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(C) 2005 Thomson/West.
No claim to original U.S. Govt.
works.
780 N.E.2d 1266, 438 Mass. 428,
Eccleston v. Bankosky, (Mass. 2003)
*1266 780 N.E.2d 1266
438 Mass. 428
Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts,
Barnstable.
Kathleen A. ECCLESTON
v.
Paul E. BANKOSKY.
Argued Sept. 6, 2002.
Decided Jan. 13, 2003.
Child's appointed guardian
filed counterclaim for modification
of child support provisions of judgment
of divorce nisi with
respect to child's parents, extending
former husband's support obligation
past child's eighteenth birthday.
Former husband filed
motion to dismiss and counterclaim
for termination of support obligation.
The Probate and Family Court Department,
Barnstable
County, Robert E. Terry, J., granted
relief requested in guardian's complaint
and denied former husband's motions.
Former husband
appealed, seeking direct appellate
review by the Supreme Judicial Court.
The Supreme Judicial Court, Marshall,
C.J., granted
review and held that: (1) trial
court improperly relied on divorce
modification statute in ordering
former husband to pay
postminority support; (2) postminority
child support could not be based
upon statute governing support awards
to guardians; (3)
statutory end date of guardian's
guardianship was not tolled by guardian's
commencement of instant action;
and (4) trial court had
authority to order postminority
support pursuant to its general
equity jurisdiction.
Vacated and remanded.
Cowin, J., dissented with
opinion.
West Headnotes
[1] Guardian and Ward
k30(2)
196 ----
196III Custody and Care of Ward's
Person and Estate
196k30 Support and Education
196k30(2) Support by Parents.
Guardianship does not sever
the parental-child relationship,
nor the support obligation of a
legal parent to a child.
[2] Child Support k549
76E ----
76EXII Appeal or Judicial Review
76Ek548 Review
76Ek549 In General.
Former husband waived appellate
review of his contention that he
was unable to pay for unemancipated
child's college education by
failing to argue such contention
on his appeal from modification
of child support provisions of divorce
decree to extend his
support obligation past child's
majority. Rules App.Proc.,
Rule 16(a)(4), 43B M.G.L.A.
[3] Guardian and Ward
k30(2)
196 ----
196III Custody and Care of Ward's
Person and Estate
196k30 Support and Education
196k30(2) Support by Parents.
Trial court improperly relied
on divorce modification statute
in ordering former husband to pay
postminority child support to
child's appointed guardian, where
guardian was not child's parent,
and child was therefore not "domiciled
in the home of a parent"
as required by divorce modification
statute. M.G.L.A. c. 208,
s 28.
[4] Guardian and Ward
k20
196 ----
196II Appointment, Qualification,
and Tenure of Guardian
196k20 Majority of Ward.
[See headnote text below]
[4] Guardian and Ward
k30(1)
196 ----
196III Custody and Care of Ward's
Person and Estate
196k30 Support and Education
196k30(1) In General.
Award of postminority child
support could not be based upon
statute governing support awards
to guardians, where such statute
expressly provided for termination
of guardianship upon minor's attaining
age of 18 years. M.G.L.A.
c. 201, s 40.
[5] Guardian and Ward
k20
196 ----
196II Appointment, Qualification,
and Tenure of Guardian
196k20 Majority of Ward.
Statutory reference to an
actual age for the termination of
the guardianship of a minor precludes
judicial discretion. M.G.L.A.
c. 201, s 40.
[6] Guardian and Ward
k17
196 ----
196II Appointment, Qualification,
and Tenure of Guardian
196k17 Operation and Effect of Appointment.
Statutory end date of guardian's
guardianship was not tolled, for
purposes of her attempt to obtain
extension of child support
obligation of child's father, by
guardian's commencement of action
for modification of child support
provisions of child's parents'
divorce judgment. Rules Civ.Proc.,
Rule 3, 43A M.G.L.A.
[7] Guardian and Ward
k20
196 ----
196II Appointment, Qualification,
and Tenure of Guardian
196k20 Majority of Ward.
[See headnote text below]
[7] Guardian and Ward
k30(1)
196 ----
196III Custody and Care of Ward's
Person and Estate
196k30 Support and Education
196k30(1) In General.
Child's appointed guardian
had no cognizable statutory claim
to receive postminority support
for child's care and maintenance,
where guardian's legal relationship
with child terminated as matter
of law on child's eighteenth birthday.
M.G.L.A. c. 201, s 40;
c. 208, s 28.
[8] Child Support k390
76E ----
76EVII Termination
76Ek389 Age
76Ek390 In General.
Child's attaining the age
of 18 years does not, of itself,
terminate the support obligations
of a noncustodial parent.
[9] Parent and Child
k16
285 ----
285k16 Emancipation.
Legislature did not intend
that emancipation automatically
occur on reaching the age of majority
in all circumstances.
[10] Infants k11
211 ----
211I Disabilities in General
211k11 Removal of Disabilities.
[See headnote text below]
[10] Parent and Child k16
285 ----
285k16 Emancipation.
"Emancipation"
is a legal term of art that relates
to the cessation of rights and duties
between parent and child, and is
concerned more with the extinguishment
of parental rights and duties than
with the removal of the disabilities
of infancy.
[11] Parent and Child k16
285 ----
285k16 Emancipation.
Individual may be considered
emancipated for some purposes but
not for others.
[12] Infants k11
211 ----
211I Disabilities in General
211k11 Removal of Disabilities.
Courts are statutorily required
to inquire, in matters involving
questions as to an individual's
legal capacity based upon his or
her age, whether specific provisions
of other statutes override the statutory
presumptive age of full legal capacity.
M.G.L.A. c.
231, s 85P.
[13] Child Support k23
76E ----
76EII Duty to Support in General
76Ek22 Obligation of Parents
76Ek23 In General.
