ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
Dan J. May Timothy P. Spahr
Kokomo, Indiana Peru, Indiana
In the
Indiana Supreme Court
_________________________________
No. 34S02-0701-CV-8
KATHY L. WHITED,
Appellant (Respondent below),
v.
KENNETH B. WHITED,
Appellee (Petitioner below).
_________________________________
Appeal from the Howard Superior Court III, No. 34D03-0405-DR-00005
The Honorable Douglas A. Tate, Judge
_________________________________
On Petition To Transfer from the Indiana Court of Appeals, No. 34A02-0507-CV-00626
_________________________________
January 9, 2007
Shepard, Chief Justice.
The parties before us have spent considerable time and money litigating the amount of
child support due from the 1990’s. The trial court gave the obligor/father both too much and not
enough. It wrongly permitted him a retroactive modification of support for a period in which he
should have fully paid an “order in gross” for three children, but it also ordered him to pay
support after two children were emancipated and the third had come to live with him, in what
was a de facto change of custody.
Facts and Procedural History
Kenneth R. Whited and Kathy L. Holland married in September 1973. They had four
children, but the present dispute involves only three: Faith, Benjamin, and Joshua.
Kenneth and Kathy divorced on December 18, 1979. At the time, parents and children
all lived in Howard County, Indiana. The trial court initially awarded custody of the children to
Kathy. In November 1980, however, the court transferred custody to Kenneth. Finally, in
December 1985, upon agreement of the parties, the court transferred custody of the children back
to Kathy and ordered Kenneth to pay $60 per week in child support.
Kathy and the children subsequently moved to Florida. The children visited Kenneth in
Indiana for extended periods of time after the move. Although the child support order directed a
specified sum of undivided support for several children (sometimes called an “order in gross”),
Kenneth proportionally reduced his payments in accordance with the number of children in his
care. Thus, if one child was in Indiana with Kenneth and two children were in Florida with
Kathy, Kenneth paid Kathy two-thirds of the court-ordered child support for that period.
In August 1990, Kathy moved to modify support and calculate an arrearage. During a
deposition taken for this proceeding, Kathy said that despite Kenneth’s improper reduction in
support for the children’s extended stays in Indiana, she did not believe Kenneth owed her “a
support payment for any of the periods of time that the children actually resided with him under
his care and control and under his roof.” (Appellant’s App. at 13 (quoting Kathy Holland Dep. at
103, Sept. 27, 1990).) The trial court agreed, and declared that Kenneth did not owe any child
support arrearage. (Id. at 57 (“1991 Support Order”).) The court also increased Kenneth’s
weekly support obligation to $173. The 1991 Support Order, like all previous orders, did not
provide for any reduction in payments during the children’s stays in Indiana.
2
Kenneth regularly made support payments until November 10, 1993, the date that his
youngest son, Joshua, moved back to Indiana. 1 Consistent with his earlier practice, however,
Kenneth continued to reduce his payments proportionally during the children’s extended stays in
Indiana.
In April 2004, nearly eleven years after Kenneth’s last child support payment, Kathy
moved to determine the arrearage and to enforce Kenneth’s child support obligation, requesting
both prejudgment interest on Kenneth’s arrearage and attorney’s fees. In calculating the
arrearage, the trial court determined March 1, 1991 through March 9, 1995 as the relevant time
frame. 2 The court held that Kenneth “is entitled to credit for the time that any unemancipated
child spent living with him.” (Id. at 16.)
The trial court thus calculated Kenneth’s arrearage for the four years in question by
reference to two periods:
(1) March 1, 1991 – November 10, 1993: 3 Although these dates span 139 weeks, the trial
court found that Kenneth was obligated for only seventy-one weeks. (Id. at 16, 79.) 4
(2) November 10, 1993 – March 9, 1995: 5 The court applied the maximum parenting time
credit (183 days) under the Indiana Child Support Guidelines to lower Kenneth’s
obligation from $173 per week to $93 per week. (Id. at 17.)
The trial court totaled the two obligations and subtracted the amount Kenneth paid in support
during this time frame to determine the arrearage. It denied Kathy prejudgment interest and
attorney’s fees.
