Michigan Supreme Court
Lansing, Michigan
Chief Justice: Justices:
Opinion Marilyn Kelly Michael F. Cavanagh
Maura D. Corrigan
Robert P. Young, Jr.
Stephen J. Markman
Diane M. Hathaway
Alton Thomas Davis
FILED DECEMBER 20, 2010
STATE OF MICHIGAN
SUPREME COURT
In re BECK, Minors.
____________________________________
DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES,
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v No. 140842
LAWRENCE MICHAEL BECK,
Respondent-Appellant.
BEFORE THE ENTIRE BENCH (except DAVIS, J.)
YOUNG, J.
The respondent-father in this case had his parental rights terminated pursuant to
MCL 712A.19b(3)(c)(i), (g), and (j). The sole issue respondent advanced on appeal is the
propriety of the trial court’s order requiring respondent to continue paying child support
after the termination of his parental rights. Respondent argues that his obligation to pay
child support ended as a matter of law when his parental rights were terminated and that
any continued child support obligation violated his constitutional right to due process of
law. The Court of Appeals rejected respondent’s argument.
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals, but do so on the basis of an
alternative analysis from that advanced by the Court of Appeals. The Legislature
specifically defined parental rights and parental obligations, and it chose to address those
concepts in two discrete statutory provisions. Thus, the statutory structure indicates the
Legislature’s determination that parental rights are distinct from parental obligations, and
nothing in the statutory structure indicates that the loss of parental rights automatically
results in the loss of parental obligations. Rather, a parental obligation continues “unless
a court of competent jurisdiction modifies or terminates the obligation . . . .”1 Because
the trial court declined to modify or terminate respondent’s obligation to pay child
support, respondent’s obligation remains intact.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Respondent’s two children, AB and LB, were made temporary wards of the court
in 2007 because of chronic drug abuse by both parents. Subsequently, respondent and his
wife divorced, and both were ordered to pay child support while the children were in the
care of their grandmother. The children were returned to their mother’s care in January
2008 after she complied with the parent-agency agreement.
When respondent made no progress toward reunification with his children, the
Department of Human Services filed a supplemental petition seeking termination of his
1
MCL 722.3(1).
2
parental rights. In May 2009 the trial court terminated respondent’s parental rights, and
further ordered that respondent’s child support obligation continue pursuant to the
divorce judgment.
On appeal in the Court of Appeals, respondent did not challenge the termination of
his parental rights; rather, respondent only challenged his continuing obligation to pay
child support. Respondent claimed that the trial court’s order requiring him to pay child
support after his parental rights were terminated violated his constitutional right to due
process of law.
In a published opinion, the Court of Appeals rejected respondent’s claim and
affirmed the trial court’s order.2 The panel rejected respondent’s constitutional claim
because, “apart from simply asserting” a due process violation, respondent did not
“explain how the trial court’s decision resulted in a denial of due process . . . .”3 Rather,
the Court of Appeals treated the issue as “a straightforward question of law . . . .”4
The Court of Appeals reasoned that had the Legislature intended that the
termination of parental rights also terminate parental obligations, it could have easily said
so.5 The panel also held that child support and parental rights are not interdependent,
noting that parents should not be denied parenting time simply because they are unable to
2
In re Beck, 287 Mich App 400; 788 NW2d 697 (2010).
3
Id. at 402.
4
Id.
5
Id. at 402-403.
3
pay child support.6 The Court of Appeals also stated that children possess “the inherent
and fundamental right to receive support” and that this fundamental right exists
independently from whether a parent retains parental rights.7 The panel further noted
several public policy considerations compelling the conclusion that the termination of
parental rights does not automatically extinguish a child support obligation.8
Respondent appealed in this Court. We granted leave to appeal, asking the parties
to address whether a parent whose rights have been involuntarily terminated “can
nevertheless be ordered to pay child support for those children.”9
STANDARD OF REVIEW
Whether a parent may be compelled to pay child support after his parental rights
have been terminated presents a question of law that this Court reviews de novo.10
6
Id. at 403.
