Two identical questions have been certified to this Court by the Circuit Court of Boone County in three separate cases. These questions ask us to determine the effect of the marriage, remarriage or cohabitation of parents on a valid preexisting order for child support and on unpaid child support that accrued prior to the marriage or remarriage of the parents. We conclude that the marriage or remarriage of parents automatically terminates the preexisting child support order; however, mere cohabitation does not. We further conclude that child support ar-rearages that accumulated prior to the marriage or remarriage of the parents are not nullified as a result of the marriage or remarriage.
I.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A.
Griffis
Three children had been born of the marriage of James and Pamela Griffis by the time they divorced in June of 1979. At the time of the divorce, the three children were approximately eleven, four-and-one-half, and two-and-one-half years old. The divorce decree granted custody of the three minor children to Pamela Griffis and ordered James Griffis to pay child support in the amount of $166 per child, per month, for a total monthly support amount of $498. James failed to make any of the ordered child support payments. Pamela received assistance from Aid to Families with Dependent Children [hereinafter “AFDC”] for the months of June and July, 1979.
In June, 1980, the couple remarried. By this time, James was in arrears on his child support obligation in the amount of $6,141.13. 1 Upon the remarriage of the couple, the Boone County office of the Child Support Enforcement Division [hereinafter “CSED”] 2 ceased calculating James’ child support obligation. In addition to the child support arrearages, James owed the State $498 for the aforementioned AFDC benefits.
Thereafter, in February 1981, the couple divorced a second time. Custody of the minor children was again awarded to Pamela. James was ordered to pay child support in the amount of $167 per child, per month, for *206 a total monthly support amount of $501. Once again, James failed to make any child support payments. Pamela received AFDC benefits from June, 1982, through February, 1984.
In May, 1984, the couple married a third time. The amount of child support that had accrued, but was not paid by James, between the couple’s second divorce and third marriage was $19,630.87. James also owed the State $4,482 for the AFDC benefits Pamela received between June, 1982, and February, 1984.
At some point, proceedings directed toward a third divorce were initiated. However, the action was dismissed- due to the couple’s reconciliation. James and Pamela remain legally married. CSED records indicate that James currently owes Pamela a total of $61,741.90 in child support arrears and owes the State a total of $581.83 for AFDC benefits paid to Pamela. 3
B.
Shreve
Kimberly O. and Steve A. Shreve were married in July, 1975. On September 8, 1987, the couple separated. Kimberly requested public assistance. The assistance was approved on September 11, 1987. Kimberly and Steve were granted a divorce by order of the Circuit Court of Boone County in November, 1987. Kimberly was awarded custody of the couple’s two children, who were then approximately seven-and-one-half and three-and-one-half years old. Steve was ordered to pay Kimberly $249 per month in child support. Steve fulfilled his child support obligation until June, 1988, when he and Kimberly reconciled. 4 Apparently due to this reconciliation, the CSED ceased tabulation of Steve’s child support obligation in June, 1988. 5 The couple remarried in August, 1991.
Kimberly and Steve separated a second time in August, 1994, and Kimberly applied for AFDC benefits. As a result of the AFDC application, there was an automatic referral to the CSED and a child support case was opened. Kimberly filed for divorce in October, 1994, and the CSED began collecting child support payments from Steve in December, 1994. By temporary order, the Circuit Court of Boone County awarded custody of one of the couple’s two children to Kimberly, and Steve was awarded custody of the other child. In addition, Steve was ordered to pay Kimberly $450 per month for support of the child in Kimberly’s custody. 6 The divorce became final in August, 1996. The provisions for child custody and support that were provided in the temporary order were repeated, without modification, in the final order granting the divorce. As of June 1, 1997, Steve was in arrears to Kimberly in the amount of $550.41.
' C.
