Yes.
Can my salary be garnished if I have not missed a child support payment
yes
can the state of maryland garnish my government disability check for back taxes owed the state of maryland ?no they cannot, u.s.gov. disability or social security cannot be garnished, Except for child support and Federal TAXES.
They sure can in Michigan if it is a court ordered child support payment.
401k's can be seized for child support. For college payments or attorney's fees, not likely.
Unemployment can be garnished only for child or spousal support. Child support cannot be garnished.
Support can be garnished from UIB payments. However, if there is little or no income, the NCP should run, not walk, to the court that entered the order for support and request that support be terminated or at least suspended.
In California, Child Support Services can only garnish the wages from the parent. If you are the step-parent, your wages cannot be garnished. If you are the parent, wages can be garnished within 30 days of legal separation, as ordered by the courts.
No, creditors generally cannot garnish Social Security disability benefits to repay debts. These benefits are protected from most types of debt collections.
Generally garnishment occurs only in cases where a loan or other debt is, or has been, in default. (Although I've heard of cases where parents volunteered to have child support garnished so they didn't have to worry about missing a payment.) There are only a few types of debt that can be legally garnished: alimony and/or child support, student loans, and deliquent federal taxes. The payment terms of your loan should be clearly defined and specifically include the amount and date the payments are due. Garnishing your refund while your account was current would be demanding payment before it was due. If you are not currently in default and have never been, then there is no reason to assume your tax refund would be garnished. However, if you've previously been in default and not brought the loan completely current, they might garnish the portion still in arrears.
No, only biological parents or parents who have legally adopted a minor child are responsible for the financial support of that child/children.
Yes