In re the Marriage of Forrester

936 P.2d 388, 147 Or. App. 319, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 439
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 26, 1997
Docket83 0045; CA A88235
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 936 P.2d 388 (In re the Marriage of Forrester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Marriage of Forrester, 936 P.2d 388, 147 Or. App. 319, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 439 (Or. Ct. App. 1997).

Opinions

LANDAU, J.

Mother initiated this proceeding to establish and collect from father a child support arrearage. The principal issue is whether father and mother agreed that, in lieu of father paying mother child support as required by their dissolution judgment, father would pay mother’s credit card obligations, and, if so, whether their agreement is enforceable. An administrative law judge (ALJ) held that such agreements are not enforceable unless reflected in a modification of the dissolution judgment by the court, and he established father’s arrearage accordingly. The trial court reversed and credited father’s arrearage to the extent of father’s payments on mother’s credit card debts. We reverse the trial court and remand with instructions to enter judgment reflecting an arrearage that does not credit such payments.

The original dissolution judgment was entered in 1983. It awarded custody of the parties’ child to mother and required father to pay child support of $200 per month until their child turned 18. At the time of the dissolution judgment, mother had accrued approximately $3,700 in credit card obligations. The parties agree that the debt was incurred by mother after the parties separated but before the entry of the dissolution judgment. There is no evidence of the nature of the purchases that created the credit card debt.

Shortly after the dissolution, father received notice that payments were not being made on mother’s credit card obligations. Mother contacted father and asked him to take over the payments on the credit card. Father verbally agreed to do so. At this point, the parties’ versions of the events that followed vary.

Father testified that after he had been making the payments on the credit card debt “for some time,” he suggested to mother that he continue to make the credit card payments, but in lieu of his child support payments. He testified that mother agreed and that the parties decided that, in exchange for father paying the credit card bill, mother would offset father’s credit obligation in the amount of $5,000. For approximately the next three years, father paid the credit card debt. During those years, and the eight years [322]*322that followed until this proceeding was initiated, father also voluntarily incurred a variety of expenditures on behalf of the child, including the purchase of a car, the payment of car insurance premiums and the purchase of clothing.

Mother testified that, although she did ask father to pay the credit card debt, she never intended that those payments would substitute for child support. She explained that she wanted father to pay the credit card debt because those obligations were incurred before the parties were divorced and because she had not sought spousal support in the dissolution. She further explained that she did not complain about father failing to make child support payments “because I didn’t want anything to happen to the relationship between [the child] and him,” and because father was unemployed on a number of occasions.

In October 1993, the child turned 18. Shortly after that, mother initiated this proceeding, contending that father owed approximately $11,900 in unpaid child support over a ten-year period. Father requested an administrative hearing to contest the amount of arrearage, contending that his credit card payments, along with various other expenditures made on behalf of the child, must be credited against his arrearage. After a hearing, the ALJ found that, during the 123-month period from August 1983 through October 1993, father’s child support obligation totaled $24,600 and that father had paid to mother $12,700, plus four cash payments of $75 delivered by the child to mother. The ALJ concluded on the basis of those facts that father’s arrearage totaled $11,600. The ALJ gave no credits for any payments on the credit card debt or other expenditures, holding that he was obligated to enforce the dissolution judgment as entered, because the judgment had not been modified.

Father appealed to the circuit court. ORS 416.427. The trial court found that father’s arrearage totaled only $3,300. The court made no findings as to the method by which it arrived at that figure, but in a brief letter opinion it suggested that it awarded father credit for any payments that could be documented. Father since has paid the $3,300. Mother appeals, contending that the arrearage should [323]*323include an additional $8,005.59.1 According to mother, the ALJ was correct in concluding that, unless a dissolution judgment ordering the payment of child support is modified by a court or authorized agency, that judgment must be paid according to its terms. She contends that she never agreed to substitute credit card payments for child support. In any event, she contends, such agreements are unenforceable, as this court has held on a number of occasions. She further argues, again in accordance with numerous decisions of this court, that, even if the credit card payments may be credited against father’s arrearages, the other voluntary payments may not be treated in that fashion. Father responds that there was indeed an agreement to substitute credit card payments for child support and that such agreements should be enforceable. He contends that all of mother’s authorities are not to the contrary, because none involved an express agreement made before the substitution of one form of payment for another.

We first address the parties’ dispute as to the credit card payments. We need not decide whether the parties did enter into such an agreement, for, even if they did, such an agreement is not enforceable, as we have held many times. ORS 107.135(6) provides that a dissolution judgment requiring the payment of child support

“is a final judgment as to any installment or payment of money which has accrued up to the time either party makes a motion to set aside, alter or modify the decree, and the court does not have the power to set aside, alter or modify such decree, or any portion thereof, which provides for any payment of money, either for minor children or the support of a party, which has accrued prior to the filing of such motion. However, the court may allow a credit against child support arrearages for periods of time, excluding reasonable visitation unless otherwise provided by order or [324]*324decree, during which the obligated parent has physical custody of the child with the knowledge and consent of the custodial parent.”

(Emphasis supplied.) By its terms, the statute provides that, if installments of child support have accrued before a motion to modify is made, they become part of the dissolution judgment and are beyond the power of the court to modify, subject only to the exception of allowing credit for a noncustodial parent’s actual custody of a child. Thus, agreements between the parties as to the terms of the support obligation cannot be enforced by the court as to installments that already have accrued.

We addressed the issue first in Starzinger v. Starzinger, 82 Or App 96, 727 P2d 168 (1986), in which a dissolution judgment required the father to pay $100 per month to the mother for child support.

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Related

T.M. v. L.H.
742 N.E.2d 89 (Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2001)
In re the Marriage of Forrester
942 P.2d 299 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1997)

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Bluebook (online)
936 P.2d 388, 147 Or. App. 319, 1997 Ore. App. LEXIS 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-marriage-of-forrester-orctapp-1997.