Mitchell
By an order entered on October 2, 1978, the Circuit Court of Boone County found that Thomas G. Mitchell was the father of a child born to Shirley Mitchell on September 8, 1975. Pursuant to the order, Thomas was required to pay Shirley $75 per month for support of the child. The payments were to begin on October 1, 1978. Also in October, 1978, Shirley began receiving AFDC benefits. She continued receiving AFDC benefits through March, 1979. As a result of the AFDC benefits paid to Shirley, Thomas owed the State of West Virginia $300. Meanwhile,' in November, 1978, a second child was born to Thomas and Shirley. 7 The couple married in July, 1979. As a result of the marriage, *207 the CSED ceased calculating Thomas’ child support obligation to Shirley. At the time of the marriage, Thomas still owed $300 to the State and also owed Shirley $302.27 in unpaid child support.
The couple subsequently divorced in April, 1988. Custody of the couple’s two minor children was awarded to Shirley, and Thomas was ordered to pay Shirley $200 per month for support of the two children. Shirley again received AFDC benefits from April, 1988, through May, 1989, and from February, 1990, through December 1990. The AFDC benefits received by Shirley created a corresponding debt for Thomas in the amount of $5,000.
Shirley and Thomas were married a second time in December 1990. The CSED again ceased calculations on the child support obligation upon the remarriage of the couple. At that time, Thomas was indebted to the State in the amount of $5,147. He also owed Shirley $2,415.48 in unpaid child support. Thereafter, Thomas and Shirley separated again in August, 1995. Following the separation, Shirley received AFDC benefits from September, 1995, through December, 1996. No order for child support has been entered since this separation. As of June 1, 1997, Thomas owed Shirley $4,024.24 in child support arrears and owed the State $5,147 8 for AFDC benefits received by Shirley.
D.
Certified Questions
In each of the above described eases, the CSED motioned the circuit court to certify certain questions of law to this Court - for resolution. Deciding these motions by three separate orders, 9 the circuit court certified two questions to this Court. Because the questions in each ease are identical, we have consolidated the cases for the purpose of addressing the following questions certified by the Circuit Court of Boone County:
Question 1
Whether either divorce order automatically terminated upon the cohabitation, marriage, or re-marriage of the parties?
Answer of the Circuit Court
Each divorce order terminated automatically upon the marriage or re-marriage of the parties, but not upon cohabitation.
Question 2
Whether child support arrearages were eliminated upon the cohabitation, marriage, or re-marriage of the parties?
Answer of the Circuit Court
Child Support arrearages were eliminated upon the marriage or re-marriage of the parties, with the exception of arrearag-es that were assigned to the State of West Virginia. Arrearages were not eliminated upon the cohabitation of the parties.
Pursuant to our authority to do so, we rephrase the certified questions before us as follows: 10
Question 1
When the parents of a minor child or children marry, remarry or cohabit, does any pre-existing child support order/obligation regarding the child or children automatically terminate with respect to payments thereafter accruing?
*208 Question 2
When a court order requires payment of child support by one parent to another, and the parent who is required to make such payments has failed to make any or all of the required child support payments, does the marriage, remarriage or cohabitation of the parents operate to nullify the accumulated arrearages?
Before this Court, the CSED contends that no statutes or cases in West Virginia squarely deal with issues regarding the status of child support and child support arrear-ages upon the marriage, remarriage or cohabitation of the parents. It further submits that its field offices resolve such issues on a case by case basis, which results in inconsistent resolutions. The CSED also argues that there is a lack of consistency among the various circuit courts of this state in dealing with these issues.
II.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We have repeatedly stated that we apply a
de novo
standard when reviewing certified questions.
See
Syl. pt. 1,
Gallapoo v. Wal-Mart Stores, Inc.,
III.
DISCUSSION
A. When the parents of a minor child or children marry, remarry or cohabit, does any pre-existing child support order/obligation regarding the child or children automatically terminate with respect to payments thereafter accruing?
The Circuit court answered this question by ruling, in essence, that when parents of a child or children marry or remarry, any pre-existing child support order regarding the child or children automatically terminates; however, such an order does not terminate if the parents merely cohabit. The CSED urges us to adopt the circuit court’s view.
