JAMES D'AVELLA vs. THERESA MCGONIGLE & another
DOCKET SJC-07944
Dates: May 6, 1999 - June 25, 1999
Present Wilkins, C.J., Abrams, Lynch, Greaney, Fried, Marshall, & Ireland, JJ.
County Suffolk.
James D'Avella (father) and Theresa McGonigle (mother) were married in
1981. They had one child, who was born in 1983. In 1986, the mother filed
a complaint for divorce. On December 7, 1987, a temporary order was
entered requiring the father to pay $85 per week in child support. On July
21, 1988, a judgment of contempt was issued ordering the father to pay
$125 per week, $85 of which was for child support and $40 to be applied to
an accrued arrearage of $3,560. A judgment of divorce nisi was issued on
August 29, 1988, in which the father was ordered to pay $85 per week in
child support. On November 23, 1988, a second contempt judgment was issued
ordering the father to pay $110 per week in child support, $10 of which
would to applied to the accrued arrearage, which then totaled $5,055.
The father pled guilty to Federal charges of possession of a controlled
substance with the intent to distribute and was incarcerated in Federal
prison from August, 1989, until September, 1996. In March, 1997, the
father filed a complaint for modification seeking to lower his weekly
support payments and to modify retroactively the arrears which had accrued
while he was incarcerated. The parties stipulated that the father owed
$33,300 to the mother, and $15,755 to the Department of Transitional
Assistance (department). The parties further stipulated that, of these
amounts, $32,200 of what was owed the mother, and $4,600 of what was owed
the department accrued while the father was incarcerated.
A trial on the father's complaint was held on October 24, 1997. The
judge refused to abate the arrearage,(2) and found that
the father was liable to the department for $15,755.07, and to the mother
for $33,300. The father appealed, and we transferred the matter to this
court on our own motion.
II
Child support obligations become judgments by the operation of law "on
or after the date [they are] due." G. L. c. 119A, § 13 (a).(3)
The Legislature has explicitly prohibited the retroactive modification of
these judgments. Id. See Smith- Clarke v. Clarke, 44 Mass. App. Ct. 404,
405 (1998). The prohibition against the retroactive modification of child
support obligations is clear and unequivocal. Such modifications "shall
not" be allowed "except with respect to any period during which
there is pending a complaint for modification, but only from the date that
notice of such complaint has been given." G. L. c. 119A, § 13
(a).
The father argues that, due to his incarceration, it would have been
impossible for him to pursue a complaint for modification, and, therefore,
retroactive modification is warranted. This argument is without merit. The
father's impossibility argument rests on the premise that he would have
pursued a complaint for modification earlier if he could have. The facts,
however, do not support this proposition. Before entering prison the
father was not restrained from pursuing a complaint for modification in
the manner he claims he was once he was incarcerated. The judge
specifically found that the father was fully aware of his child support
obligations prior to starting to serve his sentence but made no effort to
have those obligations modified.(4) Moreover, once
imprisoned he could have attempted to file, pro se, a complaint for
modification with the court. Indeed, the father was out of prison for six
months before he brought his complaint for modification, and then it was
brought only after his bank account was seized.(5)
Even if the father could establish impossibility, the statute is clear
that such retroactive modifications "shall not" be allowed. G.
L. c. 119A, § 13 (a). The carving out of any exceptions to this clear
mandate is for the Legislature, not the judiciary.(6)
Where the language of a statute is plain, it is "the sole function of
the courts . . . to enforce it according to its terms." Boston
Neighborhood Taxi Ass'n v. Department of Pub. Utils., 410 Mass. 686, 690
(1991), quoting Massachusetts Community College Council MTA/NEA v. Labor
Relations Comm'n, 402 Mass. 352, 354 (1988).
The father also suggests that, if an action for enforcement had been
brought while he was incarcerated, a court would have found him unable to
pay. It is the father's position that, in reliance on this supposed fact,
the mother and the Department of Revenue elected not to pursue the matter
in order to allow the arrearage to increase, and, therefore, this court
should reverse the judge's finding that the father is liable for those
amounts. No authority is put forth to support this argument. It appears
that the father is attempting to argue that laches should bar enforcement
of the accrued judgments. Regardless of whether laches is appropriately
used in the manner sought by the father, the defense of laches is
unavailable in a case such as this. See G. L. c. 119A, § 13(a)
(overdue support payments are judgments by operation of law).
III
The judge's ruling that § 13 (a) bars retroactive modifications of
support orders was correct, and therefore the ruling is affirmed.
So ordered.
_____________________
Footnotes:
(1) 1 The child support enforcement division of the
Department of Revenue.
(2) 2 The judge opined that the father had "established
a case of impossibility of performance" and he would, therefore,
have abated the arrears but G. L. c. 119A, § 13 (a), barred him
from doing so.
(3) 3 The relevant statutory language reads in
full: "Any payment or installment of support under any child
support order issued by any court of this commonwealth or by a court
or agency of competent jurisdiction of any other state shall be on or
after the date it is due, a judgment by operation of law, with the
full force, effect, and attributes of a judgment of this commonwealth
including the ability to be enforced; shall be entitled as a judgment
to full faith and credit; and . . . shall not be subject to
retroactive modification except with respect to any period during
which there is pending a complaint for modification, but only from the
date that notice of such complaint has been given . . . ." G. L.
c. 119A, § 13 (a).
(4) 4 "Father's claim that he never received
notice of his child support obligation while in prison is not credible
given that he was aware of several child support orders and contempt
judgments for arrears issued against him before he was incarcerated. .
. . Father never attempted to file a complaint for Modification of his
child support obligation while he was incarcerated."
(5) 5 In his brief, the father argues that it was
this seizure which made him aware of his arrearages. The judge,
however, found that the father was aware of his obligations before he
was incarcerated. See note 4, supra.
(6) 6 Had an action for contempt been brought
against the father, he would have been able to raise impossibility as
a defense. But within the context of a modification action,
impossibility does not provide an exception to the prohibition against
the retroactive modification of support obligations found in § 13
(a).
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