The arrears should be addressed in a court order so that an additional amount is added to the regular payments. If arrears have been established by the court then review the court order for the payment schedule.
The arrears should be addressed in a court order so that an additional amount is added to the regular payments. If arrears have been established by the court then review the court order for the payment schedule.
The arrears should be addressed in a court order so that an additional amount is added to the regular payments. If arrears have been established by the court then review the court order for the payment schedule.
The arrears should be addressed in a court order so that an additional amount is added to the regular payments. If arrears have been established by the court then review the court order for the payment schedule.
The arrears should be addressed in a court order so that an additional amount is added to the regular payments. If arrears have been established by the court then review the court order for the payment schedule.
In accounting, 'arrears' refers to debt that is overdue. For example, if someone were making monthly child support payments and skipped a month but paid the rest, the skipped payment would be considered 'arrears'.
Yes.
Yes, they will. If the amount you are getting back is more than the amount you owe, they will seize the entire refund. It's happened to me twice. I am currently up to date and have almost paid of the amount I owed, but they will take it if you have back child support payments. Fathers get their returns taken who are not in arrears. see links below
You can return to the venue that issued the order and ask them to give you credit. You will probably end up making these payments a second time. NEVER GIVE YOUR CHILD SUPPORT PAYMENTS DIRECTLY TO THE OBLIGOR. Hire baseball player to take a bat upside your head see link below
Not unless your bankruptcy did the right things to allow you to keep it. If you are not in arrears in your mortgage payments before filing, you have to continue making the payments - preferably before the due date. If you are in arrears, you must file a chapter 13, with a plan to pay the arrears and whatever part of the unsecured debt you have to pay. Once the plan is completed, you can keep your house. If you get behind in your post-petition payments due, the bank will apply for relief from the automatic stay and you will lose your house.
No. If the state is supporting the mother and child the mother has no right to free the father from his responsibility to support his own children. The state will pursue him for child support.
Yes. Having to support a family definitely wil not keep you out of goal it's an interesting concept though. If your reference is can you go to jail while making payment on child support arrears, than yes, depending on circumstances. You can also go to jail while making less than the full payment, while waiting for your hearing date to have the child support modified due to a job lose. see links below if this is the case
The custodial parent can take you to court for contempt and the court can issue a new order for payment of the arrears. At the request of the custodial parent, the state may take various actions to collect that support, such as asking the courts to put you in jail for contempt, taking your tax refund or serving a wage assignment on your employer. You should be making payments against the arrears. You may be able to negotiate a cash settlement for a lesser amount if you can borrow the money to pay the arrears. For example, the custodial parent may agree to accept $15,000 if paid immediately.
I'm not familiar with the laws of Virginia, but it sounds as if this child is 'emancipated' and, therefore, termination of current support (not arrears) might be possible. It won't be a good idea to simply 'stop' making child support payments. Read the court documents that established the latest child support payment programme, and if notice is required when you expect to discontinue paying, you must give notice. You could engage an attorney to help you finalize your child support payments.
Your spouse has no authority to over-ride a court ordered child support.
You are not clear about who you're making payments to: the mortgage company for your mortgage, or to the association to pay assessments that are in arrears. If you mean payments to make up arrears, and the association filed a lien on your title, review the agreement that you made with them about making payments. It's possible that filing a lien is part of your agreement in some way. Or, that the association