Either the plaintiff and/or his or her legal representative must be in attendance or the hearing will be dismissed with or without prejudice.
The plaintiff should contact the PA child support agency.
It means that the defendant hasn't shown up in court and the court finds on behalf the plaintiff.
In my opinion: Motion to modify child support orderFound this on internetName of StateIN THE (TYPE OF) COURT FOR THE COUNTY OF XXXXXXPlaintiffV. C S No. _______ This is not legal adviceDefendantMotion to XXXXXXXCOMES NOW ; the Plaintiff or Defendant pro se (by yourself) and moves this Honorable Court to XXXXXXXXXX; In support whereof Plaintiff or Defendant states:1. Reason & what you want and why.WHEREFORE, petitioner moves this Court to XXXX and XXXXXXX orderRespectfully Submitted
No, but you must file to discontinue see links below
File a motion to modify or discontinue child support. see link
No, it can be done pro se. see links below
Motion to modify current and future child support. Make request to child support enforcement.
It requires a modification motion on the arrears to the court, but some states have laws against it, especially if any is owed Welfare.
The obligor continues to owe support regardless of where the child is in this world. But, you should file a motion for interference with custody, as well as a motion to place child support into a trust fund. see link below
They can take it all. EVen if the winning plaintiff owes his lawyer, the court can transfer the entire award to the child support agency.
You need to visit the court that issued the child support order and request it be terminated. In general, to terminate child support, you need to show the court that: you have custody of the child; the child is deceased; the child has been adopted; the child is emancipated; the child has attained majority; and/or you have no income other than public assistance; AND, you do not owe any past-due support.
That's a motion to modify retroactive child support. Most states will not allow it. Of note, Judge David Grey Ross, Commissioner of the Federal Office of Child Support Enforcement opposed the practice of backdating child support. see links