The opinion of the court was delivered by
This appeal is taken from an order of the trial court terminating the obligation of appellee, Kenneth R. Jungjohann, to pay child support for his daughter, Elizabeth Jungjohann. The trial court’s order was based upon K. S. A. 1972 Supp. 38-101 which became effective July 1,1972, and reads:
“The period of minority extends in males and females to the age of eighteen (18) years.”
The forerunner statute provided that the age of minority extended to the age of twenty-one with a proviso' pertaining to ‘legally married persons over eighteen years of age.”
*330 The facts are not in dispute and the issue presented is purely a question of law.
The controversy arises from, a decree on February 2, 1970, granting a divorce to appellant, Mary B. Jungjohann, and approving and incorporating a property settlement and alimony agreement previously entered into by the parties. With respect to custody of and support for Elizabeth, the trial court decreed as follows:
“That the plaintiff is a fit and proper person to have the care, custody and control of the minor child of the parties, to-wit:
“Elizabeth Dailey Jungjohann, bom August 5, 1953, and that the defendant shall have all reasonable rights of visitation with said minor child; that the child support payments' and other provisions concerning the minor child contained in the Property Settlement and Alimony Agreement shall be approved and adopted by the Court as its order herein and the defendant shall pay $100.00 per month child support through the Clerk of the District Court payable $50.00 on the first day and $50.00 on the 15th day of each month commencing February 1, 1970, and that all provisions concerning the said minor child and child support payments shall be subject to the continuing jurisdiction of this Court.”
The agreement, which was attached to the decree of divorce, provided that:
“. . . the Husband shall pay through the Clerk of the District Court to the Wife as and for child support the sum of $100.00 per month’ until said child attains the age of majority. Husband agrees to and shall maintain medical and hospitalization insurance coverage on said minor child during her minority. . . .”
Elizabeth became eighteen years of age on August 5, 1971; as noted the law became effective on July 1, 1972. Kenneth continued his child support payments until August of 1972 when he filed his motion to terminate his obligation. Apparently, a motion not shown in the record was filed by appellant (Mary) to enforce a provision of the agreement wherein the parties stated that they recognized "their sole and joint duty to provide for the higher education of the said minor.”
On August 17, 1972, the matter was heard by the trial court. With respect to Kenneth’s motion the trial court ruled:
“. . . that the child of the parties, Elizabeth Dailey Jungjohann, is of the age of 19 years and that the defendant’s duty to support said child ceased as of July 1, 1972, by virtue of Chapter 161 of the 1972 Session Laws amending K. S. A. 38-101, fixing the age of majority at 18 years, the contract of the parties and the order of the Court herein providing that defendant should pay support for the said child ‘until said child attains the age of majority.’ ”
With respect to expenses for Elizabeth’s higher education the *331 court found that Kenneth was to continue to contribute and in this regard further ordered:
“It Is Further Ordered that of the $150.00 child support the defendant has paid after July 1, 1972, $75.00 be applied toward the defendant’s liability for the first semester, 1972-1973, of higher education expenses as set out in the order of the Court herewith and in reference to the procedure established in the order of August 16, 1971.”
The trial court also terminated the light of Kenneth under the original decree to list Elizabeth as a dependency exemption on his income tax returns. These rulings of the trial court were not challenged by Kenneth; but based upon Elizabeth’s acceptance thereof, he has filed a motion to dismiss this appeal on the grounds that Elizabeth had acquiesced in the judgment below. Although the court’s rulings are included in one journal entry it appears that the matters were presented in two separate motions; but only the ruling on one (Kenneth’s) is appealed from. In any event, we choose to pass over this procedural point and resolve the matter on the merits since the question presented is one of first impression in this jurisdiction.
On appeal, appellant states her version of the point at issue in this fashion:
“The ruling of the Court terminating child support payments by the Appellee did not take into consideration the contract between the parties providing for the payment by Appellee of child support until the child attained the age of majority, and the statute fixing the age of majority which was in effect at the time the contract was made.” ■
Appellant advances several arguments which she claims support her position. She first asserts that our decision in
Smith v. Smith,
The distinction between the privileges of minority and the rights *333 to which a person is entitled on reaching his majority is expressed in these words in 42 Am. Jur. 2d, Infants, § 1:
“. . . Majority is the age at which the disabilities of infancy are removed, and hence a person who has reached his majority is entitled to the management of his own affairs and to the enjoyment of civic rights.