1
Kenneth and Kathy agreed that the two older children, Faith and Benjamin, were emancipated prior to November
10, 1993. As a result, Kenneth stopped all child support payments once Joshua, the last unemancipated child,
moved back to Indiana on November 10, 1993. In addition, Joshua turned eighteen on March 9, 1995, and Kenneth
and Kathy agreed that Kenneth’s support obligation could not extend beyond that date.
2
“March 1, 199[1] is the day that the support order was modified to $173.00 per week and March 9, 1995 is the day
the youngest child [Joshua] reached 18 years of age.” (Appellant’s App. at 16.)
3
This period represents the time between the order in gross and the date Kenneth and Kathy’s youngest son, Joshua,
moved back to Indiana. (Appellant’s App. at 14, 16.)
4
The trial court did not explain how it calculated seventy-one weeks, saying only that Kenneth “is entitled to credit
for the time that any unemanciapted child spent living with him.” (Appellant’s App. at 16.)
5
November 10, 1993 is the date that Kenneth and Kathy’s youngest son, Joshua, moved back to Indiana, and March
9, 1995 is the date that Joshua turned eighteen. (Appellant’s App. at 14, 16.)
3
Kathy appealed, arguing that the trial court abused its discretion by: ordering a
retroactive modification; applying a retroactive visitation credit; denying prejudgment interest on
Kenneth’s arrearage; and denying fees. The Court of Appeals affirmed. Whited v. Whited, 844
N.E.2d 546, 547 (Ind. Ct. App. 2006), vacated. It acknowledged the long-standing Indiana rule
prohibiting retroactive modification, but concluded that Kenneth and Kathy entered into an
“implied contract” that amounted to a change of custody and fit within a narrow exception to the
rule against retroactive modification. Id. at 551-53. We granted transfer.
I. Rule Against Retroactive Modification
For at least seventy-five years, Indiana has held that after support obligations have
accrued, a court may not retroactively reduce or eliminate such obligations. See Corbridge v.
Corbridge, 230 Ind. 201, 206, 102 N.E.2d 764, 767 (1952) (“After support installments have
accrued, the court is without power to reduce, annul or vacate such orders retrospectively, and a
petition to modify only operates prospectively.”); Zirkle v. Zirkle, 202 Ind. 129, 135, 172 N.E.2d
192, 194 (1930) (“But after payments had accrued, it was not within the power of the court to
annul any of them in this proceeding.”); Biedron v. Biedron, 128 Ind. App. 299, 148 N.E.2d 209
(1958). Our statutes have explicitly prohibited retroactive modification since at least 1987. 1987
Ind. Acts 1297-99 (current version at Ind. Code Ann. § 31-16-16-6 (West 2006)). We reaffirmed
this bright-line rule in Nill v. Martin, 686 N.E.2d 116, 117 (Ind. 1997), holding that a parent
subject to a support order must make payments in accordance with that order until the court
modifies and/or sets aside the order. As a result, informal agreements between parents are
generally not effective until a motion for modification is filed. Id. at 118.
Moreover, when a court enters an order in gross, that obligation similarly continues until
the order is modified and/or set aside, or all the children are emancipated, or all of the children
reach the age of twenty-one. See, e.g., Ogle v. Ogle, 769 N.E.2d 644 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002);
Schrock v. Gonser (In re Marriage of Schrock), 658 N.E.2d 615 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996). We have
prohibited retroactive modification even where one of the several children subject to the order in
gross died. See Kaplon v. Harris (In re Marriage of Kaplon), 567 N.E.2d 1130, 1132-33 (Ind.
4
1991) (“[C]ourt wrongly effected a retroactive modification by crediting [father] with one-third
of every support payment due after the date of [son’s] death . . . .”); Nill, 686 N.E.2d at 118 (no
retroactive modification even where one of the children subject to order in gross died and parents
informally agreed to reduce support).
In re-affirming these long-standing principles ten years ago, we recognized that they may
occasionally cause inequities, but observed that the benefits outweighed any potential inequities.
If parties could effect legal modifications of child support through informal
means, disputes over amounts and methods and effective dates would certainly
multiply. Disagreements over such issues have led to expensive litigation . . . . A
bright-line rule limiting informal arrangements and effecting modifications only
after the date a petition for modification is filed short-circuits many disputes. The
time and money spent litigating informal agreements that later go awry could be
well spent for the support of children. Compared to the cost of litigation such as
that before us now, submitting for court approval an agreed order modifying is
among the simplest of legal tasks.
