Bandstra, J.
Defendant Michael Novik appeals by leave granted from an order of the circuit court denying his motion for modification of previous child-support orders. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
While unmarried, plaintiff Linda M. Hall gave birth to a child on December 20, 1990, following a relationship with Novik. On February 15, 1991, Hall filed a complaint for paternity against Novik. With the assistance of attorneys, the parties entered into a process of negotiation and an agreement was reached resulting in a court-approved consent order entered on December 23, 1991. This order provided that Novik did not acknowledge that he was the father of Hall’s child but that he would make payments to Hall for the child’s support and education at a set level, as well as provide a policy of health-care insurance on the child’s behalf. The circuit court, in its order approving the parties’ agreement, specified that the agreement made “adequate provision for the support
and education” of the child. Further, the order expressly barred any remedies that might otherwise be available to Hall against Novik, specifically disallowing any later modification of the agreement. The parties’ agreement and the court order approving it were entered pursuant to MCL 722.713;
the parties do not argue that any provision of the statute authorizing this agreement and order (hereinafter the original support order) was not complied with fully.
During the ensuing decade, the constitutionality of the statute upon which this arrangement was based became the subject of a number of appellate-court decisions. Initially, a divided panel of this Court enforced a similar nonmodifiable settlement agreement, rejecting a claim that the statute was an unconstitutional denial of equal protection to illegitimate children.
Crego v Coleman,
201 Mich App 443, 446-447; 506 NW2d 568 (1993)
(Crego I).
In 1995, in a separate case, a panel of our Court reached the opposite conclusion on the constitutional question and, because the statute underlying a nonmodifiable support agreement was thus struck down, held that the agreement could be modified through a further court order.
Dones v Thomas,
210 Mich App 674, 679-680;
534 NW2d 221 (1995). As a result of
Dones,
the statute was repealed. See
Sturak v Ozomaro,
238 Mich App 549, 556; 606 NW2d 441 (1999). However, that repeal did not affect orders, like that at issue here, that were entered while the statute was still in effect. The
Dones
Court did not consider
Crego I.
However, the
Crego
case returned to our Court and another panel decided that it was required to follow
Crego I
and uphold the constitutionality of the statute, although it agreed with the
Dones
panel’s holding that the statute was unconstitutional.
Crego v Coleman,
226 Mich App 815, 821; 573 NW2d 291 (1997)
(Crego II).
The opinion in
Crego II
was then vacated, and a special panel, convened to resolve this conflict of authority, MCR 7.215(H)(3), concluded that the statute was an unconstitutional violation of the equal-protection guarantees of the United States and Michigan constitutions.
Crego v Coleman,
232 Mich App 284, 294-296; 591 NW2d 277 (1998)
(Crego III).
The issue was finally resolved by our Supreme Court, which held that the statute did not violate the equal protection clauses of the federal and state constitutions and that, therefore, nonmodifiable support agreements entered into pursuant to the statute are enforceable.
Crego v Coleman,
463 Mich 248, 269-272; 615 NW2d 218 (2000)
(Crego IV).
To summarize this history, during the period when the parties here negotiated and initially complied with their 1991 agreement, the statute upon which the agreement was based was considered constitutional.
Dones
held otherwise in 1995, and its finding of
unconstitutionality was ultimately affirmed by this Court through the 1998 conflict-panel decision in
Crego III.
The five-year period running from
Dones,
during which the statute was considered unconstitutional, was ended by the 2000 Supreme Court decision in
Crego TV,
which constitutes the final resolution of the equal-protection issue.
In the instant case, notwithstanding the agreement, Hall returned to the circuit court seeking a modification of the original support order. Relying on
Dones,
the circuit court granted that relief and entered an order increasing the monthly payments that Novik was required to pay on behalf of the child and also making other changes to the benefits that were due.
This order (hereinafter referred to as the increased support order) further required the parties to undergo testing to determine whether Novik was the child’s biological father. Following attempts by Novik to avoid that requirement,
Novik was determined to be the child’s biological father.
QUESTION PRESENTED AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
As noted earlier, the question presented here is the effect of
Crego TV
on the increased support order. Shortly after
Crego TV
was decided, defendant filed a
motion asking the circuit court to reinstate the original support order and require reimbursement of amounts paid in excess of it by Novik to Hall under the increased support order.
We are, of course, bound by
Crego IV.
However,
Crego IV
did not specify whether it should be applied retroactively; instead, it merely remanded the case to the circuit court “for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.”
Crego IV, supra
at 282.
Crego IV
is thus a case in which the Court “announce [d] a change of law” while “refrain[ing] from going the next step to indicate how its new rule is to be applied.”
Riley v Northland Geriatric Ctr (After Remand),
431 Mich 632, 643; 433 NW2d 787 (1988). The issue of the retroactive or prospective application of
Crego IV
is now left for us to decide here.
