Department of Human Resources v. Bagley

235 S.E.2d 734, 142 Ga. App. 353, 1977 Ga. App. LEXIS 1614
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedApril 19, 1977
Docket53685
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 235 S.E.2d 734 (Department of Human Resources v. Bagley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Department of Human Resources v. Bagley, 235 S.E.2d 734, 142 Ga. App. 353, 1977 Ga. App. LEXIS 1614 (Ga. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinions

Deen, Presiding Judge.

In a prior divorce proceeding, a decree of divorce was entered between the appellee and her husband in which the latter was liable for child support payments of $100 per month for Kim D. Bagley, the only living child of the parties at that time. Some months after the divorce Jason C. Bagley was born; it is uncontested that he was a child of the marriage and that the decree makes no provision for his support.

The husband subsequently became delinquent in support payments and the appellee brought a contempt proceeding against him which terminated in the husband paying the amount of his obligation into court and thus placing himself on a current basis. At this point the State Department of Human Resources, which had made welfare payments to the wife, filed a motion to intervene in the case and, this being granted, filed a money rule against the clerk of court contending that the sum of $1,200, representing child support payments for the prior twelve month period, should be paid directly to it. The court after hearing evidence ordered the money paid to the mother, and the department appeals. Held:

1. The purpose of the federal program for grants to states in the latter’s administration of aid to families with dependent children (AFDC) is to encourage the care of [354]*354children in their own homes by enabling each state to furnish financial assistance to needy and dependent children and their parents living in the home, and thus to strengthen family life with the purpose of helping the family achieve self-support and personal independence. 42 USCA § 601. To be eligible for federal assistance the state plans must require certain standards to be met, including provision that as a condition of eligibility for aid the applicant be required to assign to the state any rights to support which have accrued at the time such assignment is executed, and cooperate with the state in obtaining support payments for such applicant or child. 42 USCA § 602 (a) (26) (A, B). Pursuant thereto 45 CFR § 232.11 (a) (i) requires that as a condition of eligibility for assistance the state plan must provide that the applicant assign to it any rights to support from any other person that the applicant may have on behalf of any family member for whom the assistance is to be provided "[w]hich have accrued at the time such assignment is executed.” 45 CFR § 232.11 (a) (1) (i, ii). "When a family ceases receiving assistance under the State’s title IV-A plan, the assignment of support rights under § 232.11 of this title terminates, except with respect to the amount of any unpaid support obligation that has accrued under such assignment. From this accrued amount, the IV-D agency shall . . . determine the Federal Government’s share of the collection so the IV-A agency may reimburse the Federal Government to the extent of its participation in the financing of the assistance payments.” 45 CFR § 302.51 (f) (2). Georgia has complied with federal law in the enactment and administration of the Child Support Recovery Act, Code Ch. 99-9B. Receipt of welfare payments creates a debt by the parent to the state, limited, in the case of sums specified in divorce decrees, to the amount there stated. "This liability shall attach only with respect to the period of time during which public assistance is granted and only if the parent or parents were financially able to furnish support during this period.” Former Code § 99-904b, Ga. L. 1973, pp. 192, 194. This sentence was omitted when the section was rewritten (Ga. L. 1976, pp. 1537, 1539, eff. April 7, 1976). It was, however, the law during a large part of the time in which [355]*355the support money collected in the contempt proceeding came due, and is therefore applicable to support provisions of the divorce decree until the effective date of the new Act.1 Acceptance of such financial assistance constitutes an assignment of the right to any child support owed up to the amount of assistance paid. "The department shall be subrogated to the right of the child or children or the person having custody to initiate any support action existing under the laws of this State and to recover any payments ordered by the courts.” Code § 99-905 (b).

In the same vein, 45 CFR § 303.6 provides: "For all cases under the State plan in which the obligation to support and the amount of the obligation have been established, the IV-D agency must maintain an effective system for identifying, within 30 days, those cases in which there is a failure to comply with the support obligation and to contact such delinquent individuals as soon as possible in order to enforce the obligation and obtain the current support obligation and any arrearages. Such attempts to collect support must include the institution of the following procedures as applicable and necessary: (a) Contempt proceedings to enforce an extant court order. . .” (Emphasis supplied.) It follows that the [356]*356purpose of the assignment is to allow the department to carry out its own obligation to collect from the delinquent parent. The department here utterly failed in this duty, but hung back until the mother of these children employed a lawyer, initiated and followed through with a contempt action and collected the back payments reaching at the very least into some undetermined time in 1975, and now attempts to seize the entire amount of such payments without offering any proof of when or in what amount its own assistance was given so as to show its own entitlement.

It is apparent that the overriding purpose of AFDC is to keep the family together and financially self-supporting. The provisions for recovery of payments advanced from the parents, particularly from a parent under a court order to provide support, and for reimbursement to the state and by it to the federal government, are designed to keep the burden of support of the family on the shoulders of the breadwinner so far as possible. We have not quoted all of the "Distribution of child support collections” rules set out in 45 CFR § 302.51, but, taking them as a whole, it is obvious that the distributions contemplated are those of funds received as a result of state collection actions initiated by it. Subdivision (e) (1), for example, states that when child support payments "collected and distributed under the title IV-D State plan” cease, the state may continue to collect current support payments from the absent parent for a period not exceeding three months.

It then becomes pertinent to examine these statutes and regulations in view of the beneficent purposes to be effected. When so construed, the assignment of an accrued right of support to the state is for the purpose of allowing the state to initiate collection litigation. It is certainly not for the purpose of taking away those very payments which would render the family unit financially solvent and by so doing to leave it in a situation where the governmental agency continues with the burden of making monthly welfare payments. In the present case the state did not initiate and took no part in the collection activity.

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Related

Reid v. Reid
502 S.E.2d 269 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1998)
Department of Human Resources v. Bagley
240 S.E.2d 867 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1977)
Department of Human Resources v. Bagley
235 S.E.2d 734 (Court of Appeals of Georgia, 1977)

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Bluebook (online)
235 S.E.2d 734, 142 Ga. App. 353, 1977 Ga. App. LEXIS 1614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/department-of-human-resources-v-bagley-gactapp-1977.