[See headnote text below]
[13] Child Support k103
76E ----
76EIII Factors Considered
76EIII(C) Factors Relating to Child
76Ek101 Age
76Ek103 Adult Children.
[See headnote text below]
[13] Children Out-Of-Wedlock
k21(1)
76H ----
76HIII Support
76Hk21 Duty to Support
76Hk21(1) In General.
[See headnote text below]
[13] Infants k228(2)
211 ----
211VIII Dependent, Neglected, and
Delinquent Children
211VIII(E) Judgment; Disposition
of Child
211k228 Liability for Support
211k228(2) Liability of Parents.
Opportunity to receive postminority
support is not limited to children
whose parents are divorced; Probate
and Family Court
judges may impose postminority support
orders on noncustodial parents where
the parents have never married each
other, or have
legally separated, and children
who have "aged out" of
foster care on reaching the age
of 18 years may receive postminority
support
to enable them to pursue opportunities
for education, rehabilitation, and
training. M.G.L.A. c. 119,
s 23; c. 208, s 28; c. 209,
*1266s 37; c. 209C,
s 9; c. 209D, s 1-101.
[14] Infants k228(2)
211 ----
211VIII Dependent, Neglected, and
Delinquent Children
211VIII(E) Judgment; Disposition
of Child
211k228 Liability for Support
211k228(2) Liability of Parents.
Child who, prior to turning
18 years old, has become a ward
of the state because his or her
parents are found unfit to care
for him or her, and who, after reaching
18 years of age, continues to make
his or her domicil with a custodial
adult who voluntarily provides for
him or her may, insofar as he or
she is found to be financially dependent,
properly be made the beneficiary
of a postminority support order,
imposed by a court on the child's
financially able noncustodial parent
or parents. M.G.L.A. c. 215,
s
6.
[15] Child Support k3
76E ----
76EI In General
76Ek2 Constitutional and Statutory
Provisions
76Ek3 In General.
Child support statutes should
be construed liberally to secure
the welfare of children. M.G.L.A.
c. 119A, s 1.
[16] Guardian and Ward k30(2)
196 ----
196III Custody and Care of Ward's
Person and Estate
196k30 Support and Education
196k30(2) Support by Parents.
Probate and Family Court
had authority to order child's father
to pay postminority support to child's
appointed guardian for child's
benefit pursuant to its general
equity jurisdiction, where state,
for child's own benefit, prevented
child from maintaining domicil
with either of her parents, guardian
continued to provide domicil for
child after child's eighteenth birthday,
child still needed financial support,
child's father was able to provide
support, and child's domicil with
guardian remained in her best interests.
M.G.L.A. c. 215, s 6.
[17] Child Support k178
76E ----
76EV Proceedings
76EV(A) In General
76Ek178 Parties.
[See headnote text below]
[17] Infants k228(1)
211 ----
211VIII Dependent, Neglected, and
Delinquent Children
211VIII(E) Judgment; Disposition
of Child
211k228 Liability for Support
211k228(1) In General.
Child's appointed guardian
was not child's de facto parent,
for purpose of determining guardian's
right to seek postminority
child support on child's behalf,
where guardian was appointed to
care for child because of unfitness
of both of child's parents,
and thus was not in parent-like
relationship with child with voluntary
consent of either parent.
[18] Child Support k549
76E ----
76EXII Appeal or Judicial Review
76Ek548 Review
76Ek549 In General.
Reviewing court was not required
to address former husband's motions
for reconsideration and for new
trial on issue of his obligation
to pay postminority child support,
to extent such motions raised factual
questions concerning child's domicil,
where former husband addressed such
questions peripherally at best on
appeal. Rules App.Proc., Rule
16(a)(4), 43B M.G.L.A.
*1268
Lois M. Farmer, Hyannis, for the
defendant.
Kathleen A. Eccleston, pro
se.
*1269
Present: MARSHALL, C.J., GREANEY,
IRELAND, SPINA, COWIN, SOSMAN, &
CORDY, JJ.
MARSHALL, C.J.
We consider in this case
the novel question whether G.L.
c. 208, s 28, (FN1) authorizes a
Probate and Family [438 Mass. 429]
Court judge to order a divorced
father to pay postminority support
(support payable after a child's
eighteenth birthday) to a third
party appointed as his child's guardian
and with whom his child is domiciled.
It does not. A Probate and
Family Court judge, however, does
have authority pursuant to equity
powers vested by the Legislature
under G.L. c. 215, s 6, to determine
whether the father should be required
to support his daughter financially
beyond her eighteenth birthday.
(FN2) We vacate the modification
judgment and remand this case for
entry of a support order under G.L.
c. 215, s 6, consistent with this
opinion.
1. Background. We summarize
the relevant factual and procedural
history from the judge's memoranda
and orders and from the undisputed
facts. Cailyn Bankosky (Cailyn),
born on May 13, 1983, is the only
child of the marriage of Paul Bankosky
(father) and Kathryn Mulroy (mother).
Pursuant to their divorce in 1990,
the mother was awarded physical
custody of Cailyn and the father
was
ordered to pay child support in
the [438 Mass. 430] amount of $171.31
each week. When Cailyn was
eleven years of age, she was placed
in the custody of the Department
of Social Services (department)
as a result of her parents' unfitness
to care for her, specifically, the
mother's alcohol abuse and the father's
"inappropriate touch[ing]"
of her. See G.L. c. 119, s
23. The department first placed
Cailyn in a foster home and then
with maternal relatives, but by
December, 1995, it had returned
Cailyn to her mother's home.
On March 13, 1997, the department
petitioned to restore custody of
Cailyn, then thirteen years old,
to the mother, and a Probate and
Family Court judge granted the petition.
