Lead Opinion
for the Court.
¶ 1. James Calvin Chapman and Debbie Ward were granted a divorce based on irreconcilable differences in 2001. Debbie was granted primary custody of the couple’s four children. James was granted visitation and ordered to pay child support.
¶ 2. In 2006, James filed a petition to hold Debbie in contempt for failing to grant him visitation and to modify the original judgment. Debbie filed an answer and a counterclaim. The chancellor entered an order granting James additional visitation, and relieving him of paying future child support. James was ordered, however, to pay $14,840.85 to Debbie for back child support arrearages already vested and due.
¶ 3. James now appeals and raises the following issues for our review:
1. Did the chancery court commit manifest error in looking to the transcript of the court’s ruling of July 9, 2001, in interpreting James’s child support obligation rather than looking at the judgment of divorce entered on March 12, 2002, nunc pro tunc July 9, 2001?
2. Did the chancery court commit manifest error when it failed to grant James a credit/set-off against his child support arrearage for sums Debbie received from the Social Security Administration for lump-sum back payments on behalf of the minor children of the parties?
¶ 4. We find no error and affirm the chancery court.
FACTS
¶ 5. James and Debbie were divorced by an entry of judgment of divorce on March 12, 2002, nunc pro tunc July 9, 2001. Debbie was awarded primary physical custody of the couple’s four children. James and Debbie were awarded joint legal custody of the children. James was unemployed at the time of the divorce due to a work-related injury. He was awaiting a hearing with the Mississippi Workers’ Compensation Commission.
¶ 6. Under the judgment of divorce, James had the following child support obligation:
[T]he husband shall pay child support 24% of his adjusted gross income withsaid support due the first month he earns a paycheck and continuing on the 1st day of each month until the minor children are emancipated and with the appropriate withholding order entered.
¶ 7. The transcript of the divorce trial clearly reflects that James knew that he would be expected to pay Debbie 24% of any income he received. James told the chancellor that he was awaiting payment for a workers’ compensation claim. However, James had been unemployed since the divorce and had not paid any child support whatsoever at the time of the hearing in this case. He did, however, receive workers’ compensation benefits beginning in October 2002, at which time the court-ordered child support payments began to accrue and vest. James received separate payments of $16,000, $12,165.92, and $26,250. James was ordered by the chancellor to pay 24% of the total of these sums, with interest, as back child support arrearages.
¶ 8. James was determined by the Social Security Administration to be totally disabled in late 2005. As a result, Debbie subsequently received three lump-sum back payments from Social Security for the benefit of the three youngest children.
¶ 9. James filed a “Petition to Find Defendant in Contempt and to Modify Judgment of Divorce” on March 9, 2006, in the Chancery Court of Madison County. James sought to have the judgment of divorce modified
¶ 10. Debbie filed her “Answer to Petition to Find Defendant in Contempt and to Modify Judgment of Divorce” along with a “Counterclaim for Citation of Contempt and Modification” on June 14, 2006. In her counterclaim, Debbie asked the court to find James in contempt for his default in child support due for the approximate four-year period in which James failed to pay child support of 24% of the workers’ compensation benefits along with 24% of any monthly unemployment benefits and/or workers’ compensation benefits he received.
¶ 11. On August 15, 2006, the court granted part of the relief requested by James and part of the relief requested by Debbie. Without articulating the policy or procedure, the chancellor followed estab
DISCUSSION
¶ 12. This Court has explained our standard of review in domestic relations cases as follows:
This Court has a limited standard of review in examining the decisions of a chancellor. A chancellor’s findings will not be disturbed upon review by this Court unless the chancellor was manifestly wrong, clearly erroneous, or applied the wrong legal standard. The standard of review employed by this Court for review of a chancellor’s decision is abuse of discretion. The standard of review for questions of law is de novo.
Burnett v. Burnett,
I. Whether the chancellor erred in looking to the transcript of the court’s ruling of July 9, 2001, in interpreting the child support obligation, rather than looking at the judgment of divorce entered Mach 12, 2002, nunc pro tunc July 9, 2001.
