On November 5, 1970, appellant Sara Young petitioned for an order to hold ap-pellee J. Wellington Young in contempt of
After their separation the parties entered into a property settlement agreement which, subject to approval of the court, adjusted their respective property rights and provided that the husband and father would pay $3,000 per year as alimony and $2,000 per year as support for the children. Proportionate reductions were provided for as each child reached 18 years of age; however, Young agreed to pay an additional $1,000 per year for each child attending college. The property settlement was incorporated in the judgment of divorce and was therein approved by the court and became its judgment. In the present litigation it was conceded that Young had failed to pay all that he was ordered to pay and that the unpaid installments were approximately equal to the amount of arrearage found by the chancellor.
The wife unsuccessfully contended in the trial court, and contends here, that the court was powerless to alter the terms of the property settlement agreement (except as to child support) and that it had no authority to modify the 1964 judgment. The former husband relies on such cases as Somerville v. Somerville, Ky.,
In Gann v. Gann, Ky.,
The final argument is that the court was required to award interest on the judgment. KRS 360.040 provides “A judgment shall bear legal interest from its date.” The intent of the statute is that interest ordinarily should' run from the date when each payment became due and payable; however, in Guthrie v. Guthrie, Ky.,
The judgment is reversed for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
