OPINION
RABINOWITZ, Justice.
I.
INTRODUCTION
The primary question raised in this appeal is, from what date does a child’s biological father have a duty to support his child?
II.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Chadaye Hawthorne was born on February 9, 1986, to Lachelle Hawthorne. Cha-daye’s birth certificate did not name Alfredo Rios as the father. The State of Alaska has paid public assistance to Lachelle on behalf of Chadaye since 1989.
In December 1991 Lachelle signed a paternity affidavit naming Rios as Chadaye’s father. In July 1992 the Child Support Enforcement Division (CSED) filed a complaint against Rios seeking to establish paternity of Chadaye. Counsel was then appointed for Rios pursuant to the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act. After his return to the United States, Rios submitted to a blood test. The results showed a 99.55 percent probability of Rios’s paternity. CSED then moved for summary judgment on the issue of paternity.
Rios did not oppose summary judgment on the issues of paternity and reimbursement of paternity testing costs. In his “Limited Opposition To Motion For Summary Judgment And Costs,” Rios opposed summary judgment on the issue of back child support. In this regard Rios stated:
Nowhere in Plaintiffs memorandum is the duty of support discussed, except in the last paragraph wherein the State requests summary judgment thereon, and therefore it is impossible for Defendant Rios to file a complete opposition to the issue. Defendant Rios therefore, requests that this Court make note on the Summary Judgment Order that the duty of support has not been briefed or decided, and that it remains for review.[
]
In its reply to Rios’s opposition, CSED argued that issues concerning the amount of ongoing child support, back child support, support payment plans, and visitation were not properly before the superior court. CSED emphasized that its motion for summary judgment was limited to a request that Rios be adjudicated the biological father of Chadaye and that as such he had a duty to support Chadaye.
The superior court granted summary judgment to CSED. Its order provided in part that the child support obligation “is deemed effective from the date of judgment.” CSED moved for reconsideration of the provision making the child support award prospective, asserting that “[a]t stake is $40,403 of welfare paid to support the child since her birth, at least a portion of which the State hopes to recover from the child’s father, the defendant.” Reconsideration was denied and this appeal followed.
III.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews questions of law
de novo. Wright v. Black,
856 P.2d 477, 479 (Alaska 1993). “The standard of review applicable to a child support award is abuse of discretion. An award will be set aside only if we are ‘left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.’ ”
Terry v. Terry,
851 P.2d 837 (Alaska 1993) (quoting
Richmond v. Richmond,
779 P.2d 1211, 1216 (Alaska 1989) (citation omitted)).
IV.
DISCUSSION
A
When Does a Parent’s Duty to Support His or Her Child Commence?
CSED frames the legal issue presented in this appeal as follows: “[FJrom what date does a child’s biological father have a duty to support his child?”
The answer is supplied by both statute and common law. Alaska Statute 25.20.030 provides in relevant part, “Each parent is bound to maintain the parent’s children when poor and unable to work to maintain themselves.” In
Matthews v. Matthews,
739 P.2d 1298, 1299 (Alaska 1987), we concluded that a parent is obligated by statute (citing AS 25.20.030) and by the common law to support his or her children. We further observed that this duty of support exists even in the absence of a court order of support and that “[a] parent’s duty of support encompasses a duty to reimburse other persons who provide the support the parent owes.”
Id.
Based on the foregoing, we hold that a biological parent’s duty of support commences at the date of the birth of the child. We therefore reject the superior court’s implicit holding that in the circumstance of a child bom out of wedlock, the biological parent’s duty of support does not begin until a court has adjudicated paternity. CSED correctly notes that, although an adjudication of paternity may be a prerequisite to enforcement of a duty of support, it does not create the duty of support.
Sound policy reasons support a holding that the duty of child support commences from the birth of the child. As the court reasoned in
Cyrus v. Mondesir,
515 A.2d 736, 738-39 (D.C.1986):
[Pjrecluding a retroactive award would create an incentive for men to avoid their child support obligations for some period of time by delaying the process of adjudicating paternity. The creation of such an incentive would, of course, run counter to the statutory purpose of providing for the needs of children without regard to circumstances of birth.
(Footnote omitted.)
B.
The Superior Court’s Provision that Rios’s Child Support Obligation “is deemed effective from the date of judgment. ”
Alaska Statute 25.27.120(a) provides that a parent
is liable to the state in the amount of assistance granted under AS 47.07 and AS
47.25.310-47.25.420 to a child to whom the obligor owes a duty of support except that, if a support order has been entered, the liability of the obligor for assistance granted under AS 47.25.310-47.25.420 may not exceed the amount of support provided for in the support order... .[
]
CSED is charged with obtaining, enforcing, and administering orders for child support. AS 25.27.020. In the instant case, CSED instituted proceedings to establish Rios’s paternity as a prerequisite to establishing, through its administrative procedures, the amount of child support owed by Rios.
As noted above, in granting summary judgment establishing Rios’s paternity of Chadaye, the superior court further provided that Rios’s child support obligation “is deemed effective” from the date of entry of summary judgment.
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OPINION
RABINOWITZ, Justice.
I.
INTRODUCTION
The primary question raised in this appeal is, from what date does a child’s biological father have a duty to support his child?
II.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Chadaye Hawthorne was born on February 9, 1986, to Lachelle Hawthorne. Cha-daye’s birth certificate did not name Alfredo Rios as the father. The State of Alaska has paid public assistance to Lachelle on behalf of Chadaye since 1989.