This certified question presents an issue that has not previously been addressed by this Court. In answering this question, we first consider the effect of the remarriage of a divorced couple on the child support provisions contained in the original divorce decree. The CSED submits that the circuit court’s ruling on this issue represents the majority rule. Indeed, our review of this area of the law reveals that the general rule is that the remarriage of divorced parents to each other automatically nullifies child custody and support provisions contained in a previously entered order dissolving a prior marriage. 11
The Supreme Judicial Court of Maine was asked to resolve this issue in
Palacci v. Palacci,
Similarly, in
Davis v. Davis,
[T]he rule as developed in other jurisdictions is that if the parties again intermarry!,] child custody and support orders as between themselves are thereupon terminated, as well as the jurisdiction of the court to enforce such orders, and that this is true whether or not the parents subse *209 quently divorce again. (See Lockard v. Lockard (1951)63 Ohio L. Abs. 549 ,49 Ohio Ops. 163 [102 N.E.2d 747 , 748]; McDaniel v. Thompson (Tex.Civ.App., 1946)195 S.W.2d 202 , 203-204; Jenkins v. Followell (Okla., 1953)262 P.2d 880 , 882; Dunlap v. Dunlap (1923)88 Okla. 200 [212 P. 608 , 609]; Ex parte Phillips (1957)266 Ala. 198 [95 So.2d 77 ]; Eppes v. Covey (Fla.App., 1962)141 So.2d 747 , 748; Rasch v. Rasch (1964)250 Miss. 885 [168 So.2d 738 , 743]; Lowe v. Lowe (1909)53 Wash. 50 [101 P. 704 , 705]; Oliphant v. Oliphant (1928)177 Ark. 613 [7 S.W.2d 783 , 786-787]; Cain v. Garner (1916)169 Ky. 633 [185 S.W. 122 , Ann. Cas. 1918B 824,L.R.A. 1916E 682 ]; 27B C.J.S., Divorce, § 323, subd. h, p. 730; 24 Am.Jur.2d, Divorce and Separation, § 805, p. 915.).
(Footnote omitted). The
Davis
court recognized that some of the cases it cited in the opinion spoke “only of custody”; however, the court explained the relevancy of these eases by noting that “a custody award to [one parent] ordinarily carries with it a support order against the [other parent].”
Davis
at 292,
The rationale for this rule was fittingly explained by the Missouri Court of Appeals in
In re Marriage of Root,
It would be absurd to hold that once parents remarry each other and the family is again intact and residing in the same household, the former noncustodial parent must pay future installments of child support to the other parent per the past divorce decree. That is to say, the remarriage should terminate the former noncustodial parent’s duty to pay any child support that would have become due after the remarriage.
Id. at 523. Another court has similarly explained that:
When previously divorced parties remarry, the “parties are restored to their rights as if they had never been divorced. After remarriage, the parties’ relationship to the children and the duty to furnish support become exactly as they were before the divorce and upon the showing of remarriage, judgment for custody or for an amount for support of the children cannot be maintained based on the prior decree.”
Palacci v. Palacci,
In addition to determining the effect the remarriage of divorced parents has on child support awarded in conjunction with a prior divorce, we are further asked to determine
*210
the effect of a marriage on a prior order mandating child support when the parents were not previously married. We find no reason to alter the general rule under these circumstances. • At least one court has reached this conclusion in a case involving a child support judgment that was entered as part of a paternity proceeding, as opposed to child support in connection with a divorce, where the parents were married subsequent to the child support judgment.
Schaff v. Schaff
The parties to the Schaff case had a child prior to their marriage. A paternity judgement was entered against the father, and he was ordered to pay child support. 12 Approximately one year later, the couple married. During a subsequent divorce proceeding, issues involving the previous child support order were raised. The court found that the factual scenario before it was like that of divorced parents who remarry each other. The court recognized that “[generally, when divorced persons- remarry each other, their remarriage nullifies the divorce court’s order for child custody ... and future installments of child support.” Schaff at 31. (citations omitted) (footnote omitted). The court reasoned that “if the parties to a divorce decree remarry each other, they no longer have separate rights of custody and separate obligations for future support; rather, the same joint rights to custody and joint obligations for future support which antedated the divorce are resumed.” Id. (citations omitted). The Schaff court further observed:
The paternity action, as well as the divorce action, each involves a determination of the separate rights and liabilities of parents for their children. While a paternity action and a divorce action establish the separate rights and liabilities of parents, those parents’ subsequent marriage or remarriage establishes anew the parents’ joint rights and liabilities for custody and support of their children replacing their former separate rights and liabilities.
