this case, the child-support order could be retroactive to July 9, 2001, the date the divorce petition was filed. The family court erred in holding that retroactivity could back only to the date that father filed his motion to establish child support, August 1, 2003.
¶23. As we have emphasized, this early retroactivity date merely establishes the outer limit on the discretion of the court.
See
Klein II,
¶ 24. We reverse the family court decision that retroactivity can extend no further back than the date of the motion to establish child support and remand for the child-support magistrate to exercise its discretion to choose the date of retroactivity within the limits describеd by this decision.
Affirmed, in part and remanded for farther proceedings consistent with the views expressed herein.
Notes
Mother argued before the magistrate and the family court judge that child support should be retroactive to January 1, 2002, shortly after the divorce order was entered. Mother did not preserve the argument that she makes to this Court.
