IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
NO. 2016-CA-00425-SCT
THOMAS M. DENNIS
v.
SHELIA F. DENNIS
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/05/2016
TRIAL JUDGE: HON. KENNETH M. BURNS
TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: MARC DARREN AMOS
CARRIE A. JOURDAN
LISA LYNN MEGGS
J. TYSON GRAHAM
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LOWNDES COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: DAVID C. OWEN
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE: SHELIA F. DENNIS (PRO SE)
NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - DOMESTIC RELATIONS
DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 08/03/2017
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:
BEFORE DICKINSON, P.J., KING AND CHAMBERLIN, JJ.
CHAMBERLIN, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
¶1. Thomas Dennis appeals from the judgment of the Chancery Court of Lowndes
County, arguing that the chancellor erred by denying a petition to terminate his child-support
obligations with respect to his step-great-grandchild, J.R.H.1 We affirm the decision of the
chancellor.
1
To protect the minor child’s confidentiality, we refer to the child by the child’s
initials.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
¶2. On March 28, 1994, Thomas Dennis (“Dennis”) and Sheila Sims Dennis (“Sims”)
were married to each other.2 Prior to her relationship with Dennis, Sims had a daughter
named Renee Wright. Renee then had a daughter named Courtney; thus, Courtney is Sims’s
granddaughter. Courtney married Josh Hartzell, and they are the natural parents of J.R.H.
Therefore, Sims is J.R.H.’s great-grandmother and, by extension, Dennis was J.R.H.’s step-
great-grandfather. J.R.H. and Dennis are not blood-related in any way.
¶3. In May 2005, the Mississippi Department of Human Services (“DHS”) informed Sims
that J.R.H.’s natural parents (the Hartzells) had gotten into legal trouble. According to Sims,
DHS told her that she could either come get J.R.H. or that DHS would put the child “in the
system.” So, in October 2005, Dennis, Sims, and the Hartzells filed a Joint Petition for Child
Custody in Lowndes County. All parties agreed that it would be in the best interest of J.R.H.
to be placed in the custody of and reside with Dennis and Sims. In the petition, the Hartzells
each agreed to pay $106 per month to Dennis and Sims for the care, maintenance, and
support of J.R.H. The Hartzells also requested visitation rights for alternating weekends,
holidays, and summers. On March 13, 2006, the Chancery Court of Lowndes County entered
an order granting the parties’ requests.
¶4. About six months later, on or around October 10, 2006, Dennis and Sims separated.
Two years later, on June 11, 2008, Sims filed for divorce. A judgment granting an
irreconcilable-differences divorce was entered one year later on June 23, 2009. Incorporated
2
The case is styled Dennis v. Dennis but Sims has gone back to using her maiden
name since her divorce from Dennis. Therefore, we refer to Sims by her maiden name.
2
into the divorce decree was a Child Custody and Support and Property Settlement Agreement
(“the Agreement”) which gave Sims sole legal custody of J.R.H. In the Agreement, Dennis
agreed to pay $400 per month to Sims for child support, and he was granted visitation rights
with J.R.H.3 According to Dennis, he exercised his visitation rights with J.R.H. until the
child refused to see him anymore.
¶5. At some point after Dennis’s and Sims’s divorce, J.R.H. cut off any relationship with
Dennis. According to Sims, Dennis told J.R.H. that he was happy that the child’s
grandmother (Sims’s daughter Renee Wright) had died. Dennis denies making any such
statement. Regardless of what was said, it is undisputed that J.R.H. currently refuses to see
or speak to Dennis. Sims further stated that she will not make J.R.H. see Dennis and that the
“relationship is terminated as long as [J.R.H.] wants it to be that way.”
¶6. On November 20, 2015, Dennis filed an amended petition to consolidate the divorce
matter and the child-custody matter and to modify the child-custody and support agreement.
In his petition, Dennis argued that the chancellor should allow him to relinquish his custody
of J.R.H. and to terminate any ongoing4 child-support obligations. According to the petition,
Dennis “wrongfully believed that some sort of legal duty existed pursuant to applicable law
for him to pay child support.” Dennis claimed to have “never developed any real
3
The agreement stated that child support was to continue until: (1) the minor child
marries; (2) the minor child enlists in any branch of the armed forces; (3) the minor child is
no longer attending school on a full-time basis prior to the age of twenty-one years; (4) the
minor child reaches the age of twenty-one years; or (5) at any time that a court of competent
jurisdiction shall change, alter, modify, or terminate this obligation.