¶ 13. James ai’gues that the chancellor should not have relied on the trial transcript to determine that he owed Debbie child support from his workers’ compensation earnings. Both Mississippi Code Annotated section 43-19-101(3)(a) (Rev.2004) and the transcript of the divorce hearing are, however, perfectly clear that workers’ compensation benefits are income for purposes of child support assessment. James clearly understood what the chancery court intended in its initial decision. The chancellor specifically advised James that child support was payable from “income from any source.... If you get income and it is not where a wage order is applicable, then, you’re obligated to take 24 percent of that and send it to [Debbie].” James responded, “Yes, sir.” The court was perfectly within its right to look at the transcript to clarify the court’s and James’s understanding of the divorce decree. See S(c)holtz ex rel. Barnett Nat. Bank v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co.,
II. Whether the chancellor erred in failing to grant James a credit/set-off against his child support arrearage for sums Debbie received from the Social Security Administration for lump-sum back payments on behalf of the minor children of the parties.
¶ 14. James asserts in his remaining argument that the chancellor erred in not granting him a credit against his child support arrearage for the Social Security Administration’s award of benefits to the minor children. We disagree. The chancellor did not commit manifest error in ruling that James owed Debbie the sum of $14,840.85 as child support arrearages due from the workers’ compensation benefits he received beginning in 2002. Additionally, the chanceiy court did not commit manifest error by refusing to allow James a credit or set-off against this child support arrearage due for sums later received by Debbie in 2006 from the Social Security Administration as a result of James’s disability. James did not come to court with clean hands and was not entitled to such.
¶ 15. This Court recently held in Keith v. Purvis,
¶ 16. In Keith, Jackie Keith was ordered to pay child support to Deanna Purvis. Keith,
¶ 17. This Court held in Keith that “social security benefits may be credited against a noncustodial parent’s support obligation up to the amount of the support obligation.” Id. at 1037(¶ 12) (citations omitted).
¶ 18. Like the analysis in Keith, and the authority cited therein, allowing credit to James for his arrearages for his failure to pay child support from his workers’ compensation benefits would encourage noncustodial parents to suspend payment while awaiting the receipt of workers’ compensation benefits, social security benefits, or other income, and it also would give them ammunition to pick and choose from which income sources they wish to pay child support.
¶ 19. Precedent does not allow the noncustodial parent to receive credit for ar-rearages, only credit for the current support due. Id. at 1038(¶ 18). Furthermore, to allow James credit for arrearages when he failed to pay child support from his workers’ compensation benefits clearly conflicts with the policy of meeting the child’s current needs through receipt of regular uninterrupted child support payments. Id. at 1037(¶ 13) (citing Newman v. Newman,
¶ 20. James cites Professor Deborah Bell’s treatise, Bell on Mississippi Family Law, 338 (Nautilus Publishing Co.2006) as authority for the proposition that social security benefits paid to a child as a result of the payor’s employment can offset child support arrearages. However, the cases cited by Professor Bell do not support such a proposition. Professor Bell relies on Mooneyham,
¶ 21. James’s reliance on those cases, and on Professor Bell’s treatise, is misplaced. There is no authority in Mooney-ham to allow social security payments to be used to satisfy the noncustodial parent’s debt of past-due child support payments. In Mooneyham, the noncustodial father, Richard, was allowed to offset his child support obligation through social security disability payments which were paid directly to his child. Mooneyham,
¶ 22. Judge Barnes’s dissent improperly cites to dicta in a footnote at the end of the opinion in Keith, in which the dissent claims this Court cited Mooneyham for the proposition that the supreme court allowed arrearages to be satisfied out of social security benefits. Keith,
¶ 23. The dissent’s use of this footnote as authority as opposed to the actual facts of the case of Mooneyham is an example of the danger of unnecessary dicta in an opinion. Nonetheless, dicta or not, the facts and holding of Mooneyham speak for themselves. In Moaneyham, the noncustodial parent, Richard, was not in default and did not have unclean hands when he came into court. Mooneyham,
¶ 24. However, the facts in the case before us are markedly different. James paid no child support in the five years between the judgment of divorce in 2001 and the petition to modify the judgment of divorce filed in 2006, despite the significant income, approximately $54,000, he received as workers’ compensation benefits. He was clearly in arrears and in default for lack of payment of child support prior to the receipt of any benefits by the three minor children and had unclean hands when he sought modification. It is noteworthy that James had paid no support for his four children, ever. Such was not the case in Mooneyham.