7
Id.
8
The panel relied on the following considerations: First, the goal of a termination of
parental rights proceeding is to protect the child. Eliminating the benefit of child support
would not serve to protect the child from harm originating from the parent, but would
only serve to deny the child benefits based on the child’s needs and the parent’s ability to
pay. Second, if a parent’s child support obligation is extinguished, the burden of
financial assistance falls on the other parent, often with the assistance of the state. Third,
a parent may forgo reporting abusive or neglectful behavior of a coparent in order to
preserve a child’s right to receive support, which would be detrimental to the child’s
welfare. In addition, if the termination of parental rights automatically extinguished a
child support obligation, an irresponsible parent could abuse or neglect his child in order
to escape liability for child support. Id. at 404-405.
9
486 Mich 936 (2010).
10
Foster v Wolkowitz, 486 Mich 356, 362; 785 NW2d 59 (2010); State News v Mich
State Univ, 481 Mich 692, 699; 753 NW2d 20 (2008).
4
ANALYSIS
MCL 712A.19b pertains to the termination of parental rights. The respondent in
this case had his parental rights terminated pursuant to MCL 712A.19b(3)(c)(i), (g), and
(j). MCL 712A.19b(5) provides: “If the court finds that there are grounds for termination
of parental rights and that termination of parental rights is in the child's best interests, the
court shall order termination of parental rights and order that additional efforts for
reunification of the child with the parent not be made.” Nothing in the statutory scheme
defines the scope of “termination of parental rights.”
We next turn to the meaning of “parental rights.” As a constitutional matter,
parental rights encompass parents’ fundamental liberty interest in “the care, custody, and
control of their children.”11 Respondent makes no claim that the termination of his
parental rights violated his liberty interests; rather, he claims that his “right to due
process” was violated by the trial court’s order requiring him to continue to pay child
support after his parental rights were terminated. However, respondent cites no authority,
and we have discovered none, holding that a parent has either a state or federal
constitutional entitlement to have his child support obligation suspended when his
parental rights have been terminated. Therefore, we find no merit in his constitutional
claim.12
11
Troxel v Granville, 530 US 57, 65; 120 S Ct 2054; 147 L Ed 2d 49 (2000).
12
In so holding, we do not purport to decide the outcomes of future cases involving due
process challenges in this context.
5
As a statutory matter, the scope of parental rights can be found in 1968 PA 293,
MCL 722.1 through 722.6. This act pertains to the “status and emancipation of minors”
and “rights of parents.” The title of 1968 PA 293 indicates that the purpose of the act is,
among other purposes, “to define the rights and duties of parents.”
The term “parents” is defined in the act as the “natural parents, if married prior or
subsequent to the minor’s birth; adopting parents, if the minor has been legally adopted,
or the mother, if the minor is illegitimate.”13
MCL 722.2 delineates the rights of parents with respect to their unemancipated
children. The statute provides:
Unless otherwise ordered by a court order, the parents of an
unemancipated minor are equally entitled to the custody, control, services
and earnings of the minor, but if 1 parent provides, to the exclusion of the
other parent, for the maintenance and support of the minor, that parent has
the paramount right to control the services and earnings of the minor. [14]
Thus, MCL 722.2 defines the scope of parental rights as encompassing the “custody,
control, services and earnings of the minor . . . .” Under the plain language of the statute,
parental rights do not include or contemplate parental obligations.
13
MCL 722.1. Because the three types of parents described in MCL 722.1 are all legal
parents, without regard to whether they share a biological connection with the minor at
issue, the statutory definition describes a legal rather than biological relationship.
Michigan law has long recognized the principle that a child born during a marriage is
presumed to be the issue of that marriage. In re KH, 469 Mich 621, 634-635; 677 NW2d
800 (2004); People v Case, 171 Mich 282, 284; 137 NW 55 (1912); Egbert v Greenwalt,
44 Mich 245, 249-250; 6 NW 654 (1880).
14
MCL 722.2 (emphasis added).