4
Dennis does not seek a refund or forgiveness for any past-due child-support
payments.
3
parental/familiar relationship with J.R.H.” and that J.R.H. had terminated any relationship
with him. He also claimed that J.R.H.’s “parents still have parental visitation rights and have
the legal obligation to provide child support.”
¶7. The chancellor held a hearing and ultimately denied Dennis’s requested relief. The
chancellor concluded that no material change in circumstances had arisen. The chancellor
also rejected Dennis’s argument that his child-support obligations should be terminated
because of J.R.H.’s refusal to see or speak to him for two years. He reasoned that the child
was only twelve years old and therefore “not old enough to appreciate that [the] failure to
have a relationship with Mr. Dennis is legally significant.” Dennis now appeals, raising nine
issues. We restate and combine these issues into three arguments for clarity:
I. Whether there is a legal basis for child support or, alternatively, whether the
collapse of the relationship justifies termination.
II. Whether the natural parents’ ongoing parental obligations establish that
Dennis should not be required to pay child support.
III. Whether Dennis should be permitted voluntarily to terminate his custodial
obligations.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
¶8. Our review of a chancellor’s decision is limited. Dep’t of Human Servs., State of
Mississippi v. Marshall, 859 So. 2d 387, 389 (Miss. 2003). “We will not disturb a
chancellor’s findings unless the court was manifestly wrong, abused its discretion or applied
an erroneous legal standard.” Id. Legal questions receive de novo review. Sanford v.
Sanford, 124 So. 3d 647, 652-53 (Miss. 2013).
4
DISCUSSION
¶9. We first note that Sims, who proceeded pro se below, failed to file an appellee’s brief
with this Court. Generally, the “[f]ailure of an appellee to file a brief is tantamount to
confession of error and will be accepted as such unless the reviewing court can say with
confidence, after considering the record and brief of appealing party, that there was no error.”
Sanders v. Chamblee, 819 So. 2d 1275, 1277 (Miss. 2002) (quoting Dethlefs v. Beau
Maison Dev. Corp., 458 So. 2d 714, 717 (Miss. 1984)). “Where the appellant’s brief makes
out an apparent case of error . . . , we do not regard it as our obligation to look to the record
to find a way to avoid the force of the appellants’ argument.” Id.
¶10. This Court, however, may choose to review a case on the merits of the record without
an appellee’s brief when the case “involves an issue affecting the public interest[.]” Id.
Because this case concerns issues regarding child custody and support modification, as well
as who may be held accountable for child-support obligations, we choose to review this case
on the merits. See Allred v. Allred, 735 So. 2d 1064, 1067 (Miss. Ct. App. 1999) (“Because,
to some extent, this proceeding touches on matters relating to the welfare of minor children,
this Court has determined to reach the merits of the issues in this appeal, though we proceed
unaided by a brief from the appellee.”).
I. Whether there is a legal basis for child support or, alternatively,
whether the collapse of the relationship justifies termination.
¶11. Dennis’s primary argument is that he has no duty to provide support to J.R.H. because
5
he is not the child’s parent. Citing Mississippi Code Section 93-5-23,5 he argues that only
the natural parents of a child or those standing in loco parentis have support obligations.
¶12. This Court has “defined a person acting in loco parentis as one who has assumed the
status and obligations of a parent without a formal adoption.” Logan v. Logan, 730 So. 2d
1124, 1126 (Miss. 1998). “Any person who takes a child of another into his home and treats
it as a member of his family, providing parental supervision, support and education, as if it
were his own child is said to stand [in loco parentis].” Griffith v. Pell, 881 So. 2d 184, 186
n.1 (quoting Logan, 730 So. 2d at 1126). Here, Dennis argues that he is not in loco parentis
and that he never sought to supplant J.R.H.’s relationship with the natural parents. To the
contrary, he claims that he spent less than a year in the same home with J.R.H. before moving
out and separating from Sims and never assumed the role of stepfather. Therefore, he argues
that the chancellor erred by not allowing him voluntarily to terminate his obligations because
no duty exists for him to pay child support.
