You inquired what requirements a parent must meet to qualify as a legal dependent
                  in the State of Wisconsin. You requested this opinion in order to determine whether
                  a representative payee was properly using recipient's benefits under 20 C.F.R. § 404.2040(c).
               
               DISCUSSION
               The general issue is whether a representative payee may use a child's conserved benefits
                  to support the child's parent. The applicable regulations provide that "[i]f the current
                  maintenance needs of the beneficiary are being met, the payee may use part of the
                  payments for the support of the beneficiary's legally dependent spouse, child, and/or
                  parent." 20 C.F.R. § 404.2040(c). POMS GN 00602.020(B) provides that dependency is to be determined according to state law. Therefore,
                  it is necessary to look at Wisconsin law in order to determine whether the conserved
                  benefits of Lynn W., the representative payee, were being used properly.
               
               Wisconsin law defines the term "dependent" differently depending on the context of
                  the particular statute. For example, the definition of "dependent" used in the context
                  of a Veterans' Affairs statute is "any person who resides with a veteran and is dependent
                  upon the veteran for more than one-half of the person's support," but the definition
                  of "dependent" in the context of Executions is "any individual, including a spouse,
                  who requires and is actually receiving substantial support and maintenance from the
                  debtor." Wisc. Stat. Ann. §§ 45.71(5)(b), 815.18(2)(d) (1997). We believe the most
                  appropriate statutory reference concerns whether a child has an obligation to support
                  his or her parent in Wisconsin in order to determine whether parents were considered
                  dependents in the context of Wisconsin's general welfare statutes.
               
               The Wisconsin Supreme Court has held that unless there is a common law duty to support
                  a relative, legal dependency arises solely out of statutory provisions. In re Seely, 67 N.W.2d 836, 837 (1955). It is generally agreed that there is no common law duty
                  on a child to support his or her indigent parent. See 79 Am. Jur. § 76 (1975). Prior to 1985, however, Wisconsin law provided that:
               
               The parent, spouse and child of any dependent person (as defined in s. 49.01) who
                  is unable to maintain himself shall maintain such dependent person, so far as able,
                  in a manner approved by the authorities having charge of the dependent, or by the
                  board in charge of the institution where such dependent person is . . .
               
               Wisc. Stat. Ann. 52.01(1) (footnote added). The Wisconsin Supreme Court held that
                  this provision was ineffective to confer a duty to support until a court had ordered
                  a party to support his relative pursuant to Wisc. Stat. Ann. § 52.01(4). Seely, 67 N.W.2d at 838. Therefore, under that statutory language, a child had no obligation
                  to support a dependent parent until after a court had ordered him or her to do so.
               
               In 1985, Wisc. Stat. Ann. § 52.01 was amended and renumbered Wisc. Stat. Ann. § 49.90.
                  See Wisc. Stat. Ann. § 52.01 (1997). Wisc. Stat. Ann. § 49.90 provides that:
               
               The parent and spouse of any dependent person who is unable to maintain himself or
                  herself shall maintain such dependent person, so far as able, in a manner approved
                  by the authorities having charge of the dependent, or by the board in charge of the
                  institution where such dependent person is; but no parent shall be required to support
                  a child 18 years of age or older.
               
               Wisc. Stat. Ann. § 49.90(1)(a) (1997). By amending the statute in 1985, the Wisconsin
                  legislature therefore eliminated any obligation of a child to support a dependent
                  parent.
               
               A child no longer has any obligation to support his parent under Wisconsin law, and
                  a duty to support a parent can arise only from statutory provisions. Children, therefore,
                  are no longer obligated to support their dependent parents in Wisconsin. Therefore,
                  unless a representative payee has been ordered by a court to pay support for his or
                  her parent, he or she is under no legal obligation to pay such support, and the parent
                  is not a legal dependent. Unless Lynn W. has been ordered by a court of law to support
                  her parents, use of her benefits to support a parent does not appear to be proper
                  use of conserved benefits pursuant to 20 C.F.R. § 404.2040(c).
               
               CONCLUSION
               For the above reasons, we have concluded that parents do not constitute legal dependents
                  in Wisconsin unless a child has been ordered to support that parent by a court.
               
               Thomas W. C~
Chief Counsel, Region V
               
               By: ___________ 
 Kelly C. C~
 Assistant Regional Counsel