¶ 25. Likewise, I find Hammett inapplicable here. Hammett sought to have an arrearage of $4,308 placed in a trust account for his disabled child until the child reached the age of thirty-six. Hammett,
¶ 26. Professor Bell also cites Bradley, for her proposition that child support ar-rearages can be satisfied by social security or disability benefit payments. In Bradley, the child’s mother elected to receive social security benefits for the child based on the child’s step-father, rather than the child’s father. Bradley,
¶ 27. The supreme court in Bradley merely recognized that the monthly child support obligation of the natural father had been satisfied, albeit by a social security benefit payment based on the stepfather’s retirement. Id. A review of the case indicates that the benefits were paid when child support was due and no true arrearages existed. Id. The mother simply elected to receive benefits for the child based on the step-father’s retirement because of the obvious financial benefit to the child, despite the natural father’s request that the mother apply for social security benefits based on his retirement. Id. The court in Bradley recognized that social security benefits received by the mother on behalf of the child under the Social Security Act are considered an alternative source of payment that satisfies the noncustodial parent’s child support obligation. Id. Thus, although the child was receiving benefits based on her step-father’s retirement, not her natural father’s retirement, the monthly support obligation for the child was continuously met and no arrear-ages existed. Id. Bradley, therefore, does not stand for the proposition that child support arrearages can be satisfied through later payment of social security benefits. Again, the Bradley court, as other courts have, recognized that a credit or offset up to the amount of the support obligation due was proper. No past debt or arrearage was extinguished by the Bradley court’s recognition that the child’s natural father was entitled to credit for benefits paid based upon the step-father’s retirement.
¶ 28. Child support payments become vested in the child when due, and once vested, cannot be modified or forgiven by the courts. Houck v. Ousterhout,
¶ 29. Furthermore, James came into the chancery court seeking modification of his child support obligations with unclean hands. This Court has explained the doctrine of unclean hands as follows:
The principle of “unclean hands” dictates that he who comes into equity must come with clean hands.... [T]he meaning of this maxim is to declare that no person as a complaining party can have the aid of a court of equity when his conduct with respect to the transaction in question has been characterized by wilful inequity.... The court may apply this doctrine sua sp07ite where it is shown applicable.
Lane,
¶ 30. For the reasons stated above, we find that James’s arguments lack merit. There is no evidence in the record that the chancellor abused his discretion or that his ruling was manifestly in error. Finding no error, we affirm the judgment of the chancery court.
¶ 31. THE JUDGMENT OF THE MADISON COUNTY CHANCERY COURT IS AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO THE APPELLANT.
Notes
.The oldest child was no longer a minor at the time the social security benefits were paid. The chancellor’s amended order reflects that the oldest child did not receive any social security benefits. Hence, receipt by the other three children of any social security benefits would not have impacted any arrear-ages owed to the oldest child.
. See Lane v. Lane,
. There was also a dispute between the parties as to visitation, but this is not an issue before us on appeal.
. In Keith, there was no arrearage. In this case, James clearly is in default and arrears. We seek here only to address the arrearages issue before us and do not seek to re-hash Keith. In this case, James came to court with indisputable unclean hands and failed to present evidence as to when the social security benefits were received. The benefits are equitably deemed a benefit to the child. James could not get a modification of his child support obligations without a cleansing judgment and social security benefits do not satisfy ar-rearages.
Concurrence Opinion
CONCURRING:
¶ 32. I agree that the judgment against James Calvin Chapman in the amount of $14,850.85 in favor of Debbie Ward for
¶ 33. In the judgment of divorce, entered March 12, 2002, nunc pro tunc July 9, 2001, the chancellor ordered James to pay twenty-four percent of his adjusted gross income, with said support due the first month he earns a paycheck. Technically, James never earned a paycheck within the literal meaning of the word. He did, however, receive gross income within the meaning of Mississippi Code Annotated, section 43-19-101 (Rev.2004), because he received substantial workers’ compensation benefits. Section 43-19-101(3)(a) defines gross income to include workers’ compensation benefits. There is no doubt, however, that James knew that he was supposed to pay twenty-four percent of his workers’ compensation benefits to Debbie as child support for the parties’ minor children.
