Brown v. State of Maine, Dep't of Human Servs.

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 12, 2001
DocketKENap-00-36
StatusUnpublished

This text of Brown v. State of Maine, Dep't of Human Servs. (Brown v. State of Maine, Dep't of Human Servs.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. State of Maine, Dep't of Human Servs., (Me. Super. Ct. 2001).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL ACTION KENNEBEG, ss. DOCKET NO. AP-00-36

SKS -KEN- VI2/ Qoe/ JAMES L. BROWN, III, Petitioner Vv. DECISION ON APPEAL

STATE OF MAINE, DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES,

Respondent

This matter comes before the court on a petition requesting judicial review of final agency action pursuant to M.R. Civ. P. 80C. The court has reviewed the record and written and oral arguments of the parties. Concluding that the respondent

Department of Human Services (Department) has given the eerute in question too constricted an interpretation, the petition will be granted’. Background Petitioner James Brown was divorced from Deborah Ann Brown on March 27,1991. Brown was ordered to pay $163 per week for the support of his three minor children and maintain health insurance coverage. Mrs. Brown was to be

responsible for the first $150 of uninsured medical and expenses each year, with the

1 The decision of the Administrative Hearing Officer does not specifically refer to the statute in question. The reference to the “Department” here is to the Division of Support Enforcement and Recovery, which initiated the claim on behalf of Mr. Brown's ex-wife. parties to split those expenses in excess of $150, 67% for the petitioner and 33% for his former wife. On September 21, 1993, a court order resulted in a change of primary physical residence of one of the children to be with the petitioner and the petitioner’s obligation was reduced to $97 per week for the two children remaining with their mother. Sometime in 1994, Brown became disabled and, after a lengthy delay, he was granted Social Security disability benefits. Because of the delay, Brown received retroactive benefits to the date of the filing for disability and the former Mrs. Brown and all three of the children also received dependent benefits directly from the Social Security Administration. The benefits received by Mrs. Brown and the two children residing with her exceeded the child support arrears that had accumulated during the time of Brown’s disability (1994-1998). During this period, the former Mrs. Brown had paid all the medical treatment expenses for the three minor children. She now seeks, among other things, establishment of an arrearage for medical treatment expenses during that period. After hearing, the Department refused to allow Brown to credit against his accrued medical debt the excess retroactive Social Security benefits paid to his children. Brown has filed this timely appeal of that decision. Discussion

The key to the appeal lies in interpretation of 19-A M.R.S.A. § 2107, titled “Credit for Dependent Benefits.” That statute reads, in pertinent part:

If a child receives dependent benefits as a result of the obligor parent’s

disability, any tribunal establishing, reviewing or modifying the child

support obligation or debt shall give the obligor parent credit for the dependent benefits paid to the child. ... The tribunal shall make the

2 following findings: (c) that the obligor must receive credit against the

established obligation for the benefits received. Credit may not exceed

the amount of the current obligation for the period for which the

benefits are paid. Credit may not be given toward a past or future

obligation for dependent benefits that exceed the current obligation. Despite the apparent applicability of this provision, the Department Administrative Hearing Officer wrote:

I can find neither promulgated policy, statute, nor case law that grants

me the authority to apply retroactive Social Security benefits paid on

behalf of these children through Mr. Brown’s disability claim, those

amounts in excess of the child support owed for the period of retroactivity, to any medical expenses Mr. Brown owes for that period. By implication, the hearing officer determined that the credit provisions of section 2107 did not apply.

In arguing that the hearing officer was correct, the Department points to two cases from other jurisdictions, Smith v. Smith, 651 P.2d 1290 (Az. App. 1982) and Hinckley v. Hinckley, 812 P.2d 907 (Wyo. 1991). However, these cases are not helpful. In Smith, the parties attempted to create an offset for Social Security benefits through modification of the divorce judgment, but failed to amend an important part of that judgment. In Hinckley, the court declined to adopt through its decision a rule that would have allowed the Social Security benefits to be applied against unpaid medical expenses of minor children in the absence of an amendment to the support order through the courts. Here in Maine, the legislative enactment of section 2107 obviates the concerns of the Arizona and Wyoming courts by providing

that benefit payments such as Social Security dependent benefits shall be credited

without the need to amend the underlying order of support. In other words, the support order does not have to change every time the obligor parent begins receiving such benefits, ends such benefits, or has a change in such benefits. There is continuity in what the obligee of the support order receives, with the only change being accounting for the benefits.

The hearing officer’s decision in somewhat ambiguous in that it simply says that there is no statutory basis for the credit Brown seeks, without explaining why section 2107 does not apply. However, it would seem that this decision must be based on a reading that the medical expenses in question are not part of a “child support obligation or debt” as that term is used in the statute. There is no specific statutory definition for the term, but the Department argues that “child support obligation” must mean it is limited to the basic support entitlement portion of the calculations under the statuory guidlines used to arrive at a child support order, rather than the total support obligation.. (19-A M.R.S.A. § 2001(1) & (10)). The court is persuaded that the term is more generic in application; more akin to the definition of “support obligations” set forth in 19-A M.R.S.A. § 2103(1)(B). Under the latter statute, which sets forth the Department’s duty to enforce “support obligations,” that term is defined as “the amount due to an obligee for support

“a

under an order of support... .”. If the Department interprets its support enforcement obligations to include all aspects of an order of support (and this would be a correct interpretation), it offers no persuasive explanation why the term “child

support obligation” in section 2107 should be given any less expansive

interpretation. The more expansive interpretation of “child support obligation” not only harmonizes the statutory provisions, but also is consistent with the purpose of the Social Security disability dependents benefit. It does not require extensive legislative history to conclude that the federal government’s purpose in providing these benefits is to assist a disabled individual in supporting himself and in meeting his obligation to support his dependents while he is-disabled. To the extent that credits are not allowed for disabled persons who have been meeting their obligations by paying money to someone else who is caring for the children, the beneficial effect to this disabled person is reduced and the recipient of the funds gains a windfall.

It should be noted that credit for medical expenses under section 2107 would be subject to the same limitations as credits for basic support, child care, or any other component of the total support obligation as set forth in the order of support.

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Related

Olsen v. Olsen
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