All funds that are designated as income regardless of how or why they are obtained remitted to a non custodial parent are subject to child support garnishment. A monetary judgment due to a civil suit regarding overtime pay would be considered income.
You may not be able to. If your children where under the age of 18 when the decree for support was created then the non-custodial parent is still responsible for that support. Only a few states back date, which means that if you had the decree written up when the child was 17 then the non-custodial parent would have to pay from the day that they left the house. States can garnish wages for back child support, and also garnish tax refunds to pay child support. If it was dropped due to the child moving out on their own at age 16, which is when a child can rent their own place in Texas, than it cannot be reengaged.
if YOU are paying child support then YOU have no chance in getting a reduction, sorry they will garnish the maximum as the law requires and the C.S. is not included. sorry I've been there and it sucks. when it comes to taxes its cut throat to get the money no matter the situation. Title III permits a greater amount of an employee's wages to be garnished for child support, bankruptcy, or federal or state tax payments. Title III allows up to 50 percent of an employee's disposable earnings to be garnished for child support if the employee is supporting a current spouse or child, who is not the subject of the support order, and up to 60 percent if the employee is not doing so. An additional five percent may be garnished for support payments over 12 weeks in arrears. See Link
I'm pretty sure that is not possible without a lawsuit over the custody of the child, then there will be decided what is best for the child.
Of course not. Child support is for the support of a minor child. Why should the child be deprived of financial support if her mother dies. The order can be modified and it will be paid over to her legal guardian if that person is not the other parent.Of course not. Child support is for the support of a minor child. Why should the child be deprived of financial support if her mother dies. The order can be modified and it will be paid over to her legal guardian if that person is not the other parent.Of course not. Child support is for the support of a minor child. Why should the child be deprived of financial support if her mother dies. The order can be modified and it will be paid over to her legal guardian if that person is not the other parent.Of course not. Child support is for the support of a minor child. Why should the child be deprived of financial support if her mother dies. The order can be modified and it will be paid over to her legal guardian if that person is not the other parent.
No, not likely. If you are over 18 yrs. of age, you are considered an adult, and child support is exactly what it is...."child-support" for CHILDREN, not adults!
In a lawsuit, an intervenor is a third party that enters the case because he has some issues at stake. In a custody lawsuit, an intervenor would probably be a third party that has some claim of custody over the child.
no
The child support must be paid over as ordered in the child support order. The obligor cannot decide to pay it into a trust without a court order.The child support must be paid over as ordered in the child support order. The obligor cannot decide to pay it into a trust without a court order.The child support must be paid over as ordered in the child support order. The obligor cannot decide to pay it into a trust without a court order.The child support must be paid over as ordered in the child support order. The obligor cannot decide to pay it into a trust without a court order.
yes if the grandparents put you on child support.
Child support can be terminated only if/when the child is adopted.
No. You must obey the child support order. The child is not required to take over your child support obligation. If they are ambitious enough to work they should benefit from their efforts not be penalized by losing your financial support.
yes