[1] But Cailyn's situation
remained precarious. In December
of that year, the *1270
plaintiff, Kathleen Eccleston, on
behalf of herself and her husband,
Joseph Bell, successfully moved
for immediate appointment of temporary
guardianship of Cailyn on the ground
that the mother's behavior put Cailyn
at risk for neglect. (FN3)
See G.L. c. 201, s 14. In
March, 1998, over the mother's
objection, a judge made the guardianship
permanent. (FN4) See
G.L. c. 201, s 2. The judge
transferred the father's child support
obligation, which had previously
been reduced to $75 each week, from
the mother to the guardian and further
ordered the mother to
pay $50 each month in child support
to the guardian. (FN5)
The judge also prohibited the mother
and the father from contacting Cailyn.
Several months later, Cailyn's guardian
filed a pro se complaint against
the father for modification, seeking
an upward adjustment of child support
consistent with the child support
guidelines. A modification
judgment dated January 8, [438 Mass.
431] 1999, ordered the father to
pay $125 each week to the guardian
in child support, payable by wage
assignment through the department
of revenue, pursuant to G.L. c.
208, s 28, the first reference to
tat statute. (FN6) The
judgment did not specify a date
for termination of support.
(FN7) The father did not appeal.
In April, 2001, approximately
one month prior to Cailyn's eighteenth
birthday, her guardian filed a second
pro se modification complaint requesting
continuation of the existing child
support order beyond Cailyn's eighteenth
birthday. (FN8) In his
answer and his motion to dismiss,
the father argued that, once Cailyn
reached her eighteenth birthday,
the guardianship ended as a matter
of law, (FN9) Eccleston lacked standing
*1271 to pursue the modification
complaint, and the judge lacked
jurisdiction under G.L. c. 208,s
28, to order postminority child
support because Cailyn did not "reside
with a parent."
The father also sought leave to
counterclaim for termination of
his support obligation as of the
date Cailyn graduated from high
school (about one month after her
eighteenth birthday) and for a "credit"
toward arrearages for any child
support paid to the guardian after
Cailyn's high school graduation.
The case proceeded expeditiously.
On July 20, 2001, following a brief
trial, the judge issued an order
and memorandum [438 Mass. 432] granting
the guardian's modification complaint.
He also allowed the father's motion
to file a counterclaim, but denied
the father's motion to dismiss and
his counterclaim. The judge
reasoned that the guardian had standing
to pursue the modification
complaint on Cailyn's behalf because
the complaint, filed prior to Cailyn's
eighteenth birthday, "tolled"
the operation of G.L. c. 201, s
4. Alternatively, he concluded,
the guardian could proceed with
the case as Cailyn's "next
friend." See note
1, supra. The judge
ruled that the guardian had proved
a "material and substantial
change in circumstances" and
that modification would be in
Cailyn's best interests, see id.,
by showing that, without her father's
continued financial assistance,
Cailyn, an unemancipated child,
would experience a "deficit
in support" that would have
a "negative[ ] impact[ ]"
on her welfare. (FN10)
Finally, the judge held that the
guardian was entitled to child support
as Cailyn's "de facto parent,"
see Youmans v. Ramos, 429 Mass.
774, 776 & n. 3, 711 N.E.2d
165 (1999), and ordered the father
to continue to pay $125 a week in
child support to Cailyn's guardian.
The father filed two posttrial
motions, one for reconsideration
and the other for a new trial on
the ground, inter alia, of allegedly
newly discovered evidence that Cailyn
was no longer living with the guardian.
(FN11) After a hearing on
the matter, the judge denied both
motions in an order and memorandum
dated September 14, 2001.
The father appeals from the judge's
decisions granting the guardian's
requested relief and denying his
[438 Mass. 433] motions to dismiss,
for reconsideration, and for a new
trial. We granted the father's
application for direct appellate
review.
[2] 2. Modification.
On appeal, the father does not contest
the judge's conclusions that Cailyn's
welfare will suffer without his
continued financial support and
that his continued support would
be in Cailyn's best interests.
Nor does he seriously contest that
he has the ability to pay continued
support in the amount of $125 a
week. (FN12) Rather,
the essence of the father's *1272
argument is that, because the guardianship
was statutorily terminated when
Cailyn became eighteen years of
age, and because she did not reside
with either of her parents as required
by the postminority support provisions
of G.L. c. 208, s 28, see note 1,
supra, she was an "adult child"
over whom the Probate and Family
Court lacked further jurisdiction.
[3] We agree that the judge
erred in ordering the father to
pay postminority child support to
Eccleston pursuant to G.L. c. 208,
s 28, the divorce modification statute.
Eccleston is not Cailyn's "parent,"
and Cailyn therefore does not meet
the statutory prerequisite that
she be "domiciled in the home
of a parent."
[4][5] Nor could such an
award be predicated on G.L. c. 201,
s 40, which allows a support award
to a guardian. The Legislature
has specified that guardianship
of a minor must end when "the
minor attains the age of eighteen
years." See note
9, supra. The statutory
reference to an actual age precludes
judicial discretion. See Leibovich
v. Antonellis, 410 Mass. 568, 576,
574 N.E.2d
978 (1991) (no question of statutory
construction where Legislature's
intentions expressly stated).
[6][7] Nor may this statutory
end date be extended, or "tolled,"
as the judge held, by reference
to general procedural rules regarding
the commencement of actions, Mass.
R. Civ. P. 3, as amended, 385 Mass.
1215 (1982), and Mass. R. Dom.
Rel. P. 3 (2001) (same). See
Risk Mgt. Found. of Harvard Med.
Insts., Inc. v. Commissioner of
Ins., 407 Mass. 498, 505, 554 N.E.2d
843 (1990) (
"general statutory language
must yield to that which is more
specific"). Because her
legal relationship with Cailyn ended
as [438 Mass. 434] a matter of law
on Cailyn's eighteenth birthday,
Eccleston had no cognizable claim,
as guardian, to receive support
for Cailyn's care and maintenance,
and, insofar as the judge ordered
the father to pay postminority child
support to her in that capacity,
this was error.
