Blair v. Blair

Decision Date01 June 1983
PartiesJames Mitchell BLAIR v. Faye T. BLAIR (Brewington). Civ. 3601.
CourtAlabama Court of Civil Appeals

Bingham D. Edwards, Decatur, for appellant.

Stephen V. Hammond of Chenault, Chenault & Hammond, Decatur, for appellee.

HOLMES, Judge.

This is a child support modification case.

The trial court of Morgan County required the father of a permanently disabled child to support the child past the age of majority. Additionally, the trial court increased support payments.

The father appeals and this court has no alternative but to reverse.

The primary issue before this court is whether the trial court's actions requiring a non-custodial father to support his permanently disabled child is error. The father also contends the trial court erred in increasing support.

The facts pertinently are:

The parties were divorced in 1967. At that time there were four minor children including the disabled child who is the youngest. The original decree required the father to pay $12 per child per month for support. Child support was to continue for the children until they reached the age of eighteen or became self-supporting.

In 1970, the decree was modified to require the father to pay $50 per month for the disabled child's support as well as all medical expenses.

In July, 1982, the mother filed a petition for modification seeking an increase in child support. The trial court found that the disabled child was permanently disabled and would continue to be dependent upon his parents. At the time of the hearing, the child was seventeen years old. He suffers from spinal epifida causing him to be paralyzed from the waist down and confined to a wheelchair. He currently lives with his mother who has custody by virtue of the divorce decree.

Both parents have remarried and their spouses both work. The father's income has increased substantially--from $4.39 to $10.05 per hour--since the 1970 modification.

The trial court ordered the father to pay $150 per month for six months beginning September, 1982, thereafter increasing to $300 per month for support for the disabled child. In addition, the father is required to pay all medical expenses and maintain a life insurance policy with the disabled child as beneficiary. The trial court ordered that the support payments continue "as long as the child is dependent upon the parties for his support." In denying the father's motion for new trial, the trial court stated that the "support of a dependent child is the obligation of parents as a matter of public policy."

The law in Alabama as it relates to the issue before this court is as follows:

In Reynolds v. Reynolds, 274 Ala. 477, 149 So.2d 770 (1963), the supreme court had presented to it the very issue now before this court; that is, the question of the trial court's authority in a supplemental proceeding to a divorce action to order a non-custodial parent to support his incapacitated child after the child has reached majority.

The supreme court in Reynolds held that the trial court was without jurisdiction to order a parent to support an adult child since the divorce statutes awarding child support apply only to minor children. The court stated the general rule as it exists in Alabama as being that a parent is not liable to support an adult child unless the child was living with the parent and was incompetent when he reached majority.

Alabama Code § 12-3-16 (1975) requires this court to follow the decisions of the supreme court. We have no alternative but to reverse because Reynolds, supra, requires it.

This court would be remiss in not commenting that were we free to do so, w...

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1 cases
  • Ex parte Brewington
    • United States
    • Alabama Supreme Court
    • 16 Diciembre 1983
    ...the age of majority, and further, increased the amount of support payments the father was already making. The Court of Civil Appeals, 445 So.2d 292, reversed the order of the trial court because it felt compelled to follow the decision of this Court in Reynolds v. Reynolds, 274 Ala. 477, 14......

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