The respondent, Mark A. Taylor, appeals the recommendation of the Master (Love, M.) approved by the Superior Court (Hicks, J.) that his child support obligations
The record supports, or the parties agree to, the following facts. Taylor’s child was born in 1994 and now lives with her legal guardian, the intervenor, Myrna Bellot. The original child support order, effective January 1, 2001, required Taylor to pay Bellot fifty dollars per month in child support. In August 2003, Taylor was struck by a drunk driver and suffered the loss of his leg. As a result, he received a lump sum personal injury settlement award. Taylor also receives a monthly Social Security Disability Income (SSDI) benefit for his injury. The child receives an SSDI benefit of $119 per month, which is paid to her directly.
Bellot filed a petition to modify child support. The superior court issued a modification order on January 31, 2005, ruling that Taylor’s lump sum personal injury settlement was includable in his “gross income.” The court then calculated Taylor’s monthly obligation by prorating his lump sum settlement award over his remaining life expectancy. It ordered him to pay $502 per month in child support and to create a trust in the amount of $44,905 naming the child as the beneficiary. The court refused to allow Taylor a dollar for dollar credit for the $119 monthly SSDI benefit received by his child.
On appeal, Taylor argues that the trial court erred by: (1) treating the lump sum personal injury settlement as “gross income” within the meaning of RSA chapter 458-C (2004 & Supp. 2005); (2) dividing his personal injury settlement over his projected lifetime to impute an income figure for the purpose of calculating child support; and (3) not providing a dollar for dоllar child support credit for the SSDI payments received by the child. We address each argument in turn.
Trial courts have broad discretion in reviewing and modifying child support orders. In the Matter of Jerome & Jerome,
I. Lump Sum Personal Injury Settlement
The first issue is whether the trial court erred in ruling that the lump sum personal injury settlement is “gross income” within the meaning of RSA chapter 458-C. We are the final arbiter of the legislature’s intent as expressed in the words of the statute considered as a whole. In the Matter of Plaisted & Plaisted,
For purposes of calculating a parent’s child support obligation, RSA 458-C:2, IV (2004) defines gross income as:
All income from any source, whether earned or unearned, including, but not limited to, wages, salary, commissions, tips, annuities, social security benefits, trust income, lottery or gambling winnings, interest, dividends, investment income, net rental income, self-employment income, alimony, business profits, pensions, bonuses, and payments from other government programs ... including, but not limited to, workers’ compensation,veterans’ benefits, unemployment benefits, and disability benefits.
(Emphasis added.) While trial courts have discretion to adjust a child support award based upon special circumstances, see RSA 458-C:4, II (2004), the legislative scheme requires that all items includable as “gross income” be considered to determinе the parties’ total support obligation. In the Matter of Feddersen & Cannon,
Taylor argues that because the statutory definition of gross income does not explicitly include lump sum personal injury settlements, we must look to other definitions of “income.” He urges us to rely upon definitions of “income” from two dictionaries and three United States Supreme Court cases where the Court considered whether various items were “incomе” under federal income taxation statutes. See O’Gilvie v. United States,
Bellot argues that we need not look beyond the statute to define gross income. She argues that the words “including, but not limited to” in the definition of “gross income,” “act as a starting point and the enumerated items that follow are an illustration of a few applicable terms.” She argues that “gross income” must be interpreted broadly to include lump sum personal injury settlements in light of the policy goals of the child support guidelines.
We have previously addressed whether the definition of “gross income” under the child support guidelines includes items not specifically listed in RSA 458-C:2, IV. See, e.g., In the Matter of Dolan and Dolan,
The objectives of the child support guidelines are to reduce the economic consequences of divorce on children and ensure that children enjoy a standard of living equal to that of the noncustodial parent’s subsequent family. RSA 458-C:l, II (Supp. 2005); Dolan,
Our prior rulings support treating lump sum personal injury-settlements as gross income. In Jerome, we considered whether a personal injury settlement received as an annuity was income under the child support guidelines. Jerome,
Taylor
More fundamentally, a conclusion that a personal injury settlement paid as a lump sum is not gross income would be inconsistent with our holding in Jerome that personal injury settlements paid as annuities are gross income. Such a conclusion might encourage litigants to structure personal injury settlements as lump sum settlements rather than annuities to avoid child support obligations. We do not believe that the legislature intended that two similarly situated obligors would have different child support obligations based upon nothing more than the means by which they receive settlement payments.
Our reasoning in Feddersen is consistent with Jerome. In Feddersen, we treated a one-time, nonrecurring post-divorce payment of a patent infringement settlement of more than three million dollars as “gross income” for child support purposes. Feddersen,
Our reasoning in Jerome and Feddersen is supported by cases from other jurisdictions where courts have ruled that lump sum personal injury settlements are income for child support purposes under statutory provisions similar to RSA 458-C:2, IV. See Otterson v. Otterson,
The award as actually received by appellant is a single fund which appellant may expend in his discretion. The whole tort award is subject to all appellant’s debts. It would, indeed, call into question the sanity of the law if this court were to rule that the tort award [is] available to pay debts to the butcher, the baker and the candlestick maker but not debts to aрpellant’s child for support.