[8][9][10][11][12] 3. Postminority
support. However, the fact
that the judge lacked authority
under either G.L. c. 208, s 28,
or G.L. c. 201, s 40, to order the
father to pay postminority support
to the former guardian for Cailyn's
benefit does not, in our view, compel
the conclusion that Cailyn was emancipated
as a matter of law for all purposes
when the guardianship ended on her
eighteenth birthday, or that, as
the dissent asserts, the father
was then beyond the reach of the
Probate and Family Court's jurisdiction
in the matter of her continued support.
The Legislature did not intend that
emancipation "automatically
occur on reaching the age of majority"
in all circumstances. Larson
v. Larson, 30 Mass.App.Ct. 418,
420 n. 3, 569 N.E.2d 406 (1991),
citing Turner v. McCune, 4 Mass.App.Ct.
864, 865, 357 N.E.2d 942 (1976).
(FN13) *1273 To
the contrary, since lowering the
presumptive age of majority from
twenty-one to eighteen, see St.1973,
c. 925 ("An act establishing
the age of majority for certain
legal
purposes as eighteen years of age"),
(FN14) the Legislature has acted
repeatedly to clarify and reinforce
its intent that a child's attaining
eighteen years [438 Mass. 435] does
not, of itself, terminate the support
obligations of a noncustodial parent.
In 1975, for example, the Legislature
amended G.L. c. 208, s 28, to grant
Probate Court judges the authority
to issue "orders of
maintenance" for "any
child who has attained age eighteen
years but who has not attained the
age of twenty-one years and who
is living in the home of a parent,
and is principally dependent upon
said parent for maintenance."
St.1975, c. 661, s 1. (FN15)
In 1976, the Legislature further
expanded the jurisdiction of Probate
Court judges to order postminority
support under G.L. c. 208, s 28,
by authorizing a judge to issue
orders for payment of "support
and education," as well as
maintenance for children between
eighteen and twenty-one years of
age in specified circumstances.
St.1976, c. 279, s 1. In 1991,
the Legislature once more enlarged
the Probate and Family Court's authority
over child support matters in divorce
actions as to "any child who
has attained age twenty-one but
who has not attained age twenty-three"
where the dependent child lives
with the custodial parent and is
pursuing an undergraduate degree.
St.1991, c. 173, s 1. See
note 1, supra. "The Legislature
apparently intended that children
meeting the requirements set forth
in [G.L. c. 208,] s 28 continue
to be considered 'minors' at least
for purposes of support."
Stolk v. Stolk, 31 Mass.App.Ct.
903, 904-905, 574 N.E.2d 429 (1991).
[13] The Legislature has
not confined the opportunity for
postminority support to children
whose parents are divorced.
In language identical to the postminority
support provisions of G.L. c. 208,
s 28, it has given Probate and Family
Court judges authority to impose
postminority support orders on noncustodial
[438 Mass. 436] parents where the
parents have never married each
other, or have legally separated.
See G.L. c. 209C, s 9, as amended
through St.1995, c. 38, s 167, and
St.1996, c. 199 (paternity);
and G.L. c. 209, s 37, as amended
by St.1975, c. 661, s 2; St.1976,
c. 279, s 2; and St.1991,
c. 173, s 2 (separate support).
The Legislature has also enacted
laws to ensure that children who
have "aged out" of foster
care on reaching *1274
the
age of eighteen years receive postminority
support to enable them to pursue
opportunities for education, rehabilitation,
and training. See G.L. c.
119, s 23 (Department of Social
Services may retain responsibility
for former foster child to age twenty-one
years, with person's agreement,
"for the purposes of specific
educational or rehabilitative programs").
See also G.L. c. 152, s 31
(widowed spouse of deceased employee
covered by workers' compensation
benefits may receive additional
payment for each child, including
child over age of eighteen years
who is "a full time student"
and qualified dependent under Internal
Revenue Code); G.L. c. 209D,
s 1-101 (Uniform Interstate Family
Support Act, defining "[c]hild"
as "an individual, whether
over or under the age of
majority, who is or is alleged to
be owed a duty of support by the
individual's parent or who is or
is alleged to be the beneficiary
of a support order directed to the
parent").
In enacting such statutes,
the Commonwealth has recognized
that merely attaining the age of
eighteen years does not by itself
endow young people with the ability
to be self-sufficient in the adult
world. (FN16) Statutes
providing for postminority support
advance the Legislature's purposes
to maintain children "as [438
Mass. 437] completely as possible"
from parental resources, see G.L.
c. 119A, s 1, to protect minor children
of nonintact families from parental
"underinvestment," see
note 16, supra, and to encourage
a skilled, educated workforce.
[14] Yet there is a small
category of children of nonintact
families whose needs for postminority
support the Legislature has not
specifically addressed. It
is the category to which Cailyn
belongs: namely, children
who, prior to turning eighteen years
old, have become wards of the State
because their parents are found
unfit to care for them and who,
after reaching eighteen years of
age, continue to make their domicil
with a custodial adult who voluntarily
provides for them. As to such
children, insofar as they are found
to be "unemancipated"
(that is, financially dependent),
the equity powers granted to Probate
and Family Court judges in G.L.
c. 215, s 6, are broad enough to
permit a judge to impose a postminority
support order on the child's financially
able
noncustodial parent or parents.
[15] In so holding, we act
to close an unintended gap in the
comprehensive legislative scheme
providing postminority support to
children of disrupted families that
is consistent with the Legislature's
directive to construe child support
statutes "liberally" to
secure the welfare of children.
