Depending on circumstances, yes. Missouri does that frequently. In one case, the father had been dead two years when his parents were served with papers stating the state had put a lean on their potential estate because the son owed child support. Every two years they had to notify the Springfield, MO CSE office as to whether they had died yet? In Missouri, death is not a justifiable reason for not paying.
Tell him to check out Dads House at the link below.
ANOTHER VIEW: If all your children were named as equal heirs to the home, and he was just one of the heirs, while the court could lien HIS monetary interest in the home, the court could not seize the home from the other siblings and dispose of it thereby leaving them homeless.
AnswerYou haven't explained the reason for the lien. If the beneficiary owes the siblings any money and refused to pay they can sue in court for the debt and obtain a judgment lien on the property.
You may have to haul that man back into the courtroom for not paying child support. The judge will then order him to pay or face jail/prison time. Other inmates are not kind to deadbeats who don't pay their child support payments.
Yes.
I suggest that you contact your State's child support agency. When you get an interview with them, bring all the papers relating to your child support: birth certificates, acknowledgments of paternity, court orders, payment records, etc. Be polite but persistent. Good luck!
straight and simple, yes.
If you are a realtor go to planetrealtor.com, or if you know someone who is a realtor and do it for you, thanks
That parent still owes the back support.That parent still owes the back support.That parent still owes the back support.That parent still owes the back support.
Ray Owes was born in 1972.
"owes" is a verb in the present tense.
The public debt is the debt that the United States government owes to other countries.
If ... child support IS included in both divorce decrees, then the man owes them both - funds which are usually paid from earnings, not tax refund checks. The deadbeat needs to have his hide hauled into court and hear from the judge that he is in "contempt of court" and could face jail time unless the arrears are brought up to date.
Yes, you can sue anyone who owes you money