Nill, 686 N.E.2d at 118-19. Consistent with the public policy of protecting the welfare of
children, this rule requires judicial action to reduce a support order.
In keeping with [the public policy of protecting children], Indiana courts have
from time to time voided agreements reached by parents. Agreements which
yield up a support opportunity for a child have been especially suspect. We have
treated custodial parents who receive child support as trustees of the payments for
the use and the benefit of the child. Neither parent has the right to contract away
these support benefits. The right to the support lies exclusively with the child.
Straub v. B.M.T., 645 N.E.2d 597, 599 (Ind. 1994) (citations omitted).
Thus, subject to two narrow exceptions, court orders for child support remain effective
until a court changes them. This rule protects the welfare of children, provides predictability
and certainty, and prevents extended and expensive litigation about alleged informal agreements
between parents.
5
II. Exceptions to the Rule Against Retroactive Modification
Retroactive modification is permitted when: (1) the parties have agreed to and carried out
an alternative method of payment which substantially complies with the spirit of the decree, or
(2) the obligated parent takes the child into his or her home, assumes custody, provides
necessities, and exercises parental control for such a period of time that a permanent change of
custody is exercised. 6
A. Alternative Method of Payment that Substantially Complies with Spirit of Decree.
The standard for alternative arrangements that “substantially comply” with the spirit of the
original decree is rigorous. Credit for non-conforming payments is recognized when parents
informally agree to change the form of payment (e.g., payment directly to the parent as opposed
to through the clerk’s office), so long as the amount of payment can be verified and there is no
reduction of amount. Compare Payson v. Payson, 442 N.E.2d 1123, 1129 (Ind. Ct. App. 1982)
(payments made directly to mother and to third parties for rent instead of through clerk of court
substantially complied with spirit of decree), with Decker v. Decker, 829 N.E.2d 77, 80 (Ind. Ct.
App. 2005) (child care did not substantially comply with decree requiring father to pay weekly
installments to clerk).
B. Permanent Change of Custody. A second exception exists where the obligated parent,
by agreement with the custodial parent, takes the child or children into his or her home, assumes
custody, provides the child with necessities, and exercises control over the child’s activities for
such an extended period that a permanent change of custody has occurred. See Nill, 686 N.E.2d
at 118; O’Neil v. O’Neil, 535 N.E.2d 523, 524 (Ind. 1989) (citing Isler v. Isler, 425 N.E.2d 667,
669-70 (Ind. Ct. App. 1981) (exception excludes “nonconforming payments” made during
summer vacations and other durations that do not constitute a permanent change of custody)).
6
We originally recognized a third exception in O’Neil v. O’Neil, 535 N.E.2d 523 (Ind. 1989), when support
payments have been made by the obligated party even though the payments are technically non-conforming. We
subsequently determined, however, that this exception is the same as exception (1) stated above. See Nill, 686
N.E.2d at 118.
6
The Court of Appeals applied this exception in deciding In re Marriage of Jackson, where
the father was subject to an order in gross, but both of the parties’ children permanently moved
into their father’s home nearly eight years earlier. 682 N.E.2d 549, 552 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997).
The court held:
[B]y [mother’s] prolonged acquiescence, and by her own failure to support her
children, [mother] has consented to the current custodial arrangement in which
[father] has assumed almost total responsibility for them. She cannot now
complain that she never actually agreed to give [father] primary physical custody
of the children in lieu of child support payments.
Id. The court concluded that this case fell squarely within an exception to the general rule
prohibiting retroactive modification, noting that any accumulated arrearage could not “be used to
reimburse [mother] for support she never provided.” Id.
Where a parent is subject to an order in gross, however, this exception can be applied
only where all children subject to the order permanently change custody. See, e.g., Isler, 425
N.E.2d at 669-70 (where one or more children remain in the original custodian’s care, “[a]ny
order reducing the support must follow the court’s thorough consideration of whether the support
order is excessive for the remaining children.”). Thus, the court may deny a “pro rata reduction”
to fully support the remaining children and ease the original custodian’s burden.
