Opinion
Docket No. 87676.
Decided October 7, 1986.
Kenneth McAlpine and Marguerite F. Walker II, for plaintiff.
Currie, Stieper, Haddrill Seyferth, P.C. (by Nelson B. Stieper), for defendant.
Defendant appeals as of right from an order denying child support. We reverse.
Plaintiff and defendant were divorced in 1976 and defendant-father was given custody of the couple's two daughters, ages three and four. The property settlement awarded plaintiff-mother a twenty percent interest in the marital home and provided that she would not be responsible for the support of the children. At the time of the divorce, plaintiff earned $94 a week and defendant earned $255 a week.
In 1980, defendant petitioned the court to modify the divorce judgment to require plaintiff to pay child support. By this time plaintiff was earning a net weekly salary of $204. The friend of the court recommended that plaintiff pay $30 a week per child in support. The trial judge, however, denied defendant's petition holding: "The property settlement is the agreement between the two parties and provided that she shall not pay support and maintenance. He signed it and they both agreed to it. I won't change it." Defendant did not appeal the decision.
In 1984, defendant again petitioned the court for a modification of the divorce judgment to provide for child support. The friend of the court then recommended that plaintiff pay $58 per week, per child, as her salary had increased to an average net weekly earnings of $716. The original trial judge had died, but the successor trial judge held that, although there had been a change in circumstances, the parties were bound by the earlier ruling, and that defendant's only remedy was to appeal the 1980 decision.
We disagree. Parents of a minor child may not agree to deprive a court of the power to set or modify child support. West v West, 241 Mich. 679, 683-684; 217 N.W.2d 924 (1928); Cochran v Buffone, 137 Mich. App. 761; 359 N.W.2d 557 (1984); Sayre v Sayre, 129 Mich. App. 249; 341 N.W.2d 491 (1983). Thus, even if the parties had agreed that the wife would receive only twenty percent of the marital home's sale proceeds in exchange for her release from all future support obligations, the agreement would not be enforceable. The parties could not deprive the trial court of the power to set or modify child support. Furthermore, the divorce judgment does not state that the plaintiff was forever released from paying child support. Regardless of what the parties agreed to originally, the court had authority to modify the divorce judgment to provide for child support when defendant so petitioned in 1980 and again in 1984. A trial court has continuing jurisdiction to modify a divorce judgment to provide for or alter child support upon a change in circumstances justifying modification. MCL 552.17; MSA 25.97 and MCL 722.27(c); MSA 25.312(7)(c). Thus, the trial court erred in 1980 by refusing to review the parties' changed circumstances, and the trial court erred in 1984 by ruling that the parties were bound by the prior decision denying modification.
Although the trial court found that there was a change in circumstances, no finding was made as to the amount of child support. Thus, the trial court's order is reversed and this case is remanded for a determination of child support. We do not retain jurisdiction.