Mary E. (Donovan) CRAGO, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. Thomas DONOVAN, Defendant and Appellee.
No. 20736.
Supreme Court of South Dakota.
Decided June 2, 1999.
1999 SD 67
Considered on Briefs April 26, 1999.
Mitchell D. Johnson, Rapid City, South Dakota, Attorney for defendant and appellee.
MILLER, Chief Justice.
[¶ 1.] Mary Crago (Mother) appeals from an order that offsets Thomas Donovan’s (Father’s) child support arrearages by the increase in social security benefits paid to the children in 1992 through 1995. We affirm.
FACTS
[¶ 2.] Mother and Father were divorced in February 1983. Mother was granted primary physical custody of their two young sons and Father was ordered to pay $200 per month child support. In December 1989 Father filed a motion to modify child support due to his development of a disability which would result in anticipated social security dependent benefits of $145 per month for each of the children. Based on an estimated amount of these anticipated payments, his support obligation was reduced to $49 per month. The actual social security payments were much lower than anticipated, and in March 1990 Mother petitioned for modification of the support obligation. An order was entered June 8, 1990 setting Father’s obligation at $335 per month.1
[¶ 3.] No petition to modify this amount was ever filed, although social security disability benefit amounts increased after 1991. In January 1992, $68 in benefits were paid to the children. From February 1992 through August 1992, these benefits increased to $146 per month. In Sep
[¶ 4.] In August 1997, primary physical custody of the parties’ only then-minor child transferred to Father by court order. Mother’s child support obligation was set at $163.20 per month. Mother made no payments on this obligation, due to a dispute between the parties regarding Father’s arrearages, and by May 1998 she had accumulated arrearages of $1,468.80. She filed a motion with the trial court for an accounting of the parties’ child support obligations and asked that the court offset Father’s arrearages by any amount owed by her. Instead, the trial court offset Father’s arrearages by the social security benefits the children had received.
[¶ 5.] The trial court made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law:
That between June 1, 1990 and August 15, 1997, the amount of Social Security benefits payable as the result of the disability of [Father] and received by [Mother] changed from time to time, resulting in this dispute as to whether or not the net child support payable from June 1, 1990 through August 15, 1997 would remain the same pursuant to said Judgment regardless of the amount of Social Security benefits paid, or if [Father] is entitled to a credit against his child support obligation based on the benefits paid from time to time even though there were no proceedings before this Court to amend or modify the Court’s Judgment setting child support as of June 1, 1990 in the sum of $355.00 [sic] per month, (emphasis added).
The Court finds that [Father] is entitled to an offset against his child support obligation of any and all sums received by [Mother] in the form of Social Security benefits paid as the result of the disability of [Father] to the extent of the child support payable from time to time, but never in an amount in which there would ever exist a credit balance (excess payment) of child support by [Father] to [Mother] during the time that support was payable.
The trial court determined Mother owed Father $1,119.08 “for the period of August 1998 and prior thereto” and ordered judgment against Mother in that amount as well as setting her child support obligation of $122.09 per month beginning September 1998.2 No judgment was taken against Father.
[¶ 6.] Mother appeals and questions whether the trial court erred in applying the increase in Social Security benefits to offset Father’s child support obligation.
ANALYSIS AND DECISION
[¶ 7.]
[¶ 8.] On appeal, both parties rely on this Court’s decisions in Grunewaldt v. Bisson, 494 N.W.2d 193 (S.D.1992) and Hawkins v. Peterson, 474 N.W.2d 90 (S.D.1991). In Hawkins, we joined the majority of jurisdictions holding that Social Security disability benefits paid on behalf of a child of a disabled parent may be credited to the disabled parent’s child support obligation during the period in which the benefits are received. 474 N.W.2d at 93 (citing Newman v. Newman, 451 N.W.2d 843, 844 (Iowa 1990)).4 Grunewaldt reaffirmed this holding in a case which denied the same credit to the nondisabled parent’s child support obligation. 494 N.W.2d at 195. We have never addressed the question of the effect of these payments upon a past-due support obligation.5 This question is one of law which we review de novo. City of Colton v. Schwebach, 1997 SD 4, ¶ 8, 557 N.W.2d 769, 771.
