The district court denied Frank J. Shepherd’s application for modification of its *146 child support order for two separate and distinct reasons. First, the court held it did not have authority to grant Frank’s request that his child support obligation be reduced retroactive to the date the application for modification was filed. Second, it found Frank’s reduced income due to a strike was not a substantial change in circumstances because the reduction was temporary and short-term. We agree.
The application for modification filed by Frank in September of 1986 was submitted to the district court upon stipulation and agreement of the parties. It was stipulated the dissolution of marriage decree, entered in February of 1986, established child support in the amount of $150 per week based upon Frank’s earnings of $475 per week as an employee of Deere & Company. Frank did not work for a period of twenty-two weeks, commencing August 22, 1986, as a result of a strike against Deere & Company. During the strike his only income was strike pay of $100 per week, from which he paid $25 per week towards his child support obligation. During the strike period, Debra M. Shepherd applied for and received Aid to Dependent Children assistance. She assigned her interests for child support to the Iowa Department of Human Services. Frank resumed payment of child support of $150 per week upon termination of the strike.
I. Review.
Our review of orders on applications to modify child support is de novo. We give weight to the trial court’s findings of fact but we are not bound by them.
Mears v. Mears,
Authority to modify a dissolution decree is provided in Iowa Code section 598.-21(8)(a) (1987) which provides:
The court may subsequently modify orders made under this section when there is a substantial change in circumstances. In determining whether there is a substantial change in circumstances, the court shall consider the following:
(a) Changes in the employment, earning capacity, income or resources of a party.
There is no statutory provision specifying the time at which modifications become effective.
II. Authority to Make Decrease in Support Retroactive.
In
Delbridge v. Sears,
Modification of a decree for support payments operates prospectively and not retrospectively. The right to modify does not authorize the court to divest the parties of rights accrued under the original decree.... Even where a decree is modified and a change is made the payments that have accrued up to that time cannot thereby be affected.
Id.
at 489,
We recognize the majority rule allows the court to cancel arrearages of support accrued after the filing of an application for modification.
See Welch v. Welch,
In granting such relief, the court should not have made its order retroactive. Nullification of installment payments maturing prior to the date the decision modifying the decree was filed is precluded....
Id.
at 314. In
In the Matter of Evans,
Our prior decisions have granted the court authority to make an increase in child support payments retroactive to the date of filing the petition to modify.
See Willcox v. Bradrick,
We agree with the trial court that it did not have authority to reduce child support retroactive to the date of the filing of the application for modification. This holding is consistent with our prior cases which reflect the policy of protecting the stability of court judgments and the vested interests of the parties.
We expressly overrule
In re Marriage of Olive,
III. Substantial Change in Circumstances.
The trial court has reasonable discretion in determining if modification of a dissolution decree is warranted. On appeal we do not disturb the trial court’s conclusions unless there has been a failure to do equity. As a general rule, a modification should be granted if there has been a substantial lowering of earning power for a sustained period of time.
In re Marriage of Wahlert,
One of the principles that has emerged from our cases is that the change in circumstances must be permanent or continuous rather than temporary. A trend in modification proceedings is that current ability to pay has become less a consideration and the long-range capacity to earn money has become more of a onsideration.
In re Marriage of Vetternack,
The trial court concluded Frank’s twenty-two weeks of reduced income because of the strike was a temporary reduction of income and it denied his application to modify. We agree.
AFFIRMED.
