Smith v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (3-24-1997)
Smith v. Smith, Unpublished Decision (3-24-1997)
Dissenting Opinion
The statutory restraint on the parties' right to contract and this court's affirmance of the legislative overreaching require my dissent.
In this case, the parties agreed on the payment of child support until age eighteen or emancipation, whichever occurred first. It was not an agreement to support the child until nineteen or twenty years of age. The majority finds that the legislative enactment of R.C.
It is my belief that the parties' privilege or right to contract in such case should permit great latitude in matters of child support — sufficient latitude to agree to zero child support or to child support for the child's lifetime. The only limitation on the parties' agreement would be that the agreement serve the child's best interest.
I believe the legislative enactment should be revisited by the legislature and the courts.
Opinion of the Court
OPINION
On January 10, 1970, appellee, M. Kathleen Sharpshair, and appellant, Timothy Smith, were married. The parties subsequently filed a petition for dissolution on October 5, 1990. The trial court held a hearing on the petition on November 6, 1990. The trial court granted the petition in a dissolution decree dated November 16, 1990. The decree expressly incorporated the terms of the separation agreement reached by the parties and provided, in pertinent part, as follows:Payor, Timothy Smith, shall pay as and for support of the minor child, Melissa, the sum of $76.20 per week * * * for a total of $327.66 per month * * * plus 2% poundage, for a total of $334.21 per month until said minor child is emancipated or reaches the age of majority.
On February 6, 1996, Butler County Child Support Enforcement Agency filed a contempt motion in which it alleged that appellant had an outstanding child support arrearage of $2,483.53. Appellant then filed a motion to terminate his child support obligation on March 25, 1996. Appellant argued that the separation agreement and dissolution decree only required him to pay support until Melissa reached the age of majority and that his child support obligation should therefore have terminated on October 11, 1994, the date of Melissa's eighteenth birthday.
A hearing on appellant's motion to terminate his child support obligation was held before a magistrate on April 11, 1996. The magistrate held that R.C.
On June 4, 1996, appellant filed objections to the magistrate's report pursuant to Civ.R. 53. The trial court overruled appellant's objections in an order dated July 12, 1996. Appellant now appeals setting forth the following assignment of error:
THE COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO GRANT THE MOTION TO TERMINATE SUPPORT.
Appellant contends that the trial court should have terminated his child support obligation on October 11, 1994, the date of Melissa's eighteenth birthday, because the separation agreement and dissolution decree specifically provided that his child support obligation was to terminate when Melissa reached the age of majority. Appellant relies upon the Ohio Supreme Court's decision in In re Dissolution of Marriage of Lazor (1991),
In Lazor, the Supreme Court held that, under then-existing law, the parties to a dissolution action may contractually agree that one party's duty to make specific child support payments will terminate when the child reaches the age of majority. The court reasoned that former R.C.
The General Assembly subsequently amended R.C.
(B) Notwithstanding section
3109.01 of the Revised Code, the parental duty of support to children, including the duty of a parent to pay support pursuant to a child support order, shall continue beyond the age of majority as long as the child continuously attends on a full-time basis any recognized and accredited high school. That duty of support shall continue during seasonal vacation periods.
In Mazzuckelli v. Mazzuckelli (1995),
The effect of the statutory amendment demonstrates the legislature's intent to override the majority's decision in Lazor * * *. When the amendment is viewed alongside other pertinent provisions of the Revised Code, it is now clear * * * that the duty to pay court-ordered support is mandated beyond the age of majority under specified circumstances, and that a child support enforcement agency has a right to see that the duty is appropriately enforced.
Id. See, also, Farra v. Farra (Oct. 18, 1996), Montgomery App. No. 15890, unreported.
We find the rationale of Mazzuckelli persuasive. Amended R.C.
In addition, we also find Lazor distinguishable from the present case because the separation agreement and dissolution decree in Lazor were executed and finalized before R.C.
Our review of the record indicates that the trial court issued a child support order as part of the dissolution decree on November 16, 1990, approximately seven months after the child support guidelines took effect. The specific language of R.C.
Judgment affirmed.
YOUNG, P.J., concurs.
KOEHLER, J., dissents.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.