Id.
This is a question of law that we review de novo.
Curtis v Flint,
253 Mich App 555, 563-564; 655 NW2d 791 (2002).
PROSPECTIVE APPLICATION OF
CREGO IV
By completely denying Novik’s motion, the circuit court ruled that Novik must continue to comply with the obligations of the increased support order in the future. In so doing, the circuit court failed to give
Crego TV
even prospective effect.
Crego TV
held that agreements such as that entered into by the parties here in 1991 are enforceable, the statute on which they were based being constitutional.
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Bandstra, J.
Defendant Michael Novik appeals by leave granted from an order of the circuit court denying his motion for modification of previous child-support orders. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
While unmarried, plaintiff Linda M. Hall gave birth to a child on December 20, 1990, following a relationship with Novik. On February 15, 1991, Hall filed a complaint for paternity against Novik. With the assistance of attorneys, the parties entered into a process of negotiation and an agreement was reached resulting in a court-approved consent order entered on December 23, 1991. This order provided that Novik did not acknowledge that he was the father of Hall’s child but that he would make payments to Hall for the child’s support and education at a set level, as well as provide a policy of health-care insurance on the child’s behalf. The circuit court, in its order approving the parties’ agreement, specified that the agreement made “adequate provision for the support
and education” of the child. Further, the order expressly barred any remedies that might otherwise be available to Hall against Novik, specifically disallowing any later modification of the agreement. The parties’ agreement and the court order approving it were entered pursuant to MCL 722.713;
the parties do not argue that any provision of the statute authorizing this agreement and order (hereinafter the original support order) was not complied with fully.
During the ensuing decade, the constitutionality of the statute upon which this arrangement was based became the subject of a number of appellate-court decisions. Initially, a divided panel of this Court enforced a similar nonmodifiable settlement agreement, rejecting a claim that the statute was an unconstitutional denial of equal protection to illegitimate children.
Crego v Coleman,
201 Mich App 443, 446-447; 506 NW2d 568 (1993)
(Crego I).
In 1995, in a separate case, a panel of our Court reached the opposite conclusion on the constitutional question and, because the statute underlying a nonmodifiable support agreement was thus struck down, held that the agreement could be modified through a further court order.
Dones v Thomas,
210 Mich App 674, 679-680;
534 NW2d 221 (1995). As a result of
Dones,
the statute was repealed. See
Sturak v Ozomaro,
238 Mich App 549, 556; 606 NW2d 441 (1999). However, that repeal did not affect orders, like that at issue here, that were entered while the statute was still in effect. The
Dones
Court did not consider
Crego I.
However, the
Crego
case returned to our Court and another panel decided that it was required to follow
Crego I
and uphold the constitutionality of the statute, although it agreed with the
Dones
panel’s holding that the statute was unconstitutional.
Crego v Coleman,
226 Mich App 815, 821; 573 NW2d 291 (1997)
(Crego II).
The opinion in
Crego II
was then vacated, and a special panel, convened to resolve this conflict of authority, MCR 7.215(H)(3), concluded that the statute was an unconstitutional violation of the equal-protection guarantees of the United States and Michigan constitutions.
Crego v Coleman,
232 Mich App 284, 294-296; 591 NW2d 277 (1998)
(Crego III).
The issue was finally resolved by our Supreme Court, which held that the statute did not violate the equal protection clauses of the federal and state constitutions and that, therefore, nonmodifiable support agreements entered into pursuant to the statute are enforceable.
Crego v Coleman,
463 Mich 248, 269-272; 615 NW2d 218 (2000)
(Crego IV).
To summarize this history, during the period when the parties here negotiated and initially complied with their 1991 agreement, the statute upon which the agreement was based was considered constitutional.
Dones
held otherwise in 1995, and its finding of
unconstitutionality was ultimately affirmed by this Court through the 1998 conflict-panel decision in
Crego III.
The five-year period running from
Dones,
during which the statute was considered unconstitutional, was ended by the 2000 Supreme Court decision in
Crego TV,
which constitutes the final resolution of the equal-protection issue.
In the instant case, notwithstanding the agreement, Hall returned to the circuit court seeking a modification of the original support order. Relying on
Dones,
the circuit court granted that relief and entered an order increasing the monthly payments that Novik was required to pay on behalf of the child and also making other changes to the benefits that were due.
This order (hereinafter referred to as the increased support order) further required the parties to undergo testing to determine whether Novik was the child’s biological father. Following attempts by Novik to avoid that requirement,
Novik was determined to be the child’s biological father.
QUESTION PRESENTED AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
As noted earlier, the question presented here is the effect of
Crego TV
on the increased support order. Shortly after
Crego TV
was decided, defendant filed a
motion asking the circuit court to reinstate the original support order and require reimbursement of amounts paid in excess of it by Novik to Hall under the increased support order.