G.L. c. 119A, s 1. Contrary
to the dissent, we do not agree
that an interpretation of the Probate
Court's statutorily *1275
authorized equity jurisdiction that
would disadvantage an especially
vulnerable class of children is
either required or proper under
our laws. We have previously
recognized that the general equity
jurisdiction of the
Probate and Family Court, conferred
by statute, may be invoked to order
a divorced, financially able noncustodial
parent to contribute to the support
of a mentally or physically incapacitated
adult child. See Feinberg
v. Diamant, 378 Mass. 131, 134-136,
389 N.E.2d 998 (1979). In
conferring general equity jurisdiction
on the Probate and Family Court,
the Legislature intended to
"assure that the interests
of justice are served," id.
at 137, 389 N.E.2d 998, in such
[438 Mass. 438] circumstances as
were present in Feinberg and that
are present here. Rather than
a "dangerous" act of superlegislation,
as the dissent claims, post at 440,
resort to equity is both explicitly
authorized by the Legislature and
appropriate as the narrowest ground
on which relief can
be afforded to Cailyn.
Moreover, the conclusion
we reach today is neither forbidden
by, nor contrary to, the provisions
of any other statute. See
id. at 137, 389 N.E.2d 998.
The record demonstrates that Cailyn
is a child who in every respect
would qualify for postminority support
from her noncustodial divorced parent
pursuant to G.L. c. 208, s 28, had
she a fit parent with whom she could
"domicil" during her
college years. But the neglectful,
or worse, behavior of her mother
and father has deprived Cailyn of
any opportunity to establish domicil
with either of them, not by her
own choice but mandated by the Commonwealth
for her own safety. It would
be inimical to the Legislature's
command that Massachusetts courts
safeguard "the long-term well
being of the child," G.L. c.
119, s 1, including
"dependent" adult children
to age twenty-three, to deny relief
to a dependent child who is bereft
of her parents' custody in the circumstances
present here. See also G.L.
c. 215,s 28 ("The supreme judicial
court or appeals court may, upon
appeal, reverse or affirm, in whole
or in part, any judgment, decree
or order of the probate court ...
or make any order therein as law
and justice may require").
[16][17] Eccleston, Cailyn's
former guardian, has agreed to provide
a domicil for Cailyn, although under
no legal obligation to do so, and
she has performed her caretaking
role, as the judge found, in a manner
both appropriate and supportive.
Having determined that the Commonwealth,
for Cailyn's own benefit, prevented
Cailyn from maintaining a domicil
with either of her parents,
that Eccleston continues to provide
a domicil for Cailyn, that Cailyn
still needs financial support, that
Cailyn's father is able to provide
that support, and that Cailyn's
domicil with Eccleston remains in
her best interests, the judge properly
could have ordered the father to
pay postminority support to Eccleston
for Cailyn's benefit under G.L.
c. 215, s 6. He "simply
should [438 Mass. 439] not have
done so as a corollary to the decree
nisi of divorce." Feinberg
v. Diamant, 378 Mass. 131, 136,
389 N.E.2d 998 (1979). (FN17)
*1276
[18] 4. Other motions. The
father's motions for dismissal,
reconsideration, and a new trial
largely duplicate arguments we
have considered and rejected.
To the extent that the father's
reconsideration and new trial
motions raise factual questions
concerning Cailyn's domicil, we
note only that, on appeal, the
father has addressed this argument
peripherally at best,
and we therefore need not consider
it. Mass. R.A.P. 16(a)(4),
as amended, 367 Mass. 921 (1975).
See Adoption of Sherry, 435 Mass.
331, 339, 757 N.E.2d 1097 (2001).
In any case, we find nothing in
the record that would lead us
to disturb the judge's finding
on the question of Cailyn's domicil.
Bush v. Bush, 402 Mass. 406, 411,
523 N.E.2d 259 (1988).
5. Conclusion. We
affirm the judge's denial of the
father's motions for dismissal,
reconsideration, and a new trial.
We vacate the support order entered
pursuant to G.L. c. 208, s 28,
and remand this matter to the
Probate and Family Court for further
proceedings in accordance with
this opinion. On remand,
the modification complaint should
be treated as a complaint by [438
Mass. 440] Eccleston for equitable
relief pursuant to G.L. c. 215,
s 6. The judge should reinstate
the support order and "take
any other action consistent with
general equity jurisprudence to
assure that the interests of justice
are served." Feinberg
v. Diamant, supra at 137, 389
N.E.2d 998.
So ordered.
COWIN, J., dissenting.
The court today holds that
a judge of the Probate and Family
Court may order the payment of
postminority support to the plaintiff
through the use of that court's
general equity powers, G.L. c.
215, s 6. It does so despite
its conclusion that the applicable
statutory remedies, the "comprehensive
legislative scheme providing postminority
support to children of disrupted
families," 438 Mass. at 437,
780 N.E.2d at 1274, do not permit
a probate judge to issue an identical
order. I dissent because
a judge may not act in equity
in a manner contrary to statute,
and because the court, in sanctioning
such an action, has created a
dangerous precedent.
The court's holding violates
one of the oldest tenets of equity
jurisprudence: equity must
follow the law. 2 Pomeroy,
Equity Jurisprudence s 425 (5th
ed.1941). This centuries-old
principle holds that, where the
law (either common or statutory)
provides a remedy bounded by restrictions
(as the court admits G.L. c. 208,
s 28, does here), a court may
not act in equity either to extend
or to supplement that remedy.
See Hedges v. Dixon County, 150
U.S. 182, 192, 14 S.Ct. 71, 37
L.Ed. 1044 (1893); Freeman
v. Chaplic, 388 Mass. 398, 406
n. 15, 446 N.E.2d 1369 (1983)
("a grant of equitable powers
does not permit a court to disregard
statutory requirements");
Heard v. Stanford, 25 Eng.