“Infancy is a status which is created by the law and may be subject to statutory limitations or exceptions. The disabilities of infancy are in fact personal privileges conferred on infants by law, and as such they constitute limitations on the legal capacity of infants, not to defeat their rights, but to shield and protect them from the acts of their own improvidence as well as from acts of others. Minority or majority is a status rather than a fixed or vested right, there being no vested property rights in the personal privileges of infancy. The law intends the privilege of infancy simply as a shield to protect the infant from injustice and wrong, not as a sword to be used to the injury of others.” (pp. 8, 9.)
In re Trust Under Will of Davidson,
In the instant case, appellant is attempting to extend the minority of her daughter (Elizabeth) for purposes of child support even though Elizabeth has enjoyed the rights of majority since July 1, 1972.
In this jurisdiction the rule has long been recognized that a child has no claim or vested right in future child support, and that an order extending payments for support of a child beyond the age of majority is void.
(Clark v. Clark,
In recent years many states have lowered the age of majority to eighteen years by legislative enactment. While the issue appears for the first time before this court, numerous other jurisdictions have considered the effect of such amendatory legislation on child support decrees, some of which were based upon agreements between the divorced parents as in the instant case. Examination of the cases from other jurisdictions reveals that where child support was decreed during minority or was to terminate on majority a substantial majority have held that the amendatory legislation is effective. That is to say that even though the age of majority was fixed at age twenty-one at the time of the decree, the obligation of support terminated upon the effective date of the act or upon the child attaining age eighteen, which ever the case might be.
(Shoaf v. Shoaf, 282
N. C. 287,
“. . . Hence neither the parent nor the infant has any vested right in a support order which would extend the payments beyond the age of emancipation. In Layton v. Layton, supra, this Court in discussing a consent order to support a minor, said that nothing indicates the father bound himself to do anything beyond his legal liability to support his son.
“ ‘The rule is settled beyond a doubt that majority or minority is a status rather than a fixed or vested right and that the Legislature has such power to fix and change the age of majority.’ Valley National Bank v. Glover,62 Ariz. 538 ,159 P. 2d 292 .
“Change from minority to majority in legal effect means that legal disabilities designed to protect the child are removed. . . .” (p. 290.)
Continuing jurisdiction and provisions for the custody, support and education of minor children in this jurisdiction are governed by the provisions of 60-1610 (a), supra. The statute contemplates that such provision for the children is to be made only during their minority. (Author’s commentary, Gard, Kansas Code of Civil Pro *335 cedure Annotated 1973 Supp. §60-1610 [a], p. 207.) We believe the reasoning of the North Carolina Court is particularly appropriate in the instant case, in the light of the provisions of 60-1610 (a) and the previous Kansas cases heretofore referred to.
The minority view is expressed in
Vicino v. Vicino,
In the instant case, the trial court made no specific finding as to the intent of the parties; basing its ruling on the fact that the contract of the parties and the order of the court herein provided that defendant should pay support for the said child until such child attains the age of majority.
Appellant contends the trial court’s ruling violates K. S. A. 1972 Supp. 77-201, First, which provides inter alia:
“First. Hie repeal of a statute does not revive a statute previously repealed, nor does such repeal affect any right which accrued, any duty imposed, any penalty incurred, nor any proceeding commenced, under or by virtue of the statute repealed. . . .”
Appellant says that this court has consistently applied the principle enunciated in the statute with respect to fact situations involving fixed rights which have accrued under statutes prior to amendment, citing
Bartlett v. Heersche,
We hold that whereby a decree of divorce a defendant is required to make child support payments until a child has reached her age of majority the duty imposed by such decree is terminated by K. S. A. 1972 Supp. 38-101 on the effective date thereof if prior thereto the child had become eighteen years of age.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
