OPINION OF THE COURT
The issue under review, which has not previously come before this Court, is whether a cause of action to recover damages for an alleged violation of a separation agreement may arise if a party to the agreement petitions the court for an increase in previously agreed-upon child support.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND:
The defendant Thomas Cerillo and the plaintiff were formerly husband and wife. They executed a separation agreement in March 1983. Pursuant to the terms of the agreement, the plaintiff was given custody of the parties’ two daughters, then ages six and four. The agreement was incorporated by reference into the judgment of divorce, but did not merge.
Subsequent to the execution of the separation agreement, the parties executed a modification which provided for a joint custody arrangement, with the father having exclusive physical custody of the children. The father also agreed to provide for the total support of the children out of his "own funds without contribution from the Mother”.
The parties continued to abide by the terms of the modified agreement until June 1990 when the father filed a petition in the Family Court seeking contribution toward child support from the plaintiff. The petition alleged that the father was unable to meet the children’s support requirements on his own and that the mother’s annual income was approximately $80,000. The Family Court, in a temporary order of support, directed the mother to pay $866 per month in child support. The mother did not take an appeal to this Court from that order.
The mother made the required support payments for two months, at which time the children were returned to her exclusive physical custody, and the Family Court proceeding was terminated without prejudice.
The father made a motion for summary judgment in the Supreme Court, alleging that such a cause of action is impermissible as a matter of law in that it is against public policy. The Supreme Court denied the father’s motion to dismiss the complaint, finding that there are questions of fact precluding the granting of such “drastic relief’. We disagree and grant the father’s motion.
analysis:
We find that to allow such a suit would be violative of New York State’s public policy for two reasons. The first consideration is the public policy imperative with reference to child support. The second is that to allow the petitioning parent to be sued for damages based on an attempt to secure adequate support for his or her child would inhibit a parent from taking such action.
The impact of the public policy considerations is to immunize from a suit for damages the parent who seeks an upward modification of a previously agreed-upon child support protocol. Conceding the duty of a custodial parent, as we must, to take whatever action is necessary to secure adequate child support, we hold that that parent cannot later be asked to respond in damages for an alleged breach of the previously executed agreement. The fact that the parent who is called upon to pay an amount in excess of the amount in the agreement cannot sue, is not to say that that parent is muted on the question of the reasonableness of the agreed-upon support, as will be demonstrated.
The Legislature memorialized the public policy of this State in the Child Support Standards Act (L 1989, ch 567; hereinafter CSSA) which mandates the provision of adequate child support as justice requires (see, Moat v Moat,
The CSSA gives a parent from whom an increase in child support is sought in contravention of a separation agreement, an opportunity to be heard on the reasonableness of the
Despite the fact that a separation agreement is "entitled to the solemnity and obligation of a contract, when children’s rights are involved the contract yields to the welfare of the children” (Maki v Straub,
A separation agreement that does not provide for adequate support of the parties’ minor children cannot bind a court from remedying the inadequacy. It has long been held that contracts that are in whole or in part against public policy are void (see, Matter of Cooperman,
In consideration of the foregoing and under the circumstances of this case, the plaintiffs argument that it is unconstitutional under the impairment of contracts doctrine (US Const, art I, § 10) to preclude a breach of contract action fails. A statute that is intended to prevent an economic wrong, in this case against the children, is not unconstitutional as
Accordingly, the order is reversed insofar as appealed from, on the law, and that branch of the motion which was for summary judgment dismissing the complaint insofar as it is asserted against the appellant is granted.
O’Brien, J. P., Pizzuto and Altman, JJ., concur.
Ordered that the order is reversed insofar as appealed from, on the law, with costs, and that branch of the motion which was for summary judgment dismissing the complaint insofar as it is asserted against the appellant is granted.