¶ 34. James began receiving the workers’ compensation benefits in October 2002. At that point, the court-ordered child support payments began to accrue. Yet, he paid nothing to Debbie for child support. It is clear from the record that at the time of the divorce, James was not working, presumably due to a work-related injury, and that the parties contemplated that James would soon begin receiving workers’ compensation payments as a result of the injury.
¶ 35. In late 2005, James was found to be disabled by the Social Security Administration. As a result, he received a lump-sum payment. His minor children, who were the subjects of the child support judgment, also received lump-sum payments. Although it is not entirely clear in the record, it appears that these lump-sum payments for the children were not received until sometime in 2006 prior to James’s filing his petition to modify the judgment of divorce. In the petition, he sought a setoff or credit against the children’s lump-sum social security payments for his past-due child support payments that had vested and accrued back in 2002 when he received the workers’ compensation payments.
¶ 36. The chancellor ruled that James was not entitled to a setoff against the lump-sum social security benefits because that was never the intent of the court. Specifically, the chancellor found that “[h]ad any of [the court-ordered child support payments] included social security payments or benefits the Court would not have ordered [James] to pay 24% to [Debbie].”
¶ 37. As I stated in Keith v. Purvis,
¶ 38. Our facts here are remarkably similar to the facts in Keith except they are in the inverse. In Keith, Jackie Keith was ordered to pay child support to Deanna Purvis. Keith,
¶ 39. Keith timely paid his child support payments as they became due. In today’s case, James did not. Had James paid his child support obligation when he received his workers’ compensation payments and kept his child support payments current, I would find that he should be given credit for the lump-sum social security payment that Debbie later received. In my judgment, no principle of law enunciated in any of the cases cited by the majority in Keith or in this case prohibits a noncustodial parent from being credited with, or refunded, monthly dependent social security payments that are paid in a lump sum after the noncustodial parent has been adjudged disabled if all vested, court-ordered child support payments have been paid when the social security payments are received. The fact that vested child support payments cannot be forgiven is no impediment to giving a credit or refund because no vested child support payments are being forgiven. They already will have been paid. The issue to be resolved, under those circumstances, is what is the proper disposition or application of lump-sum social security payments that are received by a custodial parent for the benefit of a dependent child of a disabled social security recipient who is under a court order to pay child support but who is current with his court-ordered child support payments when the lump-sum payment from the Social Security Administration is received.
¶ 41. In Keith, the message that is being unwittingly sent to obligators in child support orders is this: if you are a disabled social security recipient expecting a lump-sum social security payment on behalf of your dependent child, you may refuse, with impunity, to pay your court-ordered child support obligation pending receipt of the lump-sum social security payment. The flip side of the above message to a disabled social security recipient who struggles to keep his court-ordered child support payments current while waiting for the social security payments to begin is that you will be punished because you will not be given any credit for the child support payments that you made pending the commencement of the social security payments.
¶ 42. I fully embrace the jurisprudence of this state that obligators in child support orders are required to meet their obligation to make timely payments for the support of their minor children. However, when they have met that obligation and a lump-sum social security payment (representing the aggregate of payments owed from the time of a disabled recipient’s application for benefits to the date of the commencement of monthly payments) is received and the monthly social security payments begin to flow to the recipient’s dependent child, adjustments can be, and should be, made to reimburse the recipient for child support payments already made and to substitute the dependent’s social security payments for the recipient’s future child support payments, up to the amount of the recipient court-ordered support obligation. Resolving the problem in this manner satisfies two equally important interests: (1) the State’s interest in assuring that minor dependents receive adequate and timely support from the parent charged with the responsibility of providing the support, and (2) the right of the child-support obligator to be treated in the same manner as other child-support obli-gators who are given credit for social security payments in lieu of child support payments but provided no lump-sum social security payments to their dependents.
¶ 43. For the reasons presented, I concur in the affirmance of the trial court’s judgment.
CHANDLER, J., JOINS THIS OPINION. CARLTON, J., JOINS THIS OPINION IN PART.
