Court Opinion

ID: 1080339
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-10-09 20:39:43.690112+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:10:05.161068
License: Public Domain

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

                  EASTERN SECTION AT KNOXVILLE             FILED
                                                            October 30, 1997

                                                           Cecil Crowson, Jr.
                          )                  BLEDSOE CHANCERY Clerk
                                                      Appellate C ourt
                          )
IN RE: ESTATE OF          )                  NO. 03A01-9707-CH-00252
                          )
JAMES C. MEADER, DECEASED )                  HON. G. RICHARD JOHNSON
                          )                  CHANCELLOR
                          )
                          )
                          )                  AFFIRMED

                                OPINION

                                             INMAN, Senior Judge

                                        I

      The decedent, James C. Meader, died testate in Bledsoe County,

Tennessee on May 23, 1995. His will was duly propounded for probate and

letters testamentary were issued to his widow, Virginia Meader.

      In 1966, the decedent and his first wife were divorced in Milwaukee

County, Wisconsin. Custody of five (5) children was awarded to their mother;

the decedent was ordered to pay $45.00 per week child support.

      He paid nothing. In Wisconsin the age of majority is 19, and the children

attained majority in 1970, 1971, 1972, 1974 and 1977, respectively. The

decedent having defaulted in his natural and legal obligation to support his

children, the State of Wisconsin and the County of Milwaukee stepped in and

provided partial support for the children until each attained majority. The State

of Wisconsin filed a claim against the estate of the decedent to recover

$47,728.86 paid to the mother in the form of aid to dependent children; the

mother, Joyce Bunnell, one of the appellants, filed a claim for $32,590.04 for

support arrearages, and the County of Milwaukee filed a modest claim for
$320.00 to recover certain fees.

      To each of these claims the executrix filed exceptions, pleading the

statute of limitations of ten (10) years [T.C.A. § 28-3-110(2)]. The trial court

sustained the exceptions, holding that the claims were barred by the affirmative

defense of the statute of limitations of ten years.

                                           II

      So far as we know, all civil actions in this jurisdiction are subject to a

statute of limitations. T.C.A. § 28-3-110 provides that ‘actions or judgments

and decrees of courts of record of this or any other state or government’ shall be

commenced within ten (10) years after the cause of action has accrued.

      In the light most favorable to the appellants, their actions accrued in 1977

when the legal duty of the father to provide support for his children ended. If

the statute of limitations of ten (10) years is applicable, it is conceded that the

claims are barred, since they were filed in 1996.

      T.C.A. § 36-5-613(c) provides:

          (c) The Court shall apply the statute of limitations for
              maintaining an action on arrearages of support payments
              of either the local law of this State or of the State which
              issued the support order . . . whichever is longer.

      The Wisconsin statute of limitations is not revealed in the record,

requiring the presumption that it is identical to the Tennessee statute,1 which, as

stated, provides that actions on judgments and decrees of courts of record of

this or any other State or government shall be commenced within ten (10) years

after the cause of action accrued.

      This Court has ruled in a number of cases that the statute of limitations

      1
       Bagwell v. McTighe, 85 Tenn. 616, 4 S.W. 46 (Tenn. 1887); Kempe v.
Bader, 86 Tenn. 189, 6 S.W. 126 (Tenn. 1887); Hubble v. Morristown Land &
Imp. Co., 95 Tenn. 585, 32 S.W. 965 (Tenn. 1895).
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does not apply in actions to enforce judgments wherein the defaulting parent

sought to avoid payment of only that portion of the judgment which accrued

more than ten years before the action was brought, e.g., Sandidge v. Brown, No.

03A01-9104-CV-00142 (Tenn. App. 1991), and cases therein cited. The

rationale of these cases is that the obligation of support for minor children is a

continuing one and that the right of the child to be supported cannot be defeated

by the dereliction of the custodial parent in enforcing a decree of support.

      But the obligation of support in Wisconsin terminates when the child

reaches 19, the age of majority, subject to exceptions not here relevant, or, in

the language of the cases, the obligation then ceases to be a continuing one, and

the delimiting period of ten (10) years begins to run.

      The arrearages were not reduced to ‘judgment.’ For this reason,

according to the appellants, the statute of limitations is not applicable, since no

judgment was entered to trigger its commencement.

      In 1987 the Tennessee Legislature amended T.C.A. § 36-5-101 to provide

that “any order for child support shall be a judgment to be enforced as any other

judgment . . . .” This amendment guaranteed the enforceability of child support

payments. See, generally, 42 U.S.C. § 666; Rutledge v. Barrett, 802 S.W.2d
604 (Tenn. 1991). It also eliminated any equitable defense of laches, waiver or

estoppel. Rutledge did not address the issue of the statute of limitations.

      We think that, absent a clear legislative mandate, child support judgments

are subject to the defense of the statute of limitations as is “any other

judgment.” We are not in the least reluctant to express the view that, in the

field of civil law, child support payments and judgments rendered therefor

should never be barred by a delimiting statute. This parental obligation is both

natural and legal and should remain enforceable against the estate of the

                                         3
obligor. But given the current status of the applicable statutory and decisional

law, [”Judgments (for child support) are subject to the defenses applicable to

judgments generally, Bloom v. Bloom 769 S.W.2d 491 (Tenn. App. 1988)”], we

hold that in the case at Bar the plaintiffs’ ‘causes of action’ arose more than ten

years before their causes were filed. We are thus in agreement with the trial

court, and the judgment is affirmed at the costs of the appellant.

                                        _________________________________
                                        William H. Inman, Senior Judge

CONCUR:

________________________________
Houston M. Goddard, Presiding Judge

________________________________
Herschel P. Franks, Judge

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