¶13. From the outset, we restate that a third party who takes temporary custody of a child
5
The statute reads, in part,
When a divorce shall be decreed from the bonds of matrimony, the court may,
in its discretion, having regard to the circumstances of the parties and the
nature of the case, as may seem equitable and just, make all orders touching
the care, custody and maintenance of the children of the marriage, and also
touching the maintenance and alimony of the wife or the husband, or any
allowance to be made to her or him, and shall, if need be, require bond,
sureties or other guarantee for the payment of the sum so allowed. Orders
touching on the custody of the children of the marriage shall be made in
accordance with the provisions of Section 93-5-24.
Miss. Code Ann. § 93-5-23 (Rev. 2013) (emphasis added).
6
and who does not stand in loco parentis has no obligation to support the child once the
custody has ended. In Williams v. Williams, this Court held that “in the absence of
consanguinity, legal adoption, or a knowing and voluntary assumption of the obligation to
provide support, the law will not compel one who has stood in the place of a parent to
support the child after the relationship has ceased.” Williams v. Williams, 843 So. 2d 720,
723 (Miss. 2003) (quoting NPA v. WBA, 8 Va. App. 246, 251, 380 S.E.2d 178, 181 (1989)).
Every day, family members, foster parents, and others take on responsibility to care and
provide for children for various reasons, including situations like the case at hand where the
natural parents apparently were unable to do so. Holding third parties accountable for child-
support obligations after their custody has ended may cause people to be less likely to take
custody of a child out of benevolence. Therefore, simply by agreeing to take custody of
J.R.H. when DHS called, Dennis did not assume a legal obligation to provide for J.R.H. after
his custody ended.
¶14. The analysis, however, does not end here under the facts of this case. Here, Dennis
agreed to provide child support for J.R.H. in the Child Custody and Support and Property
Settlement Agreement incorporated into his irreconcilable-differences divorce decree.
Therefore, the issue is not whether Dennis has a statutory duty to pay child support, but rather
whether he has a quasicontractual obligation to do so. “We do not hold that a man who is
not a child’s biological father can be absolved of his support obligations in all cases. Those
who have adopted the child or voluntarily and knowingly assumed the obligation of support
will be required to continue doing so.” Id. at n.1 (citing NPA, 380 S.E.2d at 181) (emphasis
7
added).
¶15. In Mississippi, one of the steps parties must take to obtain an irreconcilable-
differences divorce is to enter into a written settlement agreement that provides “for the
custody and maintenance of any children of that marriage and for the settlement of any
property rights between the parties.” Miss. Code Ann. § 93-5-2(2) (Rev. 2013). The parties
may provide the chancellor with such an agreement or, if the parties cannot agree as to
certain issues, consent in writing to the divorce and allow the chancellor to decide the
contested issues. See id.; see also Miss. Code Ann. § 93-5-2(3) (Rev. 2013). The chancellor
then determines whether the terms of the agreement “are adequate and sufficient.” Id. In
West v. West, this Court emphasized that these
“[S]ettlement agreements entered into by divorcing spouses and judicially
approved under our Irreconcilable Differences Divorce Act become a part of
the decree and enforceable as such as though entered by the court following
contested proceedings.” When the Irreconcilable Differences Divorce Act has
been complied with, the custody, support, alimony, and property settlement
agreement becomes a part of the final decree for all intents and purposes. If the
agreement is sufficient to comply with the statute, that is enough to render it
a part of the final decree of divorce as if the decree had been rendered by the
chancery court following a contested divorce proceeding.
“[P]roperty settlement agreements are contractual obligations.” The provisions
of a property settlement agreement executed prior to the dissolution of
marriage must be interpreted by courts as any other contract. In East v. East,
493 So. 2d 927, 931–32 (Miss. 1986), we held “[a] true and genuine property
settlement agreement is no different from any other contract, and the mere fact
that it is between a divorcing husband and wife, and incorporated in a divorce
decree, does not change its character.”
West v. West, 891 So. 2d 203, 210 (Miss. 2004) (internal citations omitted).
¶16. This case is, to an extent, similar to Lee v. Lee, 12 So. 3d 548 (Miss. Ct. App. 2009).