In December 1991 Lachelle signed a paternity affidavit naming Rios as Chadaye’s father. In July 1992 the Child Support Enforcement Division (CSED) filed a complaint against Rios seeking to establish paternity of Chadaye. Counsel was then appointed for Rios pursuant to the Soldiers’ and Sailors’ Civil Relief Act. After his return to the United States, Rios submitted to a blood test. The results showed a 99.55 percent probability of Rios’s paternity. CSED then moved for summary judgment on the issue of paternity.
Rios did not oppose summary judgment on the issues of paternity and reimbursement of paternity testing costs. In his “Limited Opposition To Motion For Summary Judgment And Costs,” Rios opposed summary judgment on the issue of back child support. In this regard Rios stated:
Nowhere in Plaintiffs memorandum is the duty of support discussed, except in the last paragraph wherein the State requests summary judgment thereon, and therefore it is impossible for Defendant Rios to file a complete opposition to the issue. Defendant Rios therefore, requests that this Court make note on the Summary Judgment Order that the duty of support has not been briefed or decided, and that it remains for review.[
]
In its reply to Rios’s opposition, CSED argued that issues concerning the amount of ongoing child support, back child support, support payment plans, and visitation were not properly before the superior court. CSED emphasized that its motion for summary judgment was limited to a request that Rios be adjudicated the biological father of Chadaye and that as such he had a duty to support Chadaye.
The superior court granted summary judgment to CSED. Its order provided in part that the child support obligation “is deemed effective from the date of judgment.” CSED moved for reconsideration of the provision making the child support award prospective, asserting that “[a]t stake is $40,403 of welfare paid to support the child since her birth, at least a portion of which the State hopes to recover from the child’s father, the defendant.” Reconsideration was denied and this appeal followed.
III.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews questions of law
de novo. Wright v. Black,
856 P.2d 477, 479 (Alaska 1993). “The standard of review applicable to a child support award is abuse of discretion. An award will be set aside only if we are ‘left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been made.’ ”
Terry v. Terry,
851 P.2d 837 (Alaska 1993) (quoting
Richmond v. Richmond,
779 P.2d 1211, 1216 (Alaska 1989) (citation omitted)).
IV.
DISCUSSION
A
When Does a Parent’s Duty to Support His or Her Child Commence?
CSED frames the legal issue presented in this appeal as follows: “[FJrom what date does a child’s biological father have a duty to support his child?”
The answer is supplied by both statute and common law. Alaska Statute 25.20.030 provides in relevant part, “Each parent is bound to maintain the parent’s children when poor and unable to work to maintain themselves.” In
Matthews v. Matthews,
739 P.2d 1298, 1299 (Alaska 1987), we concluded that a parent is obligated by statute (citing AS 25.20.030) and by the common law to support his or her children. We further observed that this duty of support exists even in the absence of a court order of support and that “[a] parent’s duty of support encompasses a duty to reimburse other persons who provide the support the parent owes.”
Id.
Based on the foregoing, we hold that a biological parent’s duty of support commences at the date of the birth of the child. We therefore reject the superior court’s implicit holding that in the circumstance of a child bom out of wedlock, the biological parent’s duty of support does not begin until a court has adjudicated paternity. CSED correctly notes that, although an adjudication of paternity may be a prerequisite to enforcement of a duty of support, it does not create the duty of support.
Sound policy reasons support a holding that the duty of child support commences from the birth of the child. As the court reasoned in
Cyrus v. Mondesir,
515 A.2d 736, 738-39 (D.C.1986):
[Pjrecluding a retroactive award would create an incentive for men to avoid their child support obligations for some period of time by delaying the process of adjudicating paternity. The creation of such an incentive would, of course, run counter to the statutory purpose of providing for the needs of children without regard to circumstances of birth.
(Footnote omitted.)
B.
The Superior Court’s Provision that Rios’s Child Support Obligation “is deemed effective from the date of judgment. ”
Alaska Statute 25.27.120(a) provides that a parent
is liable to the state in the amount of assistance granted under AS 47.07 and AS
47.25.310-47.25.420 to a child to whom the obligor owes a duty of support except that, if a support order has been entered, the liability of the obligor for assistance granted under AS 47.25.310-47.25.420 may not exceed the amount of support provided for in the support order... .[
]
CSED is charged with obtaining, enforcing, and administering orders for child support. AS 25.27.020. In the instant case, CSED instituted proceedings to establish Rios’s paternity as a prerequisite to establishing, through its administrative procedures, the amount of child support owed by Rios.
As noted above, in granting summary judgment establishing Rios’s paternity of Chadaye, the superior court further provided that Rios’s child support obligation “is deemed effective” from the date of entry of summary judgment. We conclude that this portion of the superior court’s order should be vacated.
Earlier we set out in considerable detail the record context in which Rios raised what is essentially an anticipatory equitable estop-pel or waiver defense against CSED’s effort to obtain reimbursement for AFDC support payments made to the custodial parent. Assuming that estoppel or waiver is available against CSED’s reimbursement claim, we conclude that the superior court lacked an evidentiary basis for the prospective support provision it fashioned. Rios’s equitable and waiver arguments are confined to his opposition memorandum to CSED’s motion for summary judgment. Further, the record shows that the parties were never afforded the opportunity to develop an evidentiary record concerning these potential issues. Thus, given the lack of any admissible evidence supporting an equitable estoppel or waiver defense to CSED’s reimbursement claim, we hold that it was error for the superior court to
sua sponte
engraft a prospective support provision onto its order granting summary judgment.
IV.
CONCLUSION
That portion of the superior court’s order granting summary judgment which provides
that Rios’s support obligation “is deemed effective from the date of judgment” is REVERSED and VACATED. The case is REMANDED for further proceedings, not inconsistent with this opinion, for the purposes of determining the amount of child support Rios owes, and whether he has any estoppel and waiver defenses to CSED’s claims for reimbursement for AEDC payments made to the custodial parent.