The central issue in this case is whether past-due installments of child support ordered by a superior court in a divorce decree are “judgments” within the meaning of the statute of limitations, RSA 508:5. We hold that they are not.
In the 1966 decree of divorce of the parties, the Merrimack County Superior Court ordered the defendant, Robert Avery, to pay $25 a week in child support to the plaintiff, Antoinette Avery Griffin. The defendant never complied but, because he became disabled in August 1970, social security benefits in amounts less than his support obligation were paid to the plaintiff for the benefit of the children. None of the children has lived with the plaintiff since May 1, 1978.
On May 26, 1978, the plaintiff brought an action in the Merrimack County Superior Court to recover the unpaid installments of child support from the defendant. The parties submitted stipulated facts and four questions of law to the master for his decision. The Master (Robert A. Carignan, Esq.) ruled on the questions as follows: (1) the twenty-year statute of limitations pertaining to judgments, RSA 508:5, governed the plaintiffs cause of action; (2) the social security payments made to the plaintiff were credits toward the defendant’s support obligation; (3) the defendant’s support obligation did not terminate automatically when all the children moved out of the plaintiffs home; and (4) the plaintiff was entitled to judgment interest on the past-due installments of child support from the date each became due. The Superior Court (Cann, J.) approved the master’s rulings. The defendant appeals all the rulings except that pertaining to credit for social security payments; the plaintiff has cross-appealed that ruling.
In
McCrady v. Mahon
we held that past-due child support payments “are vested property rights and as such cannot be modified or vacated.”
Our opinion in
McCrady
made it clear that past-due installments of child support are not “judgments” for the amount due until they are reduced to final judgment by a court.
McCrady v. Mahon, supra
at 763,
Because child support arrearages are not “judgments” within the meaning of RSA 508:5, the master erred in applying that twenty-year statute of limitations to the plaintiff’s cause of action. The correct statute to be applied is RSA 508:4 (Supp. 1979), which states that “all other personal actions” must be brought “within six years after the cause of action accrued. . . .” Accordingly, the plaintiff may recover that amount of child support that became due between May 25,1972, and May 25,1978.
Our holding that each installment of child support does not become a judgment when it falls due dictates a finding that the plaintiff is not automatically entitled to interest on arrearages. Which interest statute applies to such cases is a question we need not decide because neither the plaintiff nor the New Hampshire Department of Probation demanded payment from the defendant within the six-year period covered by the statute of limitations. *787 Under either RSA 524:1-a or RSA 524:1-b, the plaintiff is entitled to interest only from the date she instituted her cause of action.
The master was not in error in ruling that the defendant’s support obligation did not terminate automatically when all the children moved out of the plaintiffs home. In this State the law is well established that a decree continues in force until it is judicially modified, unless the original decree provides for earlier cessation of payments,
Damon v. Damon,
There also was no error in the master’s allowance of credit toward the defendant’s overdue support obligation for social security payments made to the plaintiff. As the plaintiff correctly points out, two courts have refused to allow credit toward child support arrearages for social security payments.
Fowler v. Fowler,
The reasons for allowing a trial court discretion to allow credit are that social security disability payments are a substitute for the defendant’s earnings,
Chase v. Chase, supra
at 259,
Although the fact that the defendant never made any effort to comply with the support decree may justify a trial court’s refusal to allow credit for social security payments,
see, e.g., Fowler v. Fowler, supra; Fuller v. Fuller,
Affirmed in part; reversed in part; remanded.