8
In that case, the Lees were married in 1994. Lee, 12 So. 3d at 549. During their marriage,
the wife gave birth to two children. Id. In 2004, the husband “had a home DNA test
performed to determine whether he was [the second child’s] biological father.” Id. The test
showed a zero percent chance that he had fathered the second child. Id. The next year,
however, the Lees swore that both children were born to the marriage in their joint bill for
divorce and the husband agreed to pay child support for both children in the child-custody
and settlement agreement. Id. Two years after the divorce was granted, the husband
petitioned the chancellor “to reverse the determination that he is [the second child’s]
biological father and release him of all parental responsibilities, including child support, as
to [the second child].” Id. The chancellor denied the husband’s request. Id.
¶17. The Court of Appeals unanimously affirmed the decision of the chancellor. Id. at 552.
The court reasoned that the husband “knew a year before the judgment of divorce was
entered that [the second child] was not his child. Despite this knowledge, he voluntarily
agreed to support [the second child] and to exercise parental visitation with her.” Id. at 551
(emphasis added). The Court of Appeals distinguished Lee from Williams, where this Court
allowed a man to discontinue his child-support payments when he determined, after his
divorce, that he was paying support for someone who was not his child. Williams, So. 2d
at 721, 723.
¶18. As in Lee, the evidence shows that Dennis knowingly and voluntarily agreed to pay
child support for J.R.H. even though he knew he was not the child’s father.6 Though Dennis
6
We note that no portion of Dennis’s brief addresses whether he voluntarily assumed
a quasicontractual duty to pay child support or whether he had contractual defense to the
9
claims he wrongfully believed he had a duty to support J.R.H., the Agreement states that
“Husband and Wife each fully understand the terms and conditions of this Agreement and
believe it to be just, fair, adequate, and reasonable . . . .” Under the section titled
“VOLUNTARY EXECUTION,” the Agreement states that “[e]ach party acknowledges that
he or she has read this Agreement in its entirety, understands its terms, consents to its terms,
and enters into this Agreement voluntarily of the uses and purposes therein stated.”
¶19. As mentioned above, these child-custody and property-settlement agreements are
quasicontracts in which both spouses consent to certain terms in order to obtain an
irreconcilable-differences divorce. Thus, we find that a bargained-for exchange occurred
whereby Dennis got something in return for paying child support: a divorce. Even more, this
Court has stated:
In property and financial matters between the divorcing spouses themselves,
there is no question that, absent fraud or overreaching, the parties should be
allowed broad latitude. When the parties have reached agreement and the
chancery court has approved it, we ought enforce it and take as dim a view of
efforts to modify it, as we ordinarily do when persons seek relief from their
improvident contracts..
Bell v. Bell, 572 So. 2d 841, 844 (Miss. 1990) (emphasis added) (citations ommitted).
¶20. Under the facts of this case, we find that Dennis voluntarily agreed to pay child
support for J.R.H. We disagree with the dissent that a chancellor does not have the authority
to accept a settlement agreement that governs child-support payments for a child not of the
marriage. A chancellor’s power to accept such an agreement is granted by Section 159 of
Agreement. Dennis never claimed to the chancellor, nor to this Court, that the Agreement
was signed under duress, obtained by fraud, based on a unilateral or mutual mistake, or
substantively unconscionable.
10
the Constitution. Miss. Const. art. 6, § 159. While a chancellor’s power is codified by
statute, we consistently have held that a chancellor has broad discretion over child-support
agreements. Short v. Short, 131 So. 3d 1149, 1151 (Miss. 2014). Further, a chancellor’s
discretion extends to matters that are not codified. See Logan v. Logan, 730 So. 2d 1124,
1126 (Miss. 1998) (recognizing the doctrine of in loco parentis within the child-custody
context).
¶21. Notwithstanding their contractual nature, child-support and property-settlement
agreements may be modified when there is an after-arising material or substantial change in
the circumstances among the parties. See Shipley v. Ferguson, 638 So. 2d 1295, 1298 (Miss.
1994). Dennis next argues that J.R.H.’s refusal to see or speak to him constitutes clear and
extreme conduct that entitles him to terminate his support obligations. We disagree.
¶22. In Caldwell v. Caldwell, 579 So. 2d 543, 548 (Miss. 1991), this Court stated that
“[t]he amount of money that the noncustodial parent is required to pay for the support of his
minor children should not be determined by the amount of love the children show toward that
parent.” Later in that opinion, however, this Court recognized that a material change in
circumstances could arise from a minor child’s actions toward a noncustodial parent which
would allow the parent to terminate his or her support obligations. Id. “[A] minor child as
young as fifteen years old could forfeit his support from the noncustodial parent through his
actions toward that parent, but those actions must be clear and extreme.” Marshall , 859 So.
