FOR PUBLICATION
APPELLANT PRO SE: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:
CHARLOTTE A. JENKINS WEYBRIGHT ALLEN R. STOUT
Fort Wayne, Indiana Angola, Indiana
LATRIEALLE WHEAT
Angola, Indiana
CHARLOTTE A. JENKINS (WEYBRIGHT), )
)
Appellant-Petitioner, )
)
vs. ) No. 43A03-9704-CV-136
)
ARDEN JENKINS, )
)
Appellee-Respondent. )
STATON, Judge
II. Whether the trial court erred by modifying its existing child
support order where the youngest child covered by the support
order reached the age of twenty-one prior to the modification
petition being filed.
III. Whether the trial court's findings are incorrect insofar as they
hold Weybright responsible for paying weekly child support for
a period of approximately nine months beyond the date her
youngest child reached the age of twenty-one.
We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand.
Weybright and Jenkins were divorced on April 13, 1977. Weybright was originally
granted custody of all four of their children; however, by April of 1983, Jenkins had obtained
custody of the three youngest children. On September 3, 1985, the Kosciusko Superior Court
ordered Weybright to pay $45 per week in child support for the three children in Jenkins'
custody.
On January 31, 1996, Jenkins filed a petition in Kosciusko Superior Court seeking to
modify the 1985 child support order as it pertained to the youngest child, C.J. Jenkins
requested that the court increase Weybright's weekly child support obligation and that it
require Weybright to pay a portion of C.J. education expenses. In his petition, Jenkins
asserted that C.J., who was still a student at Purdue University, had not yet been
emancipated. At the time Jenkins filed his petition, C.J. was twenty-one years old.
Jenkins also filed a second petition seeking the payment of past-due child support and
requesting that the court hold Weybright in contempt of court for failure to pay child support
owed as a result of the 1985 order. Jenkins alleged that Weybright had paid no child support
since the order was entered in 1985.See footnote
1
Jenkins also requested that the court award him
attorney's fees incurred in connection with his action to collect child support.
On October 17, 1996, the trial court entered an order requiring Weybright to pay a
portion of C.J. education expenses and increasing Weybright's weekly support obligation.
The court also found Weybright in contempt of its 1985 child support order, and ordered her
to pay $14,265 in back child support, plus statutory interest. Too, the court ordered
Weybright to pay Jenkins' reasonable attorney's fees.
of child support," so long as the children remain unemancipated. Id. at 447. However, the
court refused to express an opinion as to whether contempt is available to enforce child
support arrearage after children are emancipated. Id. at 446, n.3. Since it refused to say
otherwise in Pettit, Weybright argues that the Indiana Supreme Court's earlier opinion in
Corbridge v. Corbridge, 230 Ind. 201, 102 N.E.2d 764 (1952), controls.
In Corbridge, the supreme court held that a court may not use its contempt power to
coerce the payment of child support where a child has reached the age of majority. Id. at
767. In so limiting the use of contempt, the court reasoned:
The extraordinary remedy of attachment for a civil contempt of court is
available, not for the protection of the one having custody of the child, but for
the benefit of the child, so that it may not want for necessities during the
period of its minority. When the child reaches its majority the purpose and
justification for the extraordinary remedy cease, and the court has no right to
coerce the back payments of support by imprisonment.
Id. Since Corbridge, this court has repeatedly followed its holding. See Kuhn v. Kuhn, 172
Ind.App. 665, 361 N.E.2d 919, 921 (1977); Ross v. Ross, 397 N.E.2d 1066, 1070 (Ind. Ct.
App. 1979); Brancheau v. Weddle, 555 N.E.2d 1315, 1318 (Ind. Ct. App. 1990).
Jenkins urges us not to follow Corbridge because the General Assembly has since
enacted a statute which specifically allows a court to use the contempt power to enforce its
child support orders.See footnote
2
I
ND
. C
ODE
§ 31-1-11.5-17(c) (1993) (recodified at IND. CODE § 31-
16-12-1 pursuant to 1997 Ind. Acts, P. L. 1) provides that all orders and awards contained
in a divorce decree may be enforced by contempt. Since the order requiring Weybright to
pay child support was contained in a divorce decree, Jenkins argues that this statute allows
a court to enforce its child support order through its contempt power, even after a child has
been emancipated.
In State ex rel. Shaunki v. Endsley, 266 Ind. 267, 362 N.E.2d 153 (1977), the Indiana
Supreme Court addressed the impact of IND. CODE § 31-1-11.5-17 on a court's power to
hold a person in contempt for failure to pay an alimony judgment. Prior to considering the
effect of this statute, the Indiana Supreme Court held that contempt could not be used to
enforce alimony judgments. Id. at 153-54 (citing State ex rel. Schutz v. Marion Superior
Court, 261 Ind. 535, 307 N.E.2d 53 (1974)). In holding that IND. CODE § 31-1-11.5-17 did
not change its prior decisions, the court stated, " . . . we view [the contempt] portion of the
statute as merely recognizing the court's inherent authority to enforce its lawful orders by
contempt proceedings." Shaunki, 362 N.E.2d at 154. The effect of the supreme court's
holding in Shaunki is to say that IND. CODE § 31-1-11.5-17(c) does not in any way expand
a court's contempt power beyond that which existed prior to its enactment.See footnote
3
Accordingly, we
hold that IND. CODE § 31-1-11.5-17(c) (recodified at IND. CODE § 31-16-12-1 pursuant
to 1997 Ind. Acts, P. L. 1) does not affect our supreme court's Corbridge decision.
Here, all of the children covered by the 1985 support order were emancipated prior
to Jenkins' request that Weybright be held in contempt for failure to pay her child support
arrearage.See footnote
4
Thus, in accordance with Corbridge, we hold that the trial court did not have the
authority to hold Weybright in contempt for her child support arrearages.
Too, in Donegan v. Donegan, 605 N.E.2d 132 (Ind. 1992), our supreme court held that
"a trial court may not first make an order for educational needs when the petition seeking
such relief is filed after the child's emancipation." Id. at 134. Since C.J. was twenty-one
prior to Jenkins' filing of his petition, the trial court's award of educational expenses was
error.
support arrearage, so that this amount may then be entered as a judgment against her.
Finally, we affirm the trial court's award of Jenkins' reasonable attorney's fees. I
ND.
C
ODE
§
31-1-11.5-16 (1993) (recodified at IND. CODE § 31-16-11-1 pursuant to 1997 Ind. Acts,
P.L. 1) (allows the court to order the payment of reasonable attorney's fees incurred in
maintaining or defending a proceeding related to the payment of child support).
Affirmed in part, reversed in part, and remanded.
GARRARD, J., and BARTEAU, J., concur.
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