Id. at 32. The court went on to hold:
[Wjhen parents of a child born out-of-wed-loek marry each other, the child custody and future support provisions of the paternity judgment are nullified and replaced by the law governing the rights and obligations of married parents to their children. If those parents subsequently seek a divorce, the divorce laws are then applicable to the determination of child custody and support.
Id. (footnote omitted). Thus, it appears the marriage of a minor child’s previously unwed parents would likewise extinguish any pre-existing order of child support decreed for the benefit of such child.
With respect to the impact of the parents’ cohabitation on an existing child support obligation, the CSED suggests that little has been said about this issue in any jurisdiction. While the CSED does not cite any case law, it suggests two policy reasons for adopting the rule that cohabitation of the parents should not terminate child support obligations. 13 First, the CSED argues that it is easier to cohabit than to marry or remarry, thus cohabiting couples are more likely to separate and then reunite. Consequently, the resulting onslaught of cases would create an accounting nightmare for CSED. Second, one parent may force the other, through domestic violence, to cohabit or to commit fraud by asserting a non-existent reconciliation. The CSED contends that because it is *211 easier to cohabit than to marry, the risk of coercion is greater.
We find that the substantial differences that exist between marriage and cohabitation unquestionably compel the conclusion that cohabitation, without marriage, is insufficient to automatically nullify the provisions of an existing court order related to child custody and support. Since common law marriages may not be validly formed in this State,
Goode v. Goode,
Upon the termination of a marriage or second marriage between parents, custody and support issues will be visited anew. See W. Va.Code § 48-2-15 (1996) (Repl.Vol. 1996). Thus, the child will not be harmed by the fact that an earlier child support order was terminated upon the marriage or remarriage of the parents. There is no such protection in place when a couple ceases to cohabit. Consequently, if cohabitation were sufficient to terminate a prior order of child support, a child could, and most likely would, be significantly harmed if and when his or her parents cease to cohabit. In the absence of a legally significant unification of the family, we must decline to find that the provisions, of a court order mandating child support are automatically terminated.
We therefore hold that when the parents of a minor child or children marry or remarry, any sums of child support subsequently due under a preexisting child support order, entered by a court of competent jurisdiction, regarding that child or children, automatically terminates and no further child support will accrue under that order from the date of the subsequent marriage forward. However, where the parties do not marry or remarry, but simply cohabit, the preexisting order does not automatically terminate, but remains in full effect, and the child support obligation continues as defined in the order.
B. When a court order requires payment of child support by one parent to another, and the parent who is required to make such payments has failed to make any or all of the required child support payments, does the marriage, remarriage or cohabitation of the parents operate to nullify the accumulated arrearages?
The Circuit Court of Boone County answered this question by ruling that when a court order requires payment of child support by one parent to another, and the par *212 ent who is required to make such payments has failed to make any or all of the required child support payments, the marriage or remarriage of the parents operates to nullify the accumulated arrearages; however, the mere cohabitation of the parents does not operate to nullify such arrearages. In addition, the court ruled that arrearages that are assigned to the State of West Virginia are not eliminated by the marriage, remarriage or cohabitation of the parents.
The CSED urges us to answer this question in the negative. The CSED argues that nullifying child support arrears is inconsistent with West Virginia law and contrary to the weight of authority from other jurisdictions. While there is apparently no case law addressing this precise issue, the CSED notes that in Syllabus point 2 of Goff v. Goff we held:
The authority of the circuit courts to modify alimony or child support awards is prospective only and, absent a showing of fraud or other judicially cognizable circumstance in procuring the original award, a circuit court is without authority to modify or cancel accrued alimony or child support installments.
Considering the above principles, the CSED argues that “[i]f a circuit court lacks the authority to retroactively modify a child support obligation, and the parties cannot by agreement terminate a child support obligation, a fortiori, the accrued and unpaid child support payments (which are the vested right of the judgment holder) may not be eliminated upon the [marriage or] remarriage of the parties.”
