702 A.2d 1217 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1997
General Statutes §
These statutes empower a family support magistrate or Superior Court judge to hold obligors in contempt when they fail to pay premajority child support that is past due. Nothing in the foregoing statutes limits the court's power to enforce premajority support orders once the child reaches the age of majority. This court, therefore, "has jurisdiction in a contempt proceeding to enter an order to pay child support on unpaid installments which accrued before the child reached majority, where the proceedings were commenced after the child reached majority. The jurisdiction of the court is a continuing one, and the mere emancipation of the child *171
should not serve to cancel the arrearage." Arnold v. Arnold,
The defendant's narrow construction of the applicable statutes is unwarranted given that our Supreme Court "has construed broadly statutes providing for parental support of minor children." Guille v. Guille,
In view of the foregoing, the decision of the family support magistrate is affirmed.