¶ 1. The question in this case is whether a retroactive Social Security disability lump-sum benefit payment, paid directly to the children of a worker, may offset a child support arrearage. We hold that it can and affirm.
¶2. The relevant facts are not in dispute. The parties were married in 1988 and were divorced on February 7, 2002. Together they have two children, one of whom is emancipated. Mother, Pamela McDonald, was awarded sole legal and physical parental rights and responsibilities for the children in 2001, and father, Jeremiah Louko, was ordered to pay $326 per month in child support beginning on July 11, 2001. Father was incarcerated shortly after the divorce and remained in prison until May 2006.
¶ 3. Since the parties’ breakup, there has been continuous litigation over child support. Father did not pay the ordered child support, and an arrearage built up. Once he was released from prison, father began to make motions to modify the child support order based on health issues and the receipt of welfare benefits, and mother and the Office of Child Support (OCS) filed motions to enforce. These motions and orders are background for this appeal; they are not central to .it.
¶4. The key facts for the appeal relate to father’s application for Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) benefits in
¶ 5. Eventually, on July 13, 2009, the SSA concluded that father was, in fact, disabled and that the onset of disability occurred on December 31, 2006. On that basis, the SSA awarded retroactive SSDI benefits commencing on June 1, 2007. Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 402(d), the SSA also awarded children’s benefits to father’s children. The award included retroactive children’s benefits of between $14,000 and $15,000 to cover the period from June 1, 2007, to the date of the award. The retroactive children’s benefits amount was paid to mother on behalf of father’s remaining minor child, his other child having become emancipated.
¶ 6. Father had filed a motion to modify child support on February 10, 2009, and the motion was still pending when the notification of the benefit award arrived from SSA. Father notified the court of the award and, among other requests, sought to have the retroactive children’s benefits offset his child support arrearage. The magistrate first denied this request but then held that the retroactive children’s benefits could be offset against the unsatisfied child support obligation for the period from June 1, 2007 to February 28, 2009. The magistrate explained: “The court does not find this to be a retroactive modification since the court is not changing the monthly obligation under previous orders but only giving credit for what [father] should have paid under those orders that has now been paid by the derivative benefit.” OCS and mother appealed to the family court claiming that the credit for the retroactive lump-sum children’s award represented a modification of the child support obligation for that period. They argued that the modification violated 15 V.S.A. § 660(e) because it was retroactive prior to the date of the motion. The family court affirmed the magistrate’s decision holding that the offset against the arrearage was not a modification of the child support award “because [the magistrate] was not ordering a change in the monthly amount he owes under the previous order.” The court noted that if father were not given credit for this lump-sum payment, “the outcome will result in a significant windfall to [mother].” The court also concluded, again affirming the magistrate’s decision, that to the extent the children’s on-going benefit amount exceeds father’s child support obligation, the excess cannot be applied against the arrearage. This appeal followed.
¶ 7. Mother and OCS make the same argument they made to the magistrate and the family court — the offset was a modification of the preexisting child support order and was unlawful to the extent that the modification affected payments due before the date of the motion to modify. The main issue on appeal is a question of law: whether an obligor is entitled to an offset of his child support arrearages based on the amount of a child’s dependent benefit for a period prior to the date on which the obligor filed a motion to modify child support. We consider questions of law de novo.
Lambert v. Beede,
¶ 8. Two earlier cases are important background for the issues before us, but do not decide this case. The first case,
Davis
v. Davis,
had many of the elements of this case except that it preceded the child support guideline legislation and the procedural history and factual background
¶ 9. The second case,
Cantin v. Young,
We have already determined in Davis that the obligor must be given a credit for disability payments received directly by the children. Although the child support statutory scheme is now different, we decline to revisit that holding. For consistency, we now hold that including the amount of the direct disability payments in the obligor’s income best serves the purposes of the child support statutes by more closely approximating the income that would be available if the family unit were intact.
Id.
at 662,
¶ 10. Under Cantin, the court here treated children’s benefits as income to father and these benefits were offset against father’s child support on a monthly basis following the SSA’s award of the benefits. Since the children’s benefits amount exceeded the amount of the monthly child support obligation, the payment amount was reduced to $0, and there is no debate about that. Similarly, mother and OCS do not challenge the offset of the retroactive children’s benefits against the child support arrearage amount for the short period between the date of the filing of the motion to modify and the date of the award of the benefits, although they characterize the offset order as modifying father’s child support obligation for that period.
¶ 11. The issue of whether credit should be allowed for arrearages that accumulated prior to the commencement of a modification proceeding has not been decided by this Court. Mother and OCS claim that allowing such a credit would result in a de facto modification of the child support order prior to the date of filing, which is contrary to 15 V.S.A. § 660(e)
1
and 42
¶ 12. We conclude that father has the more persuasive side of this argument. As the family court noted, the underlying child
support order was not modified; the court’s decision held that the directly paid children’s benefits constituted payment of the ordered child support amount for the period covered by the benefits. The payment was a wage replacement benefit to support the child. See
Weaks v. Weaks,
¶ 13. In adopting this position, we join the majority of courts that have addressed the issue. See, e.g.,
Pacana v. State,
¶ 14. The minority rule appears to be based primarily on the policy of discouraging cessation of child support payments on submission of a SSDI application rather than on a fair definition of what is a modification. See
Brown,
¶ 15. OCS and mother argue that crediting the child’s SSDI benefits to past-due child support is necessarily a modification under
Cantin v. Young
because the benefits are income to father. On this point, we agree with the reasoning of the Supreme Court of Alaska in
Pacana. Cantin
requires a modification of the
current
child support order to reflect father’s income both from his SSDI benefits and from the direct payment to the child, and this modification already occurred in this case. But the modification
pertaining to
current
payments does not transform the crediting of
retroactive,
direct children’s benefits into a
retroactive
modification of the child support order. See
Pacana,
¶ 16. We conclude that in this case allowing father to credit the lump-sum SSDI payment towards his child support arrearages during the time of his disability does not retroactively modify his child support obligation. Instead, we hold such a credit results “merely [in] a change in the identity of the payer.”
Weaks,
¶ 17. In addition to their claim that allowing a credit against support arrearages would result in a de facto modification
Affirmed.
Notes
Vermont’s child support modification statute allows a support order to be modified “only as to future support installments and installments which accrued subsequent to the date of notice of the motion to the other party or parties.” 15 V.S.A. § 660(e).
Federal law states that procedures for payment under any child support order are “not subject to retroactive modification by such State or by any other State; except that such procedures may permit modification with respect to any period during which there is pending a petition for modification, but only from the date that notice of such petition has been given, either directly or through the appropriate agent, to the obligee or ... to the obligor.” 42 U.S.C. § 666(a)(9).
