Follow the terms of the settlement, which usually includes that the plaintiff be paid. Normally they get paid directly, not through the Court.
Go to Court
No settlement ( except conditional settlement ) ,deed can be revoked by an court whatsoever as long as the settlement was done as per law in force at the time of settlement.
Not on the majority of the settlement, as a settlement is thought of as a complete repayment for injuries suffered. Small areas of the settlement such as punitive fees from the court or accrued interest on the whole sum may be taxed. The attached law article describes what can be taxed in more detail.
It will more than likely appear as a "settlement."
Contact your attorney or the court to offer a settlement. You will likely not get your garnishment reduced unless your income has decreased.
A settlement in a dispute made out of court.
There is no statute of limitations on a divorce settlement. A divorce settlement is part of a court order and court orders do not expire.
No settlement deed can be revoked by any court as long as the settlement was made according to the law in force at the time and place the settlement was made.
If you did not get the settlement offer in writing or if you don't have anything in writing to prove this was a settlement offer they can take you to court, but you will just have to explain to the judge and hope they can see that this was a settlement offer.Hopefully you kept notes on the calls, who you spoke to etc. Bring all that paperwork to court so you can explain your side of the story, also bring a copy of your cashed check, front and back.
If you are in default on your child support payments the court can issue an order to seize your award.
File a motion for contempt of court against him with the court that ordered the alimony and signed the settlement.
Do I have to pay taxes on a discrimination settlement from a former employer