[¶ 9.] North Dakota has recently addressed this issue. In Mehl v. Mehl, 545 N.W.2d 777 (N.D.1996), the North Dakota Supreme Court held that credit for Social Security disability payments made for the benefit of children cannot be applied retroactively toward the disabled parent’s child support arrearages.
To apply the credit to the arrearage which accrued prior to the obligor’s filing of the modification application would amount to a retroactive modification of vested support rights. This we will not do. The credit should be applied at the time of the filing, however, only if the benefits are being paid to the dependent child or the child’s representative payee.
Id. at 780-781 (quoting Guthmiller v. Guthmiller, 448 N.W.2d 643, 649 (N.D.1989)). This holding was reaffirmed recently by the North Dakota Supreme Court in Austin v. Towne, 560 N.W.2d 895, 898 (N.D.1997).
[¶ 10.] This issue was before the Iowa Supreme Court in 1990 in Newman v. Newman, 451 N.W.2d 843 (Iowa 1990). We cited Newman with approval in Hawkins. The Newman court held that “a disabled parent who does not seek modification of a child support obligation may not later claim ‘unjust enrichment’ by the custodial parent who receives social security as well as child support payments.” Id. at 845. The Newman court stated that “[t]he retroactive forgiveness of child support liability that Ralph proposes would fly in the face of our long-standing rule that a court has no authority to divest the parties of rights accrued under the original decree.” Id.
[¶ 11.] However, there exists a split of authority among jurisdictions on this issue and both North Dakota and Iowa represent the minority rule.6 See Michael A.
Social Security benefits are paid as a result of a parent’s disability and serve as a substitute for that parent’s lost earning capacity.... Thus, a credit for [these] benefits does not retroactively modify the disabled parent’s monthly child support obligation; it merely changes the source of the payments.
Cowan, 928 P.2d at 220.8 See Dep’t of Public Aid v. McNichols, 243 Ill.App.3d 119, 183 Ill.Dec. 330, 611 N.E.2d 593, 595 (1993) (request for setoff of Social Security benefits against child support arrearages “goes to the discharge procedure of vested support payments and not modification of vested support rights”). Many courts have noted that applying these payments toward child support arrearages “is an equitable credit ... which is by nature different from a retroactive modification of a vested and accrued obligation.” Hanthorn, 460 N.W.2d at 654; Perteet, 269 S.E.2d at 454; Andler, 538 P.2d at 654; Board, 690 S.W.2d at 382; Griffin, 424 A.2d at 177; Mask, 620 P.2d at 885. Also, courts generally hold that Social Security dependent benefit amounts in excess of the court-ordered child support are considered a gratuity to the children. Andler, 538 P.2d at 654; Weaks, 821 S.W.2d at 507.
[¶ 12.] Here, income from a source already credited to Father’s share of the children’s support increased. Offsetting Father’s arrearages by the increase in disability benefits is in accord with this Court’s precedent that such benefits paid on behalf of a child of a disabled parent may be credited to the disabled parent’s child support obligation during the period in which the benefits are received. Hawkins, 474 N.W.2d at 93. Thus, the increased Social Security benefits were immediately effective as a credit against Father’s child support obligation and could not constitute a retroactive modification.
[¶ 13.] The better practice, of course, is for the obligor parent to notify the court
[¶ 14.] AMUNDSON, KONENKAMP and GILBERTSON, Justices, concur.
[¶ 15.] SABERS, Justice, concurs in result.
SABERS, Justice (concurring in result).
[¶ 16.] I concur in this result, even though unpaid support payments become judgments by operation of law and are enforceable, with interest from the date of each judgment.
Notes
Any past due support payments are not subject to modification by a court or administrative entity of this state, except those accruing in any period in which there is pending a petition for modification of the support obligation, but only from the date that notice of hearing of the petition has been given to the obligee, the obligor, and any other parties having an interest in such matter.