Rep. 723, 723-724 (1736).
The rationale behind this restriction
is self-evident: if courts
had the power to fashion equitable
*1277 remedies for
problems already addressed by
legislation, they would be free
to ignore any statutory remedies
andrestrictions that they deem
inconvenient. They would
become, in short,
super-Legislatures.
The court has fallen prey
to this temptation before, see
Adoption of Vito, 431 Mass. 550,
570-571, 728 N.E.2d 292 (2000)
(Cowin, J., concurring), and does
so again today. The court
makes the following [438 Mass.
441] holdings: (1) There
is a "comprehensive legislative
scheme," 438 Mass. at 437,
780 N.E.2d 1266, regulating postminority
educational support orders.
(FN1) (2) The applicable
portion of this legislative scheme,
G.L. c. 208, s 28, cannot be interpreted
to allow the Probate Court to
grant educational support to Eccleston,
because the Legislature intended
to limit such payments to parents,
and Eccleston is not Cailyn's
parent. See 438 Mass. at
433, 780 N.E.2d 1266. (3)
The Probate Court may, nevertheless,
exercise its equitable powers
to issue an identical order.
See 438 Mass. at 437, 780 N.E.2d
1266. How, given the statutory
command limiting postminority
educational support to parents,
does the court justify this final
holding? The inescapable
answer is that the court believes
that it may
ignore statutory restrictions
when it acts in equity.
The court apparently is
operating in the mistaken assumption
that G.L. c. 215, s 6, allows
the Probate and Family Court to
fashion equitable remedies that
run counter to statute, so long
as the Legislature has not explicitly
forbidden it to do so. That
impression is both wrong and disingenuous.
It is wrong because s 6 states
specifically that the Probate
and Family Court's equitable powers
are limited by the general principles
of equitable jurisprudence, and
the rule that equity follows the
law is one of those principles.
See 2 Pomeroy, Equity Jurisprudence,
supra at s 425. It is disingenuous
because the court is well aware
that the Legislature is not in
the habit of prohibiting actions
contrary to statute; it
presumes that the courts will
adhere to the restrictions its
statutes impose. The Legislature
enacts laws, not suggestions,
and it assumes that courts understand
this. The court has apparently
failed to grasp that to act outside
the bounds of a comprehensive
legislative scheme is necessarily
to act
contrary to it: (FN2) in
holding that a probate judge may
award postminority support to
a child pursuant to its equitable
powers, regardless [438 Mass.
442] whether that child is domiciled
with a parent or principally dependent
on that parent, the court essentially
eliminates two of the three statutory
postminority support requirements
contained in G.L. c. 208, s 28.
Nor is there any reason to suppose
that the third requirement is
safe. Given that the reach
of the Probate Court is now
*1278. constrained only by "the
long-term well being of the child,"
438 Mass. at 438, 780 N.E.2d 1266,
a probate judge could presumably
grant a
postminority support order to
a deserving thirty year old "child"
if the judge found justice so
to require.
Although the court justifies
its action as a means of avoiding
"disadvantag [ing] an especially
vulnerable class of children,"
438 Mass. at 437, 780 N.E.2d 1266,
it ignores the fact that in this
case Cailyn has been disadvantaged,
not by fate, but by statute.
Children over the age of twenty-three
years, children who do not live
with their parents, and children
who are independent of their parents
(all of whom cannot receive educational
support under s 28) are equally
"disadvantaged."
Crafting an additional statutory
exception for the "vulnerable"
is a legislative function;
if the Probate and Family Court
may fashion such an
exception pursuant to its equitable
powers, one wonders what purpose
the statute itself actually serves.
The court attempts to minimize
the import of its misuse of equity
by stating that it acts only to
"close an unintended gap
in the comprehensive legislative
scheme providing postminority
support" (emphasis added).
438 Mass. at 437, 780 N.E.2d 1266.
The problem, of course, is that
the characterization of the gap
as "unintended" is inherently
subjective. Gaps in legislative
schemes
do not come with labels, so there
is nothing to stop us from classifying
as "unintentional,"
when it suits us, a gap that the
Legislature created by design.
The rule that equity must follow
the law was fashioned specifically
to ensure that judges do not rewrite
the law in this fashion.
The true import of today's
opinion lies not in what it does
but in what it portends.
From this point forward when the
Probate Court acts in equity it
may ignore statutory boundaries
[438 Mass. 443] and the gaps that
those boundaries produce.
The vast opportunities for judicial
overreaching thus created are,
by themselves, disturbing.
The court's inability (or unwillingness)
to recognize the problem, however,
leads me to believe that future
abuses will go uncorrected and
become increasingly common.
I must, therefore, dissent.
(FN1.) General Laws c. 208,
s 28, provides, in pertinent part:
"Upon a complaint
after a divorce, filed by either
parent or by a next friend on
behalf of the children after notice
to both parents, the court
may make a judgment modifying
its earlier judgment as to the
care and custody of the minor
children of the parties
provided that the court finds
that a material and substantial
change in the circumstances of
the parties has occurred and the
judgment of modification is necessary
in the best interests of the children....
The court may make appropriate
orders of maintenance, support
and education of any child who
has attained age eighteen but
who has not attained age twenty-one
and who is domiciled in the home
of a parent, and is principally
dependent upon said parent for
maintenance. The court may
make appropriate orders of maintenance,
support and education for any
child who has attained age twenty-one
but who has not attained age twenty-three,
if such child is domiciled in
the home of a parent, and is principally
dependent upon said parent for
maintenance
due to the enrollment of
such child in an educational program,
excluding educational costs beyond
an undergraduate degree."
(FN2.) General Laws c. 215,
s 6, provides, in pertinent part:
"The probate and family
court department shall have original
and concurrent jurisdiction with
the supreme judicial court and
the superior court department
of all cases and matters of equity
cognizable under the general principles
of equity jurisprudence and, with
reference thereto, shall be courts
of general equity jurisdiction....