. The lump-sum payment represented the aggregate of monthly dependent payments retroactive to the date of James’s application for disability status. This lump-sum payment was not received until sometime after February 2006, but it was enough to cover the aggregate of dependent monthly payments that had become due under an order for child support entered by the court on March 12, 2002, nunc pro tunc July 9, 2001. Prior to receipt of the lump-sum payment, James had not paid any child support, even though he had received substantial workers’ compensation benefits in October 2002.
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING:
¶ 44. The majority affirms the chancery court’s decision to deny James a credit against child support arrearages for the sums Debbie received from the Social Security Administration for lump-sum back payments to her minor children because of James’s disability. Believing the majority opinion is contrary to Mooneyham v. Mooneyham,
¶ 45. James and Debbie were divorced by an entry of judgment of divorce on
¶ 46. Under the judgment of divorce, James had the following obligation:
That the Husband shall pay child support 24% of his adjusted gross income with said support due the first month he earns a paycheck and continuing on the 1st day of each month until the minor children are emancipated and with the appropriate withholding order entered.
¶ 47. It is undisputed that James has been unemployed since the divorce and has not paid any child support. James received workers’ compensation payments of $16,000, $12,165.92, and $26,250. It is based on these figures that the chancellor ordered James to pay 24% (along with interest) for back child support.
¶ 48. James was determined by the Social Security Administration to be totally disabled. As a result, Debbie received three lump-sum back payments from Social Security for the benefit of the three youngest children. It is unknown whether any benefits were paid for the fourth child who is no longer a minor. Debbie also receives a monthly benefit check from the Social Security Administration for the benefit of the three minor children.
¶ 49. James filed a “Petition to Find Defendant in Contempt and to Modify Judgment of Divorce” on March 9, 2006, in the Chancery Court of Madison County. James sought to have the judgment of divorce modified due to his disability to require that the social security benefits payable for the benefit of the minor children stand in lieu of the past and future child support payments.
¶ 50. Debbie filed an “Answer to Petition to Find Defendant in Contempt and to Modify Judgment of Divorce along with a Counterclaim for Citation of Contempt and Modification” on June 14, 2006. In the counterclaim, Debbie asked the court to find James in contempt for failure to pay child support of 24% of the workers’ compensation benefits along with 24% of any monthly unemployment benefits and/or workers’ compensation benefits.
¶ 51. On August 15, 2006, the court entered its “Opinion and Final Judgment” ordering James to pay Debbie $15,844.26 by September 11, 2006, and relieving James of any further child support obligation due to the receipt of social security benefits by the children based on James’s disability. The court later amended its ruling to correct a calculation error and ordered James to pay $14,840.85 as child support from the workers’ compensation benefits he received.
¶ 52. James argues that he should have been given credit against any arrearage for child support for the Social Security Administration’s award of benefits to the minor children. As this Court recently held in Keith v. Purvis,
¶ 53. While my research indicates that no authority is exactly on point with the facts of this case, I find Mooneyham controlling. In Mooneyham, the Mississippi Supreme Court, after reviewing the decisions of eight other jurisdictions, stated:
Where the father who has been ordered to make child support payments becomes totally and permanently disabled,and unconditional [s]ocial [s]ecurity payments for the benefit of the minor children are paid to the divorced mother, the father is entitled to credit for such payments by the government against his liability for child support under the divorce decree.
Mooneyham,
¶ 54. In 1992, the supreme court again looked at Mooneyham and stated: “We have held that SSI benefits received by a minor child based on his parent’s disability or retirement are considered an alternative source of payment which should be credited toward satisfaction of child support obligations.” Hammett v. Woods,
¶ 55. The chancery court in its opinion and amended opinion cited Mooneyham and Bradley and stated that the “Mississippi Supreme Court has held that payment of social security benefits for the benefit of the minor children under the Social Security Act are considered an alternative source of payment that satisfies child support and should be credited toward that obligation.” The court, however, did not recognize that this credit also applies to past-due child support. Under the cases cited, I find this to be in error. The majority states that Mooneyham is not a true arrearage ease. I disagree. The only reason the appellant father did not have child support arrearages is because in Mooneyham the supreme court gave retroactive credit to the father for the social security payments when the ap-pellee mother began receiving them directly. In Keith, this Court cited Mooneyham for the proposition that “the Mississippi Supreme Court has impliedly held that crediting social security benefits against support arrearage does not constitute an impermissible retroactive modification of support.” Keith,
