delivered the opinion of the court:
Respondent, Keith A. Jungkans, appeals the trial court’s order finding that he owed $14,750 in overdue child support to petitioner, Marie Jungkans. He contends that equitable estoppel should have prevented a finding of an arrearage, but that the trial court erroneously concluded that it did not have the power to apply equitable estoppel. We reverse and remand.
In 1992, the trial court dissolved the parties’ marriage. The court awarded custody of the parties’ children, Dawn and Christina, to petitioner and ordered respondent to pay $250 monthly for child support. In 1994, Dawn went to live with respondent and continued to live with him until she was emancipated. Beginning in January 1995, respondent reduced his child-support payments to $125 monthly. Respondent believed that petitioner agreed to the reduction in child support. Petitioner denied agreeing to the arrangement, but acknowledged that she made no effort to collect the additional child support for nearly nine years. Neither party went to court to formalize these changes.
After petitioner started working for Du Page County, she learned for the first time that the Illinois Department of Public Aid (the Department) might help her collect the past-due child support. The Department did intervene on petitioner’s behalf by filing a petition to declare a child support arrearage. Respondent answered that he did not owe child support because
Following a hearing, the trial court found a child-support arrearage of $14,750. The trial court did not consider respondent’s estoppel argument, stating:
“I do see where this is a hardship for Mr. Jungkans at this point, but frankly, the law does not really allow me to reach back into time and reverse the axis of the earth and, like Superman, go backwards in time. I can’t do it. The order is what it is. It was not modified. I can’t now say that it would have been modified. And even if I could, I am without authority to modify it.
Certainly, circumstances changed in your lives, but, as it relates to court orders, they don’t seek out families and automatically adjust themselves to the circumstances of those families. Accordingly, the way I see it, I’m without jurisdiction to modify the arrearages, and they are what they are.”
The court reserved the issue of how the arrearage would be repaid and continued the hearing on respondent’s petition to abate child support. The court subsequently denied the petition to abate child support and ordered respondent to repay the arrearage at the rate of $50 per month. Respondent timely appealed.
Respondent contends that the trial court erred in concluding that it lacked authority to retroactively modify the child-support arrearage. He acknowledges that private agreements to modify child support are unenforceable, but argues that, under the facts here, the court had the authority to find that petitioner was estopped from collecting the past-due support. We agree that, although the parties’ agreement — if there was one — was unenforceable, the trial court had the power to apply equitable estoppel.
Equitable estoppel exists where a party, by his or her own statements or conduct, induces a second party to rely, to his or her detriment, on the statements or conduct of the first party. In re Marriage of Smith,
Initially, it is clear that any agreement between the parties to abate respondent’s child-support obligation is unenforceable. However, this does not prevent application of equitable estoppel. Indeed, equitable estoppel can apply only in the absence of an enforceable agreement.
In Blisset v. Blisset,
After holding that the agreement was void, the court went on to consider whether the wife was equitably estopped from recovering past-due child support. Noting that an assistant State’s Attorney had told
In In re Marriage of Duerr,
Duerr observed that, in such cases, the children’s right to support is not compromised because they are actually being supported by the spouse obligated to pay, and any payment to the noncustodial spouse results in a windfall. Duerr,
The present case is similar to Johnston v. Johnston,
Here, one of the parties’ children went to live with respondent, the obligor spouse. Respondent then reduced his child-support payments in half, and petitioner accepted these payments for approximately nine years. Duerr and Johnston teach that equitable estoppel at least potentially applies in this situation.
We note that Blisset, while holding that private agreements modifying child support are not enforceable as such, never stated that equitable estoppel could never apply where a spouse seeks past-due support. The court held only that the father in that case had failed to establish it. Thus, Duerr and Johnston are not inconsistent with Blisset in finding equitable estoppel. Moreover, the holdings in those cases are consistent with the policy underlying the Blisset decision.
Blisset held that the children’s interests are paramount, and a parent should not be able to bargain away his or her children’s right to support. In cases such as this one, where the custody of one or more children changes, this concern is not implicated.
The State argues that Duerr and Johnston are inconsistent with this court’s decision in Smith, but Smith is distinguishable. Like Blisset, that case did not involve a change in custody and thus deemed estoppel inapplicable to a private agreement modifying child support. However, like Blisset, Smith implicitly recognized that estoppel could apply to such agreements, holding only that the trial court’s finding was not against the manifest weight of the evidence. Smith,
The trial court clearly had the power to find that petitioner was equitably estopped from collecting past-due child support. Thus, we remand the cause to that court so that it may make that determination. We express no opinion on the ultimate merits of respondent’s estoppel claim.
The judgment of the circuit court of Du Page County is reversed, and the cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
HUTCHINSON and BYRNE, JJ., concur.
