PEARSON v. PEARSON
S94A1632
Supreme Court of Georgia
March 6, 1995
454 SE2d 124
BENHAM, Presiding Justice.
Huddleston & Medori, Kathryn M. Zickert, for appellant. Jonathan A. Weintraub, for appellee.
The parties were divorced in 1982 by a Texas judgment that required appellee/husband to pay $300 per month child support for the couple‘s minor son. Each party thereafter moved to Georgia, where appellant/wife filed a petition seeking modification of the child support award to an amount calculated pursuant to the child-support guidelines of
We begin our analysis of this case by repeating the admonition that a modification action is the exclusive remedy for obtaining a provision supplementing the child support award contained in a divorce judgment. Foster v. Foster, 260 Ga. 813 (2) (400 SE2d 629) (1991). While parties may enter into an agreement concerning modification of child support (
In the case at bar, the trial court found the existence of an oral agreement and, without more, made it the order of modification of the court. Even assuming that the trial court was correct in its finding that the parties had made an oral settlement, the trial court did not make a determination that the private agreement incorporated into the court‘s modification order was “in accordance with the changed income and financial status of either former spouse or in the needs of the child . . .” (
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur.
HUNT, Chief Justice, concurring.
I concur with the outcome reached by the majority, but I write because I believe that the resolution of this case turns, not on the type of action before the trial court, in this case modification, but rather on the subject matter of the case, child support. While it is true that parties may not modify child support without the approval of the court, it must be remembered that the amount of child support cannot be fixed in the first place without court approval. In other words, I would emphasize that cases such as these are resolved not on a determination that an agreement concerning modification of child support becomes enforceable only when made the order of the court pursuant to the relevant statutes governing child support, but rather on the basis that any agreement concerning child support, whether the original fixing of the amount or a change in the amount, must be subjected to the necessary and statutorily mandated judicial scrutiny.