Probate courts shall also have
jurisdiction concurrent with the
supreme judicial and superior
courts, of all cases and matters
in which equitable relief is sought
relative to ... (vi) all
matters relative to guardianship
or conservatorship ... and of
all other matters of which they
now have or may
hereafter be given jurisdiction."
(FN3.) The record on appeal
does not disclose the nature of
the guardian's relationship with
Cailyn, although the guardianship
petition describes Eccleston
and her husband as Cailyn's "former
foster parents."
At oral argument, Eccleston represented
that she and her family
have had a "significant"
relationship with Cailyn since
the child was ten months of age,
and that the guardianship
represented the second time that
Cailyn resided with them.
(FN4.) The order appointing
Eccleston and her husband permanent
guardians was not docketed in
the guardianship action or in
the action for divorce between
Cailyn's mother and father.
*1278_ (FN5.) Guardianship
does not sever the parental-child
relationship, nor the support
obligation of a legal parent to
a child. See, e.g.,
Freeman v. Chaplic, 388 Mass.
398, 403, 446 N.E.2d 1369 (1983)
(appointment of guardian does
not, without more, extinguish
parental custody rights);
G.L. c. 201, s 40 (judge may award
child support to guardian).
(FN6.) Although in her complaint
for modification Eccleston requested
relief in her pending guardianship
case, the court docketed and considered
her request for relief under both
the guardianship and the divorce
proceedings between the mother
and the father, and docketed the
judgment on the divorce docket
only. The judge should have
considered Eccleston's request
for relief solely under
G.L. c. 201, s 40, which specifically
permits a judge to revise an award
of child support payable to a
guardian.
(FN7.) The January 8, 1999,
modification judgment and other
material filings were not included
in the appellate record, as required
by Mass. R.A.P. 8(a), as amended,
378 Mass. 932 (1979).
(FN8.) The second complaint
for modification sought to modify
the judgment entered pursuant
to G.L. c. 208, s 28, see note
6, supra, and alleged that Cailyn
would still be in high school
when she turned eighteen years
of age and would begin college
in the fall of 2001. She
had been awarded a four-year partial
scholarship to the college of
her choice in North Carolina.
However, scholarships, loans,
and grants, including a work-study
grant, were insufficient to meet
her anticipated needs. See
note 10, infra.
(FN9.) See G.L. c. 201,
s 4, which provides: "The
guardian of a minor unless sooner
discharged according to law shall
continue in office until the minor
attains the age of eighteen years
and shall have the care and management
of all his estate."
(FN10.) The memorandum and
order does not state any specific
amount of "deficit."
At trial, both the guardian and
Cailyn presented uncontradicted
testimony that Cailyn's scholarships
and grants, including work-study
grants, would leave her approximately
$1,100 shy of meeting her freshman-year
expenses for tuition and room
and board only. No testimony
was presented as
to the cost of other educational
expenses, such as books, or other
costs, such as travel home or
daily living expenses at college
or when residing at home with
Eccleston.
(FN11.) The father claimed
that Cailyn had moved out of her
guardian's home around the time
of the trial on the modification
action. After a hearing
on September 14, 2001, at which
the father was represented by
counsel and the judge heard testimony
from the guardian, he determined
that Cailyn had continued to reside
with the guardian except for a
brief visit to Vermont in late
June, or early July, 2001, and
that Cailyn was a full-time college
student entitled to ongoing child
support from the father pursuant
to G.L. c. 208, s 28.
(FN12.) The father included
one sentence in his "statement
of the facts" on appeal that
he cannot pay for Cailyn's college
education, but he did not attempt
to argue the point, thereby waiving
it. See Mass. R.A.P. 16(a)(4),
as amended, 367 Mass. 921 (1975);
Adoption of Sherry, 435 Mass.
331, 339, 757 N.E.2d 1097 (2001).
(FN13.) "Emancipation"
is a legal term of art that relates
to the cessation of rights and
duties between parent and child.
1 D.T. Kramer, Legal Rights of
Children s 15.01, at 665 (2d ed.1994).
"[I]t is concerned more with
the extinguishment of parental
rights and duties than with the
removal of the disabilities of
infancy." Id.
"Whether an emancipation
has occurred is a question of
fact; it must be determined
in the light of all relevant facts
and circumstances surrounding
each particular case. What
constitutes emancipation, however,
is a question of law."
(Emphases in original.)
Id. An individual may be considered
emancipated for some purposes
but not for others. See,
e.g., Hershkoff v. Registrars
of Voters of Worcester, 366 Mass.
570, 577-578, 321 N.E.2d 656 (1974)
(college students may be "emancipated"
to choose their domicil for voting
purposes although they are dependent
on their parents for support).
See generally Scott, The Legal
Construction of Adolescence, 29
Hofstra L.Rev. 547, 557 (2000)
("children cross over the
line to legal adulthood at different
ages for different purposes").
*1278_ (FN14.) Statute 1973,
c. 925, followed the Twenty-sixth
Amendment to the United States
Constitution that lowered the
voting age from twenty-one
to eighteen years, and was passed
in response to the conscription
of men eighteen years of age to
serve in the Vietnam War.
Scott, The Legal Construction
of Adolescence, 29 Hofstra L.Rev.,
supra at 563. Among
the statutory provisions
inserted by St.1975, c.
925, s 1, are: G.L. c. 4,
s 7, Forty-eighth (defining "[m]inor"
to mean "any person under
eighteen years of age");
G.L. c. 4, s 7, Forty-ninth (defining
"[f]ull age" to mean
"eighteen years of age or
older"); G.L. c. 4,
s 7, Fiftieth (defining
"[a]dult" to mean "any
person who has attained the age
of eighteen"); and
G.L. c. 4, s 7, Fifty-first (defining
"[a]ge of majority"
to mean "eighteen years of
age").