6
Rather, it is the very next statutory provision that identifies the parental
obligations imposed by the Legislature. The sole parental obligation identified in MCL
722.3 is the duty to provide a child with support:
(1) The parents are jointly and severally obligated to support a
minor as prescribed in section 5 of the support and parenting time
enforcement act, 1982 PA 295, MCL 552.605, unless a court of competent
jurisdiction modifies or terminates the obligation or the minor is
emancipated by operation of law, except as otherwise ordered by a court of
competent jurisdiction. Subject to section 5b of the support and parenting
time enforcement act, 1982 PA 295, MCL 552.605b, a court of competent
jurisdiction may order support as provided in this section for a child after
he or she reaches 18 years of age.
(2) The duty of support may be enforced by the minor or the child
who has reached 18 years of age, his or her guardian, any relative within
the third degree, an authorized government agency, or if the minor or the
child who has reached 18 years of age is being supported in whole or in
part by public assistance under the social welfare act, 1939 PA 280, MCL
400.1 to 400.119b, by the director of the family independence agency or his
or her designated representative, or by the director of the county family
independence agency or his or her designated representative of the county
where an action under this act is brought. An action for enforcement shall
be brought in the circuit court in the county where the minor or the child
who has reached 18 years of age resides. If a designated official of either
the state or a county family independence agency brings an action under
this act on behalf of the minor or the child who has reached 18 years of age,
then the prosecuting attorney or an attorney employed by the county under
section 1 of 1941 PA 15, MCL 49.71, shall represent the official in
initiating and conducting the proceedings under this act. The prosecuting
attorney shall utilize the child support formula developed under section 19
of the friend of the court act, 1982 PA 294, MCL 552.519, as a guideline in
petitioning for child support.
(3) A judgment entered under this section providing for support is
governed by and is enforceable as provided in the support and parenting
time enforcement act, 1982 PA 295, MCL 552.601 to 552.650. If this act
contains a specific provision regarding the contents or enforcement of a
support order that conflicts with a provision in the support and parenting
7
time enforcement act, 1982 PA 295, MCL 552.601 to 552.650, this act
controls in regard to that provision.[15]
The plain language of this provision imposes a “duty of support” on both parents, jointly
and severally, which exists “unless a court of competent jurisdiction modifies or
terminates the obligation.” The parental obligation to support minor children may be
enforced where neither parent has custody of the child,16 and may be enforced even if the
state has custody of the child.17 Lastly, MCL 722.3 provides an independent basis for the
entry of a child support order,18 although any child support order entered must comport
with the child support guidelines.19
Because the parental rights identified in MCL 722.2 are distinct and detached from
the parental duty identified in MCL 722.3, it is clear that the Legislature has determined
15
MCL 722.3 (emphasis added).
16
The duty of support may be enforced by the child or “his or her guardian, any relative
within the third degree, [or] an authorized government agency . . . .” MCL 722.3(2).
17
If the child “is being supported in whole or in part by public assistance under the social
welfare act,” the duty of support can be enforced by the Family Independence Agency,
which is now the Department of Human Services. MCL 722.3(2). Foster care is
included in the Social Welfare Act. See MCL 400.18c through 400.18e.
18
See MCL 722.3(3) (stating that “[a] judgment entered under this section providing for
support is governed by and is enforceable as provided in the support and parenting time
enforcement act,” and “[i]f this act contains a specific provision regarding the contents or
enforcement of a support order that conflicts with a provision in the support and
parenting time enforcement act, . . . this act controls in regard to that provision”)
(emphasis added).
19
MCL 722.3(1) states that parents are obligated to support a minor “as prescribed in
section 5 of the support and parenting time enforcement act,” MCL 552.605, which
requires that a child support order be determined “by application of the child support
formula” unless a basis for deviating from the child support formula exists.
8
that parental rights are independent from parental duties. Nothing in either MCL 722.2 or
MCL 722.3 evinces any legislative intent that either statutory provision is connected to or
conditioned on the other. There is no indication that the duty of support is conditioned on
the retention of parental rights, just as there is no indication that the exercise of parental
rights is conditioned on fulfilling the parental obligation to support.