III. Calculation of Kenneth’s Arrearage
A. 1991-1993
The trial court wrongly applied a retroactive modification to reduce Kenneth’s support
obligation. Although the March 1991 through November 1993 timeframe spans approximately
139 weeks, the trial court obligated Kenneth for only seventy-one weeks.
As one might well imagine, when the trial court heard testimony from Kenneth, Kathy,
and the children about the children’s living arrangements from 1991 through 1993, everyone’s
memories were dimmed by the passage of more than twelve years. (Appellant’s App. at 13, 14.)
7
It is clear, however, that each of the children visited Kenneth for extended periods of time, but at
least one child remained in Kathy’s care at all times during the 1991 through 1993 timeframe.
Although Kenneth proportionally reduced his support payments, he continued to make payments
for at least one child through November 10, 1993, suggesting that at least one child remained in
Kathy’s care. 7
The trial court held that Kenneth should be given credit for any time that any
unemancipated child spent living with him. As a result, the court faced the nearly impossible
task of determining, in 2005, each child’s living arrangements between 1991 and 1993. The
court’s reduction from 139 weeks to 71 weeks, though unexplained, apparently represented an
attempt to credit Kenneth for the time that any child spent in his care. The uncertainty and
unpredictability of such judicial determinations, however, are among the reasons for prohibiting
retroactive modification. See Nill, 686 N.E.2d at 118-19.
The Court of Appeals affirmed this calculation, saying that an implied contract existed
between Kenneth and Kathy. Whited, 844 N.E.2d at 551-53. Case law to the contrary is legion.
See, e.g., Connell v. Welty, 725 N.E.2d 502, 505 (Ind. Ct. App. 2000) (“A parent desiring a
reduction of the undivided support order as the children become emancipated must petition the
court to modify its original order.”); Schrock, 658 N.E.2d at 616 (“When a parent is ordered to
pay a specified sum of undivided support for more than one child, the parent must pay that
amount until the support payments are modified by court order or all of the children are
emancipated or reach the age of 21 years.”); Jackson, 682 N.E.2d at 552 (applying change of
custody exception where all children permanently changed custody).
It is clear from Kenneth’s payment history that at all times between 1991 and 1993 at
least one child dependent on Kenneth’s support remained in Kathy’s care. Accordingly,
Kenneth was not permitted to reduce his payments under the order in gross.
7
Kenneth’s support records illustrate this fact since Kenneth continued to proportionally reduce his payments in
accordance with the number of children in his care. (Appellant’s App. at 53-56.)
8
B. 1993-1995
The trial court applied a second retroactive modification, in the form of a maximum
parenting time credit, to the November 10, 1993 through March 9, 1995 timeframe, and the
Court of Appeals affirmed. The courts held that the parenting time credit reduced Kenneth’s
support obligation from $173 per week to $93 per week.
The parenting time credit in the Child Support Guidelines is available for purposes of
calculating what support order a court should set. Ind. Child Support Guideline 3(G), 6. It is not
an exception to the non-conforming payments rule.
Still, we conclude that Kenneth had no child support obligation during the 1993 through
1995 timeframe. Kenneth made his last child support payment on November 10, 1993, the day
that his youngest son, Joshua, permanently moved back to Indiana. By this time, Kenneth and
Kathy agreed that the two older children, Faith and Benjamin, were emancipated and neither
remained in Kathy’s care. (Appellant’s Br. at 26.) Even though Kenneth was subject to an order
in gross, once Joshua moved back to Indiana on November 10, 1993, no child remained in
Kathy’s care. Therefore, the change of custody exception terminated Kenneth’s support
obligation in its entirety. Nill, 686 N.E.2d at 118.
C. Kenneth’s Arrearage
Thus, Kenneth owed all amounts directed by the 1991 order in gross until November 10,
1993, and nothing thereafter.
9
IV. Prejudgment Interest
The statute authorizing prejudgment interest on delinquent child support payments
affords courts discretionary power. 8 We review decisions regarding award of prejudgment
interest under an abuse of discretion standard.
The Court of Appeals concluded that the trial court’s denial of Kathy’s request for
prejudgment interest rested on two grounds: (1) Kathy waited nearly eleven years after
Kenneth’s last support payment to attempt to enforce the 1991 Support Order; and (2) the
calculation for the arrearage owed was uncertain at best. See Whited, 844 N.E.2d at 554.
