delivered the opinion of the court:
This is an appeal from an order denying petitioner’s request for a rule to show cause for failure to pay child support and which allegedly denied her a judgment for arrearage.
The parties were divorced in February 1967 and, pursuant to an agreement, the decree awarded custody of their three minor children to the рetitioner and gave visitation rights to respondent, who was also to pay child support in the amount of $50 a wеek. In a motion presented later in February 1967, respondent requested that the support payments be excused because petitioner deprived him of his visitation rights by removing the children to another jurisdiction where her аddress was unknown. In her answer, among other things, petitioner asked that the court authorize her departure from this jurisdiсtion nunc pro tunc as of January 4, 1976 (the day she left) and, asserting that respondent was in arrears, she asked that а rule to show cause issue “for failure to pay child support.” On March 27, 1967, the trial court entered an order (hеreafter the 1967 order) which, in pertinent part, stated that respondent “is relieved from making child support payments as of January 4,1967, and made nunc pro tunc as of that date.”
The record discloses that the next actiоn pertinent to this appeal was taken 11 years later, on April 5, 1978, when petitioner filed a petition alleging respondent to be $29,250 in arrears of child support payments and requesting that a rule to show cause be entered as well as “such other and further relief” as the court deemed appropriate. After a heаring, an order was entered in which the trial court denied the issuance of a rule on the basis that the 1967 order had abated respondent’s obligation to pay child support. This is an appeal from that order.
Opinion
Petitioner first tаkes the position that the trial court denied her a judgment for child support arrearage on the basis that thе 1967 order had abated respondent’s child support obligations. She argues that this denial was improper beсause the order excusing child support payments was “void as against public policy.” We initially note a quеstion as to whether there was a denial of a judgment for arrearage. The order appealed from states in relevant part:
“This cause coming before this Court upon the petition of Joan Gentile for Rule tо Show Cause ° ° °, the Court ° ° °
Hereby finds that the Order of April 19,1967 1 * * * is a valid and effective abatement of child support payments as stated therein.
It is therefore hereby Ordered that Joan Gentile’s Petition for Rule to Show Cause be and is DENIED.”
Petitioner acknowledges that her petition did not specifically request an arrearage judgment, but she urges that the language therein asking for “such other and further relief” as the court deemed appropriate should be construed as a rеquest for such judgment which, she argues, was improperly denied by the trial court’s finding in the order appealed from — thаt the 1967 order was “a valid and effective abatement of child support.”
It is established, however, that matters not presented to or ruled upon by the trial court may not be argued as error on appeal. (Somerset House, Inc. v. Board of Appeals (1970),
The order appeаled from, however, did deny the issuance of a rule to show cause and, in her brief here, petitioner appears also to argue that the trial court nonetheless erred in this respect. We initially note that an ordеr is viewed as final and appealable when it “disposes of the rights of the parties, either upon the entirе controversy or upon some definite and separate part thereof.” (Village of Niles v. Szczesny (1958),
Case law provides that a father’s failure to make child support payments as required in a decree is рrima facie evidence of contempt. (Storm v. Storm (1973),
Here, it appears clear that respondent did not make child support payments because of reliance on the 1967 order relieving him of the obligation of making such paymеnts. Reliance on this order which has remained unchallenged negates any willful and contumacious refusal to obey the child support provision of the divorce decree.
In view thereof, we find that the trial court properly refused to issue a rule to show cause against respondent.
For the reasons stated, the order of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
LORENZ and WILSON, JJ., concur.
Notes
The April 19, 1967, date is an error, as it was the March 27,1967, order which relieved respondent from the requirement to pay child support.