The CSED continues by arguing that, because it is well established in West Virginia law that marriage does not alter a person’s ownership of his/her own property, W. Va. Code § 48-2-1(0(1992) (Repl.Vol.1996), and because a property settlement resulting from a divorce does not change upon the subsequent remarriage of the parties, Syl. pt. 2,
Caldwell v. Caldwell,
The CSED also asserts that “[i]f an obligor fails to make ordered support payments, and the obligee or some public agency assumes that additional burden, the party who assumed that burden is entitled to recoup the payment from the obligated party.”
16
Citing Costello v. McDonald,
At the outset, we note our holding in Section III. A of this opinion, that a preexisting order for child support remains in full effect when parents merely cohabit, resolves the present issue as it relates to cohabitation. Since cohabitation does not terminate an existing child support order, it certainly would not nullify child support arrearages accumulated under a fully enforceable order. Therefore, we limit our discussion in this section to the effect the marriage or remarriage of parents has on child support payments that accrued prior to such marriage or remarriage. Before we conclusively resolve this issue, we first review how other jurisdictions have addressed this matter.
In
Scheibel v. Scheibel,
the Supreme Court of Nebraska was asked “whether the subsequent remarriage of parties operates as a matter of law, independent of any other circumstances, to automatically bar any action for child support not paid between the time of [a] first decree of divorce and [a] subsequent remarriage.”
In the absence of any evidence whatever that the appellant was materially prejudiced by the delay in the assertion of the claim for support, we decline to hold that the remarriage of the parties will operate as a matter of law to prohibit the party for whose benefit the support was ordered from instituting action to collect the ar-rearages.
Syllabus, Id.
The Supreme Court of Iowa has reached a similar result. The case before the Iowa court involved a mother’s pursuit of child support arrearages where the parents divorced, the husband became delinquent on his related child support obligation, and then the parents remarried.
Greene v. Iowa Dist. Court for Polk County,
The Greene case involved an added element. The arrearages were not due to the mother, as she had assigned her right to the support payments to the Iowa Department of Social Services in exchange for welfare benefits. Thus, the Iowa Department of Social Services ultimately received the benefit of the enforcement of the child support judgment. While this case demonstrates that when the right to accrued child support installments has been assigned to the state, the right is still enforceable, the court did not limit its holding to the particular scenario before it. Rather, the Greene court recognized generally that pre-remarriage child support judgments are enforceable as to unpaid arrearages. 17
*214
We are inclined to agree with the reasoning and result contained in
Greene;
however, we disagree with that court’s interpretation of
Davis v. Davis.
The court in
Greene
indicated that the California rule adopted in
Davis
differed from the rule being adopted in Iowa. On the contrary, we find that the
Davis
opinion supports' the conclusion reached by the Iowa court. In
Davis,
the ■wife sought to collect child support payments for the period “between the separation that followed the remarriage, and the second support order,” based upon the support order entered in connection with the parties’ first divorce.
Davis
at 291,
In the case of
In re Marriage of Root,
Likewise, the Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama addressed this issue in
Hardy v. Hardy,
*215 Court-ordered child support payments become final money judgments on the dates that they are due and are thereafter immune from change or modification.... Past-due installments of child support are final judgments which may be collected as any other judgment.... A trial court may not modify, release, or discharge the obligor of past-due child support once the obligation matures and becomes final under the original divorce decree.
Id. at 1015 (citations omitted).
We find the aforementioned authorities particularly persuasive. Furthermore, we believe the law presently existing in this state directs us to concur with that authority. As the CSED correctly observed, the circuit courts of this state lack authority to modify or cancel accrued child support installments, Syl. pt. 2,
Goff v. Goff,
IV.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated in this opinion, we conclude that the marriage or remarriage of parents automatically terminates a preexisting child support order; however, the mere cohabitation of the parents does not. We further conclude that child support arrearag-es that accumulated prior to the marriage or remarriage of the parents are not nullified as a result of such marriage or remarriage, and the right to collect such arrearages may be asserted, even where that right has been assigned to an agency of this State.