First, although Kathy’s delay in raising the issue of child support arrearage does not bar
her claim, the court may properly consider the delay when making the discretionary decision
whether to award prejudgment interest. Id. In fact, Ind. Code § 34-51-4-8(b) provides that
“[t]he court shall exclude from the period in which prejudgment interest accrues any period of
delay that the court determines is caused by the party petitioning for prejudgment interest.” The
trial court certainly could deny prejudgment interest based on Kathy’s acquiescence in Kenneth’s
proportional reductions and her delay in seeking enforcement.
Second, prejudgment interest should be awarded only where damages are readily
ascertainable and can be calculated by simple mathematical computation. Bopp v. Brames, 713
N.E.2d 866, 872 (Ind. Ct. App. 1999). The procedural history alone of this case demonstrates
how complex the arrearage calculation was.
Finally, “[d]amages that are the subject of a good faith dispute cannot allow for an award
of prejudgment interest.” Id. There is no question that Kenneth’s arrearage was accumulated in
good faith. All of these factors support the trial court’s denial of prejudgment interest, and we
affirm.
8
See Ind. Code Ann. § 31-16-12-2 (West 2006) (“The court may . . . order interest . . . .”) (emphasis added).
10
V. Attorney’s Fees
Indiana Code § 31-16-11-1, the statute regarding attorney’s fees, is also discretionary. 9
The Court of Appeals held:
A determination regarding attorney fees in proceedings to modify a child support
award is within the sound discretion of the trial court and will be reversed only
upon a showing of a clear abuse of that discretion. In determining whether to
award attorney fees, the trial court must consider the parties’ resources, their
economic condition, their ability to engage in gainful employment, and other
factors that bear on the award’s reasonableness. The trial court, however, need
not cite the reasons for its determination.
Whited, 844 N.E.2d at 554 (citations omitted). Like the Court of Appeals, we think the trial
court was in the best position to make this determination and consider the above factors. We
affirm the denial of attorney’s fees.
VI. Conclusion
We vacate the trial court’s calculation of the arrearage, and direct it to set the arrearage
by calculating the full amount of the 1991 order in gross up until November 10, 1993, and
nothing thereafter. We affirm the denial of prejudgment interest and attorney’s fees.
Dickson, Sullivan, and Rucker, JJ., concur.
Boehm, J., dissents with separate opinion.
9
See Ind. Code Ann. § 31-16-11-1 (West 2006) (“The court periodically may order a party to pay a reasonable
amount for . . . attorney’s fees . . . .”) (emphasis added).
11
Boehm, J., dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. The husband and wife in this case worked out an adjustment to
their changed family circumstances that was acceptable to both for over twenty years. The wife
first asked the court to assess arrearages in this case eleven years after the last support payment
had been made. More importantly, her request came eleven years after the last child left the nest,
so this dispute has nothing to do with the level of funding available for the children. Only the
financial interests of the husband and the wife are affected by the result. Arrangements the
parties have worked out between themselves should be honored where their interests, and theirs
alone, are at stake. Under these circumstances, I would find that the wife is estopped from
seeking court relief to readjust a financial arrangement that both parties had lived with, and come
to rely upon, for more than a decade.
The majority today extends Nill v. Martin, 686 N.E.2d 116 (Ind. 1998), to apply even
where no challenge to the agreed arrangement is raised until long after the last child has been
emancipated. As I observed in dissent in Nill, I believe the rule the majority invokes requires
unneeded resort to the courts. To the extent possible, rules of law should conform to the
expectations of ordinary citizens. Most people would expect this agreed arrangement to be
acceptable and consider consulting a lawyer unnecessary. And, as Nill itself demonstrated, even
if lawyers are involved they may not avoid the trap of assuming an agreed resolution is
acceptable and enforceable. Where the interests of the children are concerned, they trump any
regard for honoring private arrangements between the parents. But here the only interest is the
relative balance sheets of the two former spouses. Imposing a “bright line” rule that any agreed
adjustment in support without court approval can be overturned years later seems fundamentally
unfair and unnecessary to accomplish the legitimate goal of concern for the children.