Blane Williams appeals the trial court’s ruling that social security disability payments to his minor child could not be used to offset child support arrearages which accrued prior to the date the disability payments began.
We affirm.
Thе facts of this tragic case were stipulated. Blane and Ruby Williams were divorced in 1985, and Blane was ordered tо pay $250 per month in child support for their minor son. He stopped making those payments in December 1986.
In 1989, the Sоcial Security Administration (SSA) found Blane to be totally disabled due to a mental condition. SSA paid Blane and his son а lump sum for May through September 1989. Since then, each receives a monthly check — Blane currently in the amount of $1,038 per month and the son in the amount of $555 per month.
The trial court eventually reduced Blane’s child support obligation to $151 per month and ruled the SSA benеfits received by the son were to be credited against current support then due, but that Blane was not entitled tо any credit against past due support. The arrearage was found to be over $12,000.
Blane first contends the triаl court erred in not finding any support obligation at least five years old to be dormant and therefore extinguished. Child support payments vest as they accrue and become final judgments on the dates they become duе and unpaid.
Michels v Weingartner,
K.S.A. 60-2403(a)(l) provides that all judgments become dormant after five years — but that merely prevents the dormant judgment from operating as a lien on the judgment debtor’s real estate. But a dormant judgment may not be extinguished until it has rеmained dormant for a specified period of time. For child support judgments, that time is “the period prior to the child’s emancipation plus two years.” K.S.A. 60-2403(b)(l); see K.S.A. 60-2404.-
As a result, the trial court did not err with respect to its findings regarding thе effect of the dormant judgments for child support; they are attachable.
Blane next contends the trial court erred in finding the amount of the child’s SSA benefits in excess of Blane’s monthly child support obligation could not be сredited to the support arrearage.
This is a question of first impression in Kansas and is one of law; our review, therefore, is plenary. See
Gillespie v. Seymour,
The trial court ruled the child’s monthly benefit checks served as a credit against Blane’s child support obligation for the corresponding month. So long as the benefit check exceeded that month’s support obligation, no additional child support would be due for that month. And even though the child’s monthly benefit payment exceeded Blane’s child support obligation, that excess could not be credited against Blane’s arrearage.
Koons v. Koons,
The implications of Andler and Koons are that a child’s SSA benefit paymеnts may be credited against a current support obligation accruing during the corresponding month but may not be сredited against past due child support obligations.
Such a holding is consistent with holdings of most jurisdictions which have directly addressed the issue. See
In re Marriage of Robinson,
Federal regulations also lend support to this conclusion. Representative payees (custodial parents) are required to use social security benefits for the beneficiary’s
current
maintenance. See 20 C.F.R. § 404.2040(a)(1) (1994). And once the benefiсiary’s current
Since Andler expressly prohibits crediting benefit payments toward future child support obligations, we hold the sаme rule must apply regarding the crediting of those benefit payments against prior support obligations.
This result mаy seem harsh, but the legislature has established the policy of recognizing the importance of timely monthly support payments. The excess benefit payments obviously result in a windfall to someone. That windfall should “ ‘inure not to the defaulting husband’s benefit, but to his bereft children.’ ”
Kirwan,
The trial court did not err in refusing to give Blane credit for his child’s benefit paymеnts in excess of Blane’s current child support obligation against child support obligations which accrued prior to the start of the social security benefit payments.
Affirmed.