2d at 389-90 (citing Caldwell, 579 So. 2d at 548) (emphasis added).
¶23. In Roberts v. Brown, an eighteen-year-old daughter testified “that she did not love
11
[her father], that she did not want to visit or communicate with him, that she had had time
to visit him but chose not to, and that if the court ordered her to visit her father, she would
not do so.” Roberts v. Brown, 805 So. 2d 649, 650 (Miss. Ct. App. 2002). Even more, the
daughter previously had accused her father of rape, a charge of which the father was later
acquitted. Id. at 650-51. The Court of Appeals found that the conduct of the daughter was
clear and extreme conduct that justified the termination of the father’s support obligations.
Id. at 653-54.
¶24. We hold that J.R.H.’s current refusal to see or speak to Dennis is not the type of clear
and extreme conduct envisioned in Caldwell or shown in Roberts, especially in light of the
child’s age and Dennis’s alleged statement. Though it is undisputed that J.R.H. currently is
unwilling to have a relationship with Dennis, Sims testified that Dennis told J.R.H. that he
was happy that the child’s grandmother had died. The chancellor also noted that J.R.H. was
only twelve years old when this case was in the chancery court; therefore, J.R.H. would have
been even younger when this alleged statement was made. If Dennis indeed made these
statements, it would be unjust for him now to take advantage of such fact. At this time, the
record does not indicate that the chancellor manifestly erred in his Caldwell analysis.7
II. Whether the natural parents’ ongoing parental obligations
establish that Dennis should not be required to pay child support.
¶25. Dennis’s next series of arguments concern the ongoing obligations of J.R.H.’s natural
parents, the Hartzells. Dennis argues that, because the Hartzells have current and ongoing
7
Dennis also summarily asks this Court to depart from the Caldwell rule based on the
unique facts of this case. We choose not to create an exception to Caldwell solely based on
these facts.
12
support obligations, requiring him to pay child support amounts to a windfall or double-
dipping with respect to J.R.H.’s child support. He also argues that Sims essentially is
authorized to enforce selectively whichever child-support obligation she chooses to enforce.
He further claims, apparently for the first time, that, at a minimum, he “should have been
granted a reduction in the amount of monthly child support due in the same amount as the
amount of child support due from [J.R.H.’s] parents ($212 per month).”
¶26. These arguments highlight the unique nature of Dennis’s predicament, especially in
light of the Hartzells’ ongoing obligations. We find, however, that these arguments simply
do not address the main issue: whether Dennis voluntarily assumed the personal obligation
to pay child support for J.R.H. We find that the ongoing obligations of the Hartzells do not
alter his personal duty to pay Sims pursuant to the Agreement. These arguments are without
merit.
III. Whether Dennis should be permitted voluntarily to terminate his
custodial obligations.
¶27. Lastly, Dennis claims that he is only a temporary guardian and thereby is authorized
voluntarily to terminate his custodial obligations. He points out that the Hartzells’ parental
rights were never terminated; thus, they could reassert their parental rights at any time. He
also claims it would be against public policy not to allow him to terminate his custodial
obligations.
¶28. Again, we find that these arguments do not address the main issue at hand. If the
Hartzells reasserted their parental rights, then Dennis potentially could show that there has
been an after-arising change in circumstances. Until then, however, we find no merit to these
13
arguments.
CONCLUSION
¶29. For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the decision of the chancellor.
¶30. AFFIRMED.
WALLER, C.J., DICKINSON, P.J., KITCHENS, KING AND BEAM, JJ.,
CONCUR. COLEMAN, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION
JOINED BY RANDOLPH, P.J.; MAXWELL, J., JOINS IN PART.
COLEMAN, JUSTICE, DISSENTING:
¶31. The quasi-contractual nature of property-settlement agreements notwithstanding, child
support awards are legally enforceable not because the parties might agree to them but
because the court orders them. To the extent that the majority holds that the controlling
principles of law empower an award of child support to a child not of the marriage because
the parties agree to such child support in the property-settlement agreement, I cannot join it.