(FN15.) In 1975, the Legislature
also inserted G.L. c. 231, s 85P,
made retroactively effective to
January 1, 1974. St.1975,
c. 315. Section 85P
expressly provides that any person
domiciled in Massachusetts who
is eighteen years of age is deemed
"of full legal capacity"
"[e]xcept as otherwise provided
by law...." St.1975,
c. 315,s 1. This provision
requires courts to inquire whether
specific provisions of other statutes
override the presumptive age of
full legal capacity established
in s 85P.
(FN16.) Massachusetts is
not unique in providing by statute
that parents support their children
beyond the age of majority in
certain circumstances. See,
e.g., Haw.Rev.Stat. s 580-47(a)
(Supp.2001); Mo. Ann. Stat.
s 452.340.5 (Vernon 2002 Supp.);
N.J. Stat. Ann. s 2A:34-23(a)(5)
(West 2000); Wash.
Rev.Code Ann. s 26.19.090 (West
1997). Contrast Cal. Family
Code s 3901(a) (Deering 1994)
(ending duty of support to unmarried
child of divorced parents no later
than first of child's attaining
nineteen years of age or completing
twelfth grade). We note
as well that the American Law
Institute's (ALI) Principles of
the Law of Family Dissolution
emphasize the role of child support
statutes in ensuring that children's
life opportunities are not truncated
by the nonintact family, and in
particular by the underinvestment
of the parents in the child's
higher education. See, e.g.,
ALI Principles of the Law of Family
Dissolution: Analysis and
Recommendations s 3.04(2) &
comment j, s 3.12(2)(a) &
comment a, & s
3.24(2) (2002). See also
John H. Chaffee Foster Care Independence
Program, 42 U.S.C. s 677(a)(6)
(2002) (providing States with
funding, inter alia, to "make
available vouchers for education
and training, including postsecondary
training and education, to youths
who have aged out of foster care").
(FN17.) As noted earlier,
the judge also ordered payment
of child support to Eccleston
as Cailyn's "de facto parent."
The record discloses that Eccleston
was a person appointed by the
Commonwealth to care for Cailyn
because of the unfitness of both
her parents, and thus was not
a person in a parent-like relationship
with Cailyn with the voluntary
consent of either parent, thus
undercutting Eccleston's claim
to de facto parent status in this
case. Cf. E.N.O. v. L.M.M.,
429 Mass. 824, 830, 830-831, 711
N.E.2d 886, cert. denied, 528
U.S. 1005, 120 S.Ct. 500, 145
L.Ed.2d 386 (1999) (finding de
facto parent status where both
adult parties "decided to
have a child and to form a family,"
where they resided together as
a family with the child, where
the "de facto
parent" supported the family
financially, and where "[w]ith
the [biological parent's] consent,
the [third party] participated
in raising the child ...").
See also ALI, Principles of the
Law of Family Dissolution:
Analysis and Recommendations,
supra at s 2.03(1)(c)(ii) ("agreement
of a legal parent to form a parent-child
relationship" required for
finding of de facto parentage).
To the extent that the judge based
his decision on Eccleston's status
as her former guardian for purposes
of recognizing her as a "de
facto" parent, we also note
that Eccleston's husband was appointed
coguardian, thus, under that theory,
making him an equally "de
facto" parent. See
note 3, supra. To
date, this court has not addressed
the economic ramifications (if
any) of "de facto" parenthood,
and we decline to do so here.
Because the judge had a sufficient
basis to order child support to
Eccleston under G.L. c. 215, s
6, we do not reach the issue whether
it was error for the judge to
order the father to pay child
support to Eccleston as
Cailyn's "de facto parent."
*1278_ (FN1.) The court
makes no attempt to suggest that
postminority support is an area
where the law provides no remedy.
It cites, in fact, no less
than five statutes that provide
for some form of educational support
beyond the age of eighteen years.
See 438 Mass. at 435-436,
780 N.E.2d 1266.
(FN2.) Feinberg v. Diamant,
378 Mass. 131, 389 N.E.2d 998
(1979), on which the court relies
as support for its decision, is
not to the contrary. There
we held that a parent has a common-law
obligation to provide support
for an incompetent adult child,
see id. at 133-134, 389 N.E.2d
998. Because neither the
statutory nor common law of the
Commonwealth provided a remedy
for this right, we
authorized the Probate Court to
fashion an equitable remedy.
See id. at 136-137, 389 N.E.2d
998. The Feinberg case does
not, however, stand for the proposition
that the Probate and Family Court
may act in equity where, as here,
a legal remedy does exist.
See Freeman v. Chaplic, 388 Mass.
398, 406 & n. 15, 446 N.E.2d
1369 (1983) (Probate Court could
not award custody pursuant to
equitable powers contrary to statutory
requirements).
Barbara C. Johnson, Advocate of
Court Reform and Attorney at Law
6 Appletree Lane
Andover, MA 01810-4102
978-474-0833
email:
barbaracjohnson@worldnet.att.net
False Allegations:
http://www.falseallegations.com
Participating Attorney:
http://www.lawguru.com/cgi/bbs2/user/browse.shtml
Campaign 2002:
http://www.barbforgovernor.com
-----
The judicial system is very broken.
It must be fixed.
There are four people who can do
the job:
Everybody, Somebody, Anybody, and
Nobody.
Everybody thinks Somebody will surely
do it.
It is a job Anybody can do. But
Nobody is doing it.
At least I'm trying. What are you
doing?
"Women are not men's life partners,
but rivals favored by law."
Paul Craig Roberts, in "The
Wars We Can't Afford to Lose,"
citing Professor Richard T. Hise,
The War Against Men
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