Pride v. Nolan

511 N.E.2d 408, 31 Ohio App. 3d 261, 31 Ohio B. 546, 1987 Ohio App. LEXIS 8281
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 14, 1987
DocketC-860102
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 511 N.E.2d 408 (Pride v. Nolan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pride v. Nolan, 511 N.E.2d 408, 31 Ohio App. 3d 261, 31 Ohio B. 546, 1987 Ohio App. LEXIS 8281 (Ohio Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

This cause came on to be heard upon the appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Hamilton County. 1

The parties were divorced by decree entered March 15, 1966. Appellee husband was ordered to pay $30 per week support for the parties’ two minor children. In 1975, the support order was increased to $35 per week. Appellee lost his job in 1975, thereafter failing to pay support. On April 26,1978, appellee suffered a heart attack which left him permanently disabled. He was awarded permanent social security disability benefits. As a result of appellee’s disability, on November 1, 1978 the parties’ children began receiving social security benefits. The children became emancipated on January 16, 1980 and March 18, 1984, respectively.

On July 25, 1985, appellant wife filed a motion to reduce the support ar-rearage which had accrued to a lump sum judgment. Following a hearing, the referee awarded appellant a lump sum judgment of $7,689.80, the total arrear-age of $12,415 less $4,725.20 which the children received in social security benefits due to appellee’s disability. Both parties filed objections to the referee’s report. Appellee pointed out that the referee’s report erroneously stated the parties stipulated that appellee had paid no support after March 2,1975 when in fact, appellee had paid $1,985 in support after that date. The trial court overruled appellant’s objections and sustained ap-pellee’s objections to the report of the referee. The court granted appellant a lump sum judgment of $5,704.80, the ar-rearage which the referee found to be $12,415, less social security payments of $4,725.20 and less $1,985 in support *262 payments which the court found ap-pellee had made after March 2, 1975, which support payments the referee had erroneously failed to credit to appellee. Appellant timely appealed.

Appellant’s first assignment of error alleges:

“The trial court erred in granting a retroactive reduction of a child support order.”

Appellant argues under her first assignment of error that the trial court erred in reducing the arrearage by $4,725.20, the amount of the social security payments made to the children, as the court’s action amounted to an impermissible retroactive modification of a child support order. Appellant argues that the case sub judice is controlled by this court’s decision in Sexton v. Sexton (1971), 32 Ohio App. 2d 344, 61 O.O. 2d 514, 291 N.E. 2d 542, wherein this court held, citing McPherson v. McPherson (1950), 153 Ohio St. 82, 41 O.O. 151, 90 N.E. 2d 675, that a trial court does not have jurisdiction to retroactively modify child support arrearages due and owing unless such authority is expressly reserved in the decree of divorce. We disagree.

In Sexton, the defendant husband was ordered to pay $45 per week for the support of three minor children. He failed to make the payments; consequently, an arrearage accrued. During the period that defendant failed to pay support, plaintiff was receiving welfare benefits. Plaintiff wife filed a motion to reduce the arrearage to a lump sum judgment. The trial court ordered the amount of the lump sum judgment reduced by the amount of the welfare benefits. This court reversed the decision of the trial court holding that no credit could accrue to defendant for the payments provided by the welfare department. Sexton, which involved welfare payments made to the wife for the support of the children based upon their economic situation, is clearly distinguishable from the case sub judice. In the instant case, the children received the social security benefits, based upon the disability of their father, as a substitute for the wages which appellee would have earned had he been able to work.

Appellant urges this court to adopt the holding of the Court of Appeals for the Ninth District in Webb v. Webb (Feb. 6, 1985), Summit App. No. 11772, unreported. In Webb, the decree of divorce required defendant husband to pay plaintiff wife $215 per month as combined alimony and child support. Plaintiff began receiving social security benefits as a result of defendant’s medical retirement in 1978. The combined benefits were $679 per month. On June 29, 1979, defendant stopped making support payments. Plaintiff wife filed a motion for the arrearage. Defendant husband filed a motion requesting a judgment against plaintiff for payments he made while she was receiving the social security benefits. He further requested a modification of his support payments. The referee held that defendant was justified in discontinuing the support payments and refused to grant plaintiff a judgment for arrearages. Further, the referee determined that defendant was not entitled to a judgment for the amount of money he paid to plaintiff while she was receiving social security benefits. The trial court did not adopt the referee’s report. The court granted plaintiff a judgment for arrearages of $6,175 for child support and $6,172 for alimony. The court further ordered all future child support and alimony payments to cease. Defendant appealed. The Ninth District Court of Appeals, citing Fuller v. Fuller (1976), 49 Ohio App. 2d 223, 3 O.O. 3d 273, 360 N.E. 2d 357, upheld the trial court’s decision, holding:

“[T]he trial court did not err in refusing to retroactively modify the alimony and child support payments.” Webb, supra, at 4.

*263 We decline to adopt the holding of Webb. The Webb court based its decision on Fuller, supra; however, we find the holding in Fuller to be inapplicable to the facts of the instant case. The Fuller court held that any amount of social security payments, which the children received due to the father’s disability, over the amount which the father was ordered to pay in support, cannot be used to offset a judgment for an ar-rearage which accrued prior to the time the social security payments were certified for the benefit of the children. The Fuller court did not reach the issue of whether social security payments made subsequently may be credited against child support payments due for the months in which the children received social security benefits.

The Court of Appeals for the Ninth District held in Gilford v. Wurster (1983), 24 Ohio App. 3d 77, 24 OBR 145, 493 N.E. 2d 258, that social security death benefits received by a child upon the death of her father may be used to offset the obligation, imposed in the decree of divorce, of the father’s estate to support the child until she reached the age of twenty-one. The Gilford court, citing Cocciolone v. Cocciolone (Nov. 13, 1975), Summit App. No. 7857, unreported, stated:

“ ‘The payment of the social security benefit * * * arises by reason of the defendant’s employment, for which he paid the remuneration due the Social Security Administration. Its purpose is to provide support for minor children when the parent is disabled.

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Bluebook (online)
511 N.E.2d 408, 31 Ohio App. 3d 261, 31 Ohio B. 546, 1987 Ohio App. LEXIS 8281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pride-v-nolan-ohioctapp-1987.