Lead Opinion
This appeal is from a decision of the Court of Appeals which affirmed a judgment of the circuit court determining that the estate of a deceased father with support obligations was entitled to a credit on social security benefits paid for child support as a result of his death.
The issue is whether the trial court erred in crediting social security payments against child support and the underlying issue is whether a motion for modification pursuant to KRS 403.250 must be made prior to a crediting of social security against child support payments.
Pursuant to a property settlement agreement in the dissolution of the marriage of Danny and Marsha Board, the father agreed to pay the wife $200 a week for the support of their two minor children. The father died three months after the divorce and since his death, the mother, in addition to other benefits, has received $370 per month per child from the father’s social security benefits.
Stressing that the wife would receive an unreasonable windfall if she were permitted to receive both child support and social security benefits, the Court of Appeals held that the father’s estate was entitled to a credit for the amount of social security. In answer to the wife’s argument that such a credit would improperly modify the divorce agreement, the Court of Appeals decided that not permitting a credit would actually modify the agreement.
This Court affirms the judgment of the circuit court and the decision of the Court of Appeals. KRS '403.250 is not the exclusive method to consider the application of social security benefits against child support liability.
Kentucky follows the prevailing view of most jurisdictions in the United States in that government benefits in the form of social security for child support may be credited against the parent’s liability under the decree or agreement of settlement. Hamilton v. Hamilton, Ky.App.,
The result is the same whether the child support credit is made pursuant to KRS 403.250(1), that is, a motion to modify child support, or whether it is made as in this case, in defense of a motion for arrearage. There is a distinction between crediting an obligation with payment made from another source and increasing, decreasing or terminating, or otherwise modifying a specific dollar amount.
Here the estate is liable for $866.67 per month as child support. The social security benefits pay a certain amount and the estate remains primarily liable on the en
Keplinger v. Keplinger, Ky.,
Social security benefits are not gratuitous but are paid as a substitute for lost earning power and are similar in nature to insurance benefits. Annot.
Here there is no abuse of discretion and the findings are not clearly unreasonable. Consequently there is no reason to disturb the findings of the trial court.
Nothing in this opinion inhibits the right of the custodial parent to seek modification under KRS 403.250 when appropriate.
The decision of the Court of Appeals is affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I respectfully dissent from the majority opinion in its holding that social security payments be automatically credited against a child support obligation.
The trial court had credited social security payments to the support obligation of the father’s estate without any motion or showing by the estate, but merely in response to the mother’s motion for collection on arrears. The exclusive method for modifying a child support order is found in KRS 403.250(1), which requires that a child support order can be modified “only upon a showing of changed circumstances so substantial and continuing as to make the terms unconscionable.” Thus, although the trial judge has the right to make a set-off, he can do so only upon the motion of the paying parent which shows sufficient changed circumstances.