Certified questions answered.
Notes
. This amount includes the principal balance of accrued, unpaid child support installments and statutory interest.
See
Syl. pt. 5,
Goff v. Goff, 177
W.Va. 742,
. We refer to the Child Support Enforcement Division by its statutory name. See W. Va.Code § 48A-2-12 (1997) (Supp.1997) (establishing Child Support Enforcement Division). We note, however, that under the direction of Joan Ohl, Secretary of the West Virginia Department of Health and Human Resources, the Division operates under the name "Bureau for Child Support Enforcement.
. Income tax intercepts have offset a portion of the State debt.
. Although the couple reconciled, at that time they did not remarry.
. Apparently, prior to the couple’s reconciliation, Steve had failed to pay a small tax offset. The tax intercepts for the money owed to the State were received in March, 1993, and the CSED’s case on the Shreves was then closed.
. Prior to the temporary order, Steve paid $300 per month in child support.
. Although no formal paternity action was filed at the time of the child’s birth, a subsequent divorce order found that Thomas was the child’s father.
. This is the amount of arrearages owed to the State as indicated in the CSED’s brief. It appears that this amount does not include the AFDC benefits received by Shirley from September, 1995, to December, 1996. However, there is nothing contained in the record submitted to this Court from which to ascertain the correctness of this amount.
. The “Order of Certification” in the Griffis case was entered on May 6, 1997; similar orders were entered in the Shreve and Mitchell cases on June 2, 1997.
.
See
W. Va.Code § 51-1A-4 (1996) (Supp. 1997) ("The supreme court of appeals of West Virginia may reformulate a question certified to it.”); Syl. pt. 3,
Kincaid v. Mangum,
. While the general rule is that the remarriage of divorced parents to each other automatically nullifies child custody and support provisions contained in a previously entered order dissolving a prior marriage, the impact of the nullification is apparently interpreted somewhat differently among various jurisdictions. See discussion infra Section III. B.
. In this instance, the child support took the form of a lump-sum payment into an annuity that provided the child’s mother a monthly dividend until the child reached age eighteen, and "treasury bonds with a future value of $20,000.”
Schaff v. Schaff,
. The CSED notes that, with respect to case closure criteria, it treats married and cohabiting couples identically. According to the CSED, its written policy states that upon written acknowledgment from cohabiting parties (regardless of their marital status) where no arrearages are due and no wage withholding order is in effect, a CSED case shall be closed. CSED Policy 10000.10(12). A copy of this policy was not included with the record submitted to this Court. Consequently, we cannot conclusively ascertain whether CSED Policy 10000.10(12) is consistent 'with this opinion; however, based upon the CSED’s representations, it appears that it is not. To the extent that CSED policy is inconsistent with this opinion, it is hereby superseded.
. While common law marriages may not be formed in this state, we do recognize the validity of common-law marriages formed in states that permit such marriages.
See Goode v. Goode,
. The formalities required of a couple planning to mariy include the completion of an application for a marriage licence, W. Va.Code § 48-1-6 (1993) (Repl.Vol.1996); the issuance of a license, W. Va.Code § 48-1-5 (1969) (Repl.Vol. 1996); the requirement that the licence be filed with the appropriate county clerk, W. Va.Code § 48-1-10 (1969) (Repl.VoI.1996); and the requirement that the county clerk maintain a record of marriage licenses, W. Va.Code § 48-1-11 (1969) (Repl.Vol. 1996)..
. See W. Va.Code § 9-3-4 (1979) (Repl.Vol. 1998) (“Any recipient of financial assistance under the program of state and federal assistance established by title IV of the federal Social Security Act of 1965, as amended, or any successor act thereto, shall, upon receipt of such assistance be deemed to have assigned to the West Virginia department of welfare all rights, title and interest such recipient may have to the receipt of support and maintenance moneys from any person responsible for the support and maintenance of any member of the benefit group.").
.
Accord In re Marriage of Root,
.
Accord Root
at 523 (recognizing that
Davis v. Davis,
.
See Davis v. Davis,
.
Rasch v. Rasch,
. Citing
Ringstrom v. Ringstrom,
