Memorandum Opinion
The defendant appeals an order of the Superior Court {Dunn, J.), approving the Master’s {Alice Love, Esq.) recommendation that his child support payments be increased as of the date of the filing of the plaintiff’s petition to modify. The defendant argues that: (1) the trial court erred as a matter of law in ordering retroactive application of a child support order; (2) the doctrine of res judicata bars such retroactive application; and (3) retroactive modification in this case is patently unfair and burdensome because the defendant relied on the reasonable expectation that child support obligations could be modified prospectively only. We hold that the trial court’s order was not a retroactive modification of child support and therefore affirm. Because the defendant has chosen not to submit a transcript of the proceedings before the trial court, our review is limited to errors apparent on the record available to us. See Dombrowski v. Dombrowski,
The parties were divorced in New Hampshire by decree dated October 20,1981, which incorporated a permanent stipulation. The decree provided for child support and alimony payments by the defendant. On June 10, 1988, the plaintiff filed a petition to modify the decree, requesting that the defendant’s child support payments be increased to reflect changed circumstances.
A hearing on the petition, initially scheduled for August 16, 1988, was continued at the request of the defendant. On August 9, 1988, the defendant filed a cross-petition for modification requesting termination of his obligation to pay alimony. A hearing was finally held on April 2,1990, and, by court order dated April 11,1990, the defendant’s weekly child support payment was increased “effective retroactively to the date of filing of the Petition [to be] paid in a lump sum.”
The defendant relies on our decision in Chenausky v. Chenausky,
The defendant also argues that the trial court lacked statutory authority to order modification of child support effective as of the date of the filing of the petition. He relies on RSA 458:17, VII (Supp. 1990), which states that support payments are judgments when due and payable. He contends that, according to this statute, child support is a vested right up to the time the trial court orders it modified, and that the statute constitutes a prohibition against the trial court’s ordering retroactive modification. His argument, however, overlooks other relevant provisions of the statute.
The meaning of a statute is determined from a construction of the statute as a whole, not from piecemeal analysis of words and phrases. King v. Town of Lyme,
This latter provision clearly applies when there is a change in circumstances supporting a modification of child support and expressly prohibits modification prior to the date of the petition. Under RSA 458:32, the filing of the petition is the event which gives the court authority to order modification. Read as a whole, therefore, the
Affirmed.