¶32. Property-settlement agreements may well be, as the majority writes, quasi-contractual
in nature, but the authority of a chancery court to award child support does not arise from or
depend upon the bargaining of the parties. “[W]hile it is true that property-settlement
agreements are, in many respects, enforceable contracts, they do not trump a chancellor’s
obligation to decide alimony, property-division, and child-support issues based on
established legal principles.” West v. West, 88 So. 3d 735, 741 (¶ 20) (Miss. 2012)
(emphasis added). When property-settlement agreements concerning alimony and child-
support are enforceable at law, it is not because the parties agreed to them but because the
chancery court confirms and approves them. Id.
14
¶33. Mississippi Code Section 93-5-23 provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
When a divorce shall be decreed from the bonds of matrimony, the court may,
in its discretion, having regard to the circumstances of the parties and the
nature of the case, as may seem equitable and just, make all orders touching
the care, custody and maintenance of the children of the marriage. . . .
The above-quoted section delineates what a chancellor, in an exercise of discretion, may do.
It empowers the chancery court to make orders touching the “maintenance of children of the
marriage,” but it offers no power to the chancery court to use the court’s authority to make
provisions for children not of the marriage. Put differently, the “established legal principles”
discussed by the West Court, upon which child support awards must be based, do not
authorize a child support award to a step-great-grandchild.
¶34. Because it is ultimately the power of a court decree that establishes binding child
support obligations, and not the agreement of the parties, I would hold that the chancery court
in the case sub judice erred by requiring Thomas to continue making the four-hundred-dollar
monthly payments pursuant to its authority to award child support. The quotation of a
footnote from Williams v. Williams, 843 So. 2d 720, 723 (¶ 17) n.1 (Miss. 2003), by the
majority does not persuade me otherwise. In the footnote, which is dicta, the Williams Court
clarified its holding by writing, “Those who have adopted the child or voluntarily and
knowingly assumed the obligation of support will be required to continue doing so.” Id. The
quoted language is clearly dicta, as it is not necessary to the Williams Court’s holding.
Moreover, the footnoted language was inserted with no further analysis of the chancery
court’s power to order child support payments in favor of a child not of the marriage.
¶35. To a significant extent, the majority’s citation of Section 159 of the Mississippi
15
Constitution and Short v. Short, 131 So. 3d 1149 (Miss. 2014), supports my position, set
forth above, that it is the power of the court – as opposed to an agreement between the parties
– that obligates the noncustodial parent to pay child support. Section 159 is jurisdictional,
and without doubt it grants chancery courts jurisdiction in “matters and cases” concerning
divorce, alimony, and minors’ business. I do not suggest otherwise, nor do I suggest that a
chancellor may not accept a settlement agreement that governs child-support payments under
the right conditions. What I do maintain is that, after the question of subject-matter
jurisdiction is settled, there remains the question of what, under our substantive law
elsewhere announced, i.e., statutes, child support is. In Section 93-5-23, the Legislature has
announced that it is something awarded for “the care, custody and maintenance of the
children of the marriage. . . .” Miss. Code Ann. § 93-5-23 (Rev. 2013) (emphasis added).
¶36. In responding to my dissent, the majority takes the position that the Section 159 grant
of jurisdiction also grants substantive power to chancellors to grant child support to children
not of the marriage even though the Legislature has defined child support awards as awards
made for the children of the marriage. In doing so, the majority at least suggests that the
Section 93-5-23 demarcation is unconstitutional. However, the majority cites no other
authority to suggest that the Legislature does not have the power to define child support. The
Legislature is the policy-making body, Little v. Mississippi Department of Transportation,
129 So. 3d 132, 138 (¶ 12) (Miss. 2013), and has determined that child support may be
awarded by chancery courts to children of a marriage. Without holding beyond a reasonable
doubt that the statutory law is unconstitutional, we should follow it and not seek to change
16
it. Stockstill v. State, 854 So. 2d 1017, 1022–23 (¶ 13) (Miss. 2003) (quoting Anderson v.
Lambert, 494 So. 2d 370, 372 (Miss. 1986)). Because it is, indeed, the constitutionally
granted power of the chancery court to award child support and enforce the award that gives
such an award force, and the statutes define child support in a way that does not include the
step-great-grandchild, the chancery court did not have the authority to enforce the four-
hundred-dollar monthly payment obligation as child support.
¶37. Accordingly, I respectfully dissent and would reverse the chancellor’s judgment and
remand for further proceedings.
RANDOLPH, P.J., JOINS THIS OPINION. MAXWELL, J., JOINS THIS
OPINION IN PART.
17