The plain language of the termination statute, MCL 712A.19b, only implicates
“parental rights.” Thus, when parental rights are terminated, what is lost are those
interests identified by the Legislature as parental rights. In other words, the terminated
parent loses any entitlement to the “custody, control, services and earnings of the
minor . . . .”20 Because nothing in the language of MCL 712A.19b affects the duty of
support articulated in MCL 722.3, the obligation remains intact.
Thus, even after a parent’s rights have been terminated, the obligation to support
continues “unless a court of competent jurisdiction modifies or terminates the
obligation . . . .”21 This provision of MCL 722.3 indicates that a court has the discretion
to terminate or modify a parent’s obligation to provide support, but is not compelled to do
so.22 In this case, the trial court expressly declined to modify or terminate respondent’s
20
MCL 722.2.
21
MCL 722.3(1).
22
The parental duty to support would abate if the “minor is emancipated by operation of
law . . . .” MCL 722.3(1); see also MCL 722.4(2). In contrast, when a minor is
emancipated by court order, the parental duty to support continues. MCL 722.4e(2).
Additionally, the parental duty to support would cease by operation of law when a child
is legally adopted. See MCL 710.60(1) (stating that adoptive parents “become the parent
9
child support obligation, and respondent has made no showing that the trial court’s
decision was an abuse of discretion.23 Accordingly, respondent remains responsible for
supporting his minor children.
CONCLUSION
Because the Legislature has made a clear distinction between parental rights and
the parental obligation to support a minor child, and nothing in the statutory structure
indicates that the termination of parental rights automatically results in the severance of
the parental support duty, we hold that the support duty continues unless the duty is
or parents of the adoptee under the law as though the adopted person had been born to the
adopting parents and are liable for all the duties and entitled to all the rights of parents”);
see also MCL 722.1. Thus, under the plain language of the Adoption Code, a former
parent’s duty of support is terminated when a child is legally adopted because the
adoptive parents are liable for all of the duties of parents. Cf. In re Toth, 227 Mich App
548, 553; 577 NW2d 111 (1998) (recognizing that “[t]he Michigan adoption scheme
expresses a policy of severing, at law, the prior, natural family relationship and creating a
new and complete substitute relationship after adoption”). In the context of a
pretermination guardianship, where a court may place a child with a permanent guardian
in lieu of terminating the parent’s rights, MCL 712A.19a(6) and (7)(c), no statutory
language suggests that the duty of support would cease. See MCL 712A.19a; see also
MCL 712A.19a(8) and MCL 700.5215 (stating that a guardian’s rights and duties do not
include an obligation to provide for the child with the guardian’s own money). Similarly,
no statutory language suggests that the duty of support would cease in the event of a
posttermination guardianship. See MCL 712A.19c.
23
In holding that the parental obligation to support may continue after parental rights
have been terminated, we wish to reiterate that the terminated parent retains absolutely no
rights with respect to the children and no right to interpose himself in the lives of his
children. See, e.g., Hunter v Hunter, 484 Mich 247, 269; 771 NW2d 694 (2009) (stating
that the termination of a parent’s parental rights permanently severs the “parent’s right to
be a parent and make decisions regarding his or her child’s upbringing”). In the absence
of statutory authority, the terminated parent may not claim any right to see or contact the
children attendant to the payment of child support.
10
modified or terminated by a court of competent jurisdiction. Given that the trial court
declined to modify or terminate respondent’s obligation, and respondent has made no
showing that this decision was an abuse of discretion, respondent’s obligation remains
intact.
Robert P. Young, Jr.
Marilyn Kelly
Michael F. Cavanagh
Maura D. Corrigan
Stephen J. Markman
Diane M. Hathaway
DAVIS, J., not participating. I recuse myself and am not participating because I
was on the Court of Appeals panel in this case. See MCR 2.003(B).
11