We are, of course, bound by
Crego IV.
However,
Crego IV
did not specify whether it should be applied retroactively; instead, it merely remanded the case to the circuit court “for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.”
Crego IV, supra
at 282.
Crego IV
is thus a case in which the Court “announce [d] a change of law” while “refrain[ing] from going the next step to indicate how its new rule is to be applied.”
Riley v Northland Geriatric Ctr (After Remand),
431 Mich 632, 643; 433 NW2d 787 (1988). The issue of the retroactive or prospective application of
Crego IV
is now left for us to decide here.
Id.
This is a question of law that we review de novo.
Curtis v Flint,
253 Mich App 555, 563-564; 655 NW2d 791 (2002).
PROSPECTIVE APPLICATION OF
CREGO IV
By completely denying Novik’s motion, the circuit court ruled that Novik must continue to comply with the obligations of the increased support order in the future. In so doing, the circuit court failed to give
Crego TV
even prospective effect.
Crego TV
held that agreements such as that entered into by the parties here in 1991 are enforceable, the statute on which they were based being constitutional. Hall presents arguments against the retroactive application of
Crego TV,
which would amount to a decision requiring that she reimburse Novik for payments made in excess of the original support order as a result of the increased support order. She presents no argument against prospectively applying
Crego TV
to reinstate
the original support order in the future.
We hold that the circuit court erred in failing to give
Crego TV
even this prospective application.
We realize that Hall and the child have been accustomed to receiving support at a higher level under the increased support order. Accordingly, reverting back to the support level found in the original support order will require adjustment and represent a hardship to them. Nonetheless,
Crego TV
clearly held that the original agreement was premised on a constitutional statute and should have been enforced throughout. Accordingly, having freely negotiated and accepted that agreement initially, Hall cannot now rightfully claim that it is unfair to impose its limitations upon her in the future.
Further, we recognize that the situation has changed dramatically since the agreement was entered, Novik now having been determined to be the child’s biological father. However, as Novik points out, he did not submit to paternity testing willingly, but was required to do so by the circuit court in contravention of the original agreement. The paternity determination would not have occurred but for precedents that incorrectly struck down the statute under which the agreement had been entered. It would be unfair now to continue imposing the obligations of the increased support order on Novik on the basis of that determination.
RETROACTIVE APPLICATION OF
CREGO IV
Whether
Crego TV
should be applied retroactively to require that Hall reimburse Novik for “excess payments” made under the increased support order presents a larger question.
Resolution of the issue of retroactive or prospective application “ultimately turns on considerations of fairness and public policy” requiring a court to “ ‘take into account the total situation confronting it and seek a just and realistic solution of the problems occasioned’ ” by an opinion that alters the law.
Riley, supra
at 644-645, quoting
Placek v Sterling Hts,
405 Mich 638, 665; 275 NW2d 511 (1979). However, certain rules or principles providing guidance have evolved.
Id.
at 645. The “first criterion that must be determined in deciding whether a judicial decision should receive full retroactive application is whether that decision is establishing a new principle of law . . . .”
MEEMIC v Morris,
460 Mich 180, 190; 596 NW2d 142 (1999).
A judicial decision
establishes a new principle of law if it overrules “clear past precedent on which the parties have relied ____”
Id.
We conclude that
Crego IV
presents such a “new principle of law.” As the summary of precedents presented above indicates, by the time
Dones
was decided, and certainly by the time a conflict panel affirmed
Dones
in
Crego III,
“clear precedent” from our Court established that MCL 722.713 was unconstitutional. That precedent was relied on by Hall in bringing her motion for modification of the original support order. It was also relied on by the circuit court in granting the increased support order. Further, we note that the Legislature relied on our Court’s determinations that the statute was unconstitutional in repealing the statute shortly after
Dones
was decided.
Sturak, supra.
By finding the statute constitutional,
Crego TV
overturned the law upon which all these actions were based; it established a new principle of law.
We reach that conclusion while acknowledging that the reversal by the Supreme Court of a Court of Appeals precedent does not always represent a new principle of law. See, generally,
MEEMIC, supra
at 191-197. In
MEEMIC, supra
at 197, the Court reasoned that the precedent it overturned was so poorly reasoned that its reversal was not “an unforeseeable decision . . . .” The Supreme Court noted that the precedent “was in direct conflict with the plain language
of the statute, the intent of the Legislature in enacting the statute, and two previous decisions” of the Supreme Court.
Id.
Further, the Supreme Court noted that, in the precedent, our Court had itself noted that the decision being rendered was “ ‘repugnant to the purposes and objectives . . . and to the plain language’ ” of the statute.
