Husband in a divorce action appeals from a final judgment of the Windham Family Court challenging, among other provisions, the order requiring him to maintain a life insurance policy for the benefit of the children for as long as the child support obligation remains in effect, and the order requiring him to provide child support beyond the age of majority. We reverse the provision requiring child support beyond the age of majority, and affirm in all other respects.
*416 The parties were married in 1988, but had lived together since 1980. They have four minor children. In March of 1994, the parties separated. In May of that year they signed a Memorandum of Understanding, which covered a variety of subjects, including child support, child custody, maintenance of a life insurance policy by husband, and disposition of the couple’s limited personal property. The agreement was incorporated by a magistrate into a temporary support order. A short time later, both parties became dissatisfied with different provisions of the agreement and moved to modify or rescind them. The court’s final order and decree departed substantially from the terms of the agreement, but purported to uphold a provision requiring husband to provide child support beyond the age of majority if the children were enrolled as full-time college students.
Husband’s threshold contention is that the court erred in deviating from the exact terms of the parties’ agreement. It is clear from the record, however, that both parties challenged various provisions of the agreement, and the court was thus entitled to depart from its terms. A separation agreement is not binding when both parties seek, in effect, to modify it. Cf.
McCrea v. McCrea,
Husband also contends the court erred in ordering him to maintain a life insurance policy with wife as beneficiary for as long as the child support obligation was in effect. Although husband had allowed the policy to lapse prior to the final order and decree, it was in effect when, several months earlier, the magistrate ordered him to maintain the policy for as long as he was obligated to pay child support. Thus, neither
Narwid v. Narwid,
Child support presents an altogether different situation from spousal maintenance. As the Supreme Court of Kansas has cogently explained:
In divorce actions the fundamental difference between the marital and the parental duty of parents is that after a divorce the relation of husband and wife is at an end, and all marital obligations not preserved by the decree are at an end, while the relation of parent and child continues unchanged, and a father’s obligation to support his offspring continues to exist unless cut off by the decree.
Allison v. Allison,
*418 When the parents obtained a divorce . . . and the children were placed in the custody of their mother, the likelihood [of disinheritance] increased, for an embittered or [uninterested father might well disinherit a child who had been placed in the custody of the other spouse. For this reason a number of American jurisdiction[s] began to give the divorce court authority to order the husband to support his minor children after his death, even though this did, in effect, deprive the parent of his right to disinherit his children completely.
Id.
Thus, well before the development of § 316(c) of the Uniform Marriage and Divorce Act, which permits child support to survive a parent’s death, see 9A U.L.A. 490 (1987), the weight of authority held that absent a specific statutory provision to the contrary a child support obligation could be made binding upon the father’s estate. See
In re Moore’s Estate,
The principle underlying every reported decision in this regard is the fundamental public policy, generally expressed in broad statutory terms, imposing an indefeasible duty upon parents to support their minor children. See
Hornung,
Courts and commentators have acknowledged that limiting the testamentary discretion of divorced parents places their children in a marginally better position than the children of nondivoreed parents, but have found the disparity to be amply justified for reasons of public policy. As explained in
Hornung,
“there are sound reasons grounded in human experience for affording additional legal protection to the child of divorced parents.”
Consistent with this view, a majority of jurisdictions additionally permit the court to
secure
child support payments by ordering the obligor parent to maintain some form of trust fund or life insurance for as long as the support obligation remains in effect, generally until the children reach the age of majority. See
Stackhouse v. Russell,
that the comprehensive terms of [the child support statute] are not to be narrowed but are to be applied liberally to the end that, where the circumstances equitably call for such action, the court may enter a support order for minor children to survive their father’s death and may direct the father to maintain his insurance ... for the purpose of securing due fulfillment of the support order during their minority.
Id.
at 540; see also
Franklin Life,
Looking to our own statutes, we find no express or implied inhibition against a divorce judgment requiring a parent to maintain life insurance to secure child support. Indeed, the breadth and underlying purposes of our child support statute provide, if anything, stronger support for such requirements than many of the cases cited above. Vermont’s child support statute is premised “on the concept that children should receive the same proportion of parental income after separation or divorce of their parents as they would receive if their parents were living together in one household.” 15 V.S.A. § 654. The Legislature has expressly declared “as public policy that parents have the responsibility to provide child support and that child support orders should reflect the true costs of raising children and approxi
*421
mate insofar as possible the standard of living the child would have enjoyed had the marriage not been dissolved.” 15 V.S.A. § 650. Thus, the provisions of a child support order should “be based on the policy of meeting the needs of the children.”
C.D. v.
N.M.,
These legislative purposes and principles amply support the judgment in this case. Certainly it is reasonable to assume that had the parties here not divorced, husband would have maintained the existing life insurance policy and, in the event of his death, the benefits would have been applied to the support and maintenance of the children. Moreover, as the cases have observed, it is reasonable to assume that husband would have provided for his children in his will. Thus, it is well within the scope of the child support statute and the discretion of the family court to seek to provide a similar financial security for the minor children following the parties’ divorce. In the event of husband’s untimely demise and consequent cessation of support payments, the children would then not be left in a worse position than they would have been in had the marriage remained intact. Requiring husband to maintain the existing life insurance for the benefit of the children during their minority was a sound and efficient means to secure this objective.
The fundamental goal of the child support statute — to protect and support the children of divorced parents to the same extent as the children of intact marriages — applies with no less force where the divorced parent dies before the children attain their majority. And the children in such a case should be afforded no less financial security. We thus agree with the holding of the court in
Grotsky
that the terms of the support statute “are not to be narrowed but are to be applied liberally to the end that, where the circumstances equitably call for such action, the court may . . . direct the father to maintain his insurance ... for the purpose of securing due fulfillment of the support order during [the childrens’] minority.”
We thus conclude that the family court’s order directing husband to maintain an existing life insurance policy to secure continued child support in the event of his death was proper. Although husband’s maintenance of the policy was contemplated in the parties’ original Memorandum of Understanding, husband contends that payment of the premiums presents a hardship based on the fact that *422 his income at the time of the child support hearing was $52,000, $8,000 less than that contemplated in the Memorandum. Husband presented virtually no evidence of such hardship in support of his motion for reconsideration, and made no attempt to modify the award on the basis “of a real, substantial and unanticipated change of cireumtances” under 15 V.S.A. § 660(a). Nor does he argue that his total support obligation, including the premium payments, deviates substantially from the child support guidelines. See 15 V.S.A. § 660(b), (d). We find no error.
The judgment does require modification in one respect, however. The court ordered husband to provide child support beyond the age of majority if the children were enrolled as full-time college students. Absent an agreement to the contrary, the court does not have “authority to enter a support order effective beyond the later of a child’s majority or termination of secondary education.”
McCormick v. McCormick,
Husband’s other contentions are without merit. He contends the court abused its discretion in awarding sole legal custody of the children to wife, ordering the payment of spousal maintenance, a maintenance supplement, and attorney’s fees, and requiring husband to maintain medical and dental insurance through his employer for the four children. We have reviewed the record, however, and conclude that the evidence supports the court’s findings and conclusions with respect to each of these provisions of the decree. See
McCrea,
*423 The judgment is reversed as to that portion of the order requiring child support beyond the age of majority or termination of secondary education, and the matter is remanded for reconsideration of the award of spousal maintenance consistent with this opinion. The judgment in all other respects is affirmed.