Moreover, in light of the fact that the child support guidelines treat lump sum workers’ compensation settlements as “gross income,” see RSA 458-C:2, IV, we believe that it would be inconsistent with the child support guidelines to treat lump sum personal injury settlements as other than “gross income.”
Taylor also argues that “it is impermissible for courts to treat the corpus of a lump sum personal injury settlement as an asset for purposes of settling a marital estate, but then as income for child support computations.” We note that we are not deciding whether a lump sum personal injury settlement received prior to a divorce is an asset or income for the purpose of calculating child support. Hоwever, in Jerome, where a personal injury settlement was paid out as an annuity, we noted that “even if the parties had agreed that the personal injury settlement was marital property, the trial court would not be precluded from treating it as income for child support purposes.” Jerome,
[PJroperty division and child support serve different functions and are governed by different requirements. The property division is an allocation of assets between the parents; each spouse receives something from the division. In contrast, the child of divorced parents receives nothing from the property division. A child support order gives the child fair support from the non-custodial parent’s income.
Id. (quotation omitted); see also RSA 458:16-a, II (2004). Accordingly, we reject Taylor’s argument and conclude that the legislature intended to include a lump sum personal injury settlement within the definition of “gross income” in RSA 458-C:2, IV.
II. Calculation of Child Support
We next consider whether the trial court acted within its discretion when it prorated the amount Taylor received from his personal injury settlement over each month of his remaining expected lifetime to calculate his monthly child support obligation. In calculating Taylor’s obligation, the trial court relied upon RSA chapter 458-C and mаde the following finding:
[The statute]... provide[s] the Court with the discretion to order [that] child support on one time income be paid when the income is received rather than be included in the weekly, biweekly or monthly calculation. This would neither be fair nor make sense in the instant case. Given the obligor’s permanent disability, it makes more sense to prorate the income over the remaining life exрectancy of the obligor in order to determine his monthly income on this amount.
Taylor challenges the trial court’s calculation, arguing that it constitutes impermissible “income-averaging.” Bellot argues that the trial court acted within its discretion when it calculated Taylor’s support obligation.
“Our case law is clear that trial courts should not employ income-averaging over a number of yeаrs to determine child support obligations. Rather, child support should be determined on the basis of present income.” Rattee v. Rattee,
In Hillebrand v. Hillebrand,
Among jurisdictions that have considered whether the trial court may average the obligor’s past income over a preceding period of years, we are aware of no other that absolutely prohibits income-averaging. In some jurisdictions, the relevant child support guidelines specifically authorize trial courts to engage in income-averaging. See, e.g., Keturi v. Keturi,
This case, however, presents a different issue from Rattee, Hillebrand and cases from other jurisdictions concerning income-averaging. Here, the trial court did not estimate Taylor’s income based upon a retrospective avеrage of his income over the past several years. Instead, it estimated his income prospectively by prorating his lump sum settlement award over his estimated remaining life expectancy.
We have never addressed whether the trial court may calculate an obligor’s income by prorating the proceeds of a personal injury settlement award over a future period of time. The child support guidеlines provide us with no guidance. Among jurisdictions that have addressed this issue, however, we are aware of no court that describes the prorating of a personal injury settlement over a future time period for purposes of calculating chüd support as “income-averaging”; instead, these courts describe the process as “allocation of proceeds.” See Annotation, Consideration оf Obligor’s Personal-Injury Recovery or Settlement in Fixing Alimony or Child Support, 59 A.L.R.5TH 489, 525-27 (1998). More importantly, however, no court holds that trial courts may not prospectively allocate settlement proceeds to calculate monthly child support obligations. See id.
Where obligors receive personal injury settlements as a lump sum, prorating settlement proceeds over a future time period has beеn held permissible.
Further support for Bellot’s argument that the trial court acted within its discretion in allocating Taylor’s settlement award is the established principle that the trial court may, as part of a child support order, require the obligor to create a trust fund for the child’s benefit. See Feddersen,
There is a rebuttable presumption that the trial court must strictly apply the child support guidelines when calculating a child support order or modification. RSA 458-C:4, II (2004); Plaisted,
In this case, the trial court made a written finding of “the special circumstances of [Taylor], namely the receipt of a substantial settlement in a personal injury claim and the corresponding uncertainty of any future employment.” After making this written finding, and in light of the special circumstances of this case, the trial court acted within its discretion when it calculated Taylor’s support obligation by allocating the settlement award over his remaining life expectancy. See RSA 458-C:4, II.
III. SSDI Credit
Lastly, we consider whether the trial court erred by refusing to allоw Taylor
“We choose to follow the majority of States and allow the obligor credit for his or her child support obligation as a per se rule.” In the Matter of Angley-Cook & Cook,
Under the per se rule of Angley-Cook, Taylor is entitled to a dollar for dollar credit for the $119 in monthly SSDI benefits received directly by his child. We find that the trial court thus engaged in an unsustainable exercise of discretion by refusing to allow a credit to Taylor against his monthly support obligations. Cf. id. We leave it for the trial court to determine whether Taylor’s dollar for dollar credit is offset by his receipt of monthly SSDI benefits. Accordingly, and in order to afford the trial court the opportunity to fully reconsider Taylor’s entire child support obligation, we vacate the trial court’s order and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Vacated and remanded.