Id.
at 194, quoting
Profit v Citizens Ins Co of America,
187 Mich App 55, 62; 466 NW2d 354 (1991).
In contrast, our Court’s rulings in
Dones
and
Crego III
that MCL 722.713 was unconstitutional were not so poorly reasoned that parties could not justifiably rely upon them or foresee that they would be overturned by
Crego IV.
Instead, as illustrated by the dissenting opinions in
Crego IV,
the constitutionality of the statute was a close question where reasonable minds could differ. See
Crego IV, supra
at 293-296; see also
Tebo v Havlik,
418 Mich 350, 362; 343 NW2d 181 (1984) (rejecting the argument that precedents of the Court of Appeals, not being decisions by the Supreme Court, cannot properly be relied upon), and
Gusler v Fairview Tubular Products,
412 Mich 270, 298; 315 NW2d 388 (1981) (a Supreme Court decision contrary to prior interpretations by the Court of Appeals was considered to be “not unlike the announcement of a new rule of law”).
As noted earlier, the determination that
Crego TV
established a new principle of law allows us to consider whether it should be applied nonretroactively, but it does not resolve that question. We find further guidance in
Riley, supra,
a case factually similar to that presented here. There, the issue was whether a prior Supreme Court decision,
Gusler, supra,
should be applied retroactively to require recipients of
worker’s compensation benefits to repay excess sums received from their employers. They had previously received those sums by reason of precedents adopting an erroneous computation formula. The Supreme Court held that retroactive application was inappropriate:
We believe fairness requires that
Gusler
be applied to workers’ compensation awards made after . . . the date
Gusler
was decided .... Such a holding is fair because it allows employers to reduce their payments in accordance [with Gusler] while protecting employees with respect to payments received before
Gusler. [Riley, supra
at 645.]
The Court noted that employees and employers had relied for a number of years on the
pre-Gusler
interpretation of the worker’s compensation act that allowed for benefit payments in excess of those available under
Gusler.
The Court reasoned that a prospective application of
Gusler
“appropriately recognizes that reliance, and . . . safeguards employees by not requiring repayment of any portion of benefits received prior to
Gusler.” Id.
at 646.
The same considerations lead us to conclude that a prospective application of
Crego TV
is appropriate here. As noted above, in modifying the original order to increase the support payments, the circuit court relied on earlier appellate decisions finding MCL 722.713 unconstitutional. In so doing, the circuit court determined that an increase was warranted to properly care for the child, a decision not contested by Novik. Hall received the increased payments and used them for the child’s care. For example, the record here is clear that the child has been attending a private school that would likely not have been affordable under the original support order. It would be as unfair here to require that Hall reimburse Novik for amounts paid in excess of those due under the original support order as it would have been in
Riley
to require the worker’s compensation benefit recipients to make reimbursement to their employers. As has been noted, “[Requiring ... a woman to make ‘restitution’ of years of child support payments could impose a tremendous hardship, literally to the point of bankruptcy.”
Crego III, supra
at 329 (Whitbeck, J., dissenting).
Further, the public policy of this state, as reflected by statute, is that support payments once made for the care of a child are not normally “subject to retroactive modification.” MCL 552.603(2). “[T]his provision normally operates to prevent a payer from retroactively decreasing support payments that have already come due . . . .”
Harvey v Harvey,
237 Mich App 432, 437-438; 603 NW2d 302 (1999). The puipose of this statute is that “ ‘[t]he custodial parent, who actually provides for the child’s welfare, should be able to rely on receiving the court-ordered amount’ ”
until a petition for reduction has been filed.
Id.
at 438, quoting House Legislative Analysis, SB 318-320, June 30, 1987. Similarly, consistent with this statutory policy, a parent should be able to use court-ordered support payments without fear that reimbursement will be later required following a change in the law.
Earlier, we recognized that prospectively applying
Crego IV
works a hardship on Hall and now we acknowledge that failing to apply
Crego IV
retroactively works a hardship on Novik. Had the statute been considered constitutional throughout, as
Crego IV
finally determined it is, the original support order would have been enforced and Novik’s payments would not have escalated. Nonetheless, any change of law presents a difficult situation and the job of the court is to determine the issue of prospective or retroactive application in a manner that best accommodates the interests of all those affected by it. In this case, we conclude that a prospective-only application of
Crego IV
best achieves that goal.
CONCLUSION
The circuit court erred in failing to give
Crego IV
prospective effect. The circuit court granted a stay of proceedings pending appeal here, placing payments beyond those required by the original support order into escrow beginning February 1, 2001. Beginning
that date, Novik should be required to support the child only as specified in the original support order and the escrowed amounts should be returned to him.
We affirm the circuit court’s ruling that
Crego TV
should not be applied retroactively to require that Hall reimburse Novik any amounts paid previously to her in excess of those required by that original order, pursuant to the increased support order.
We remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. We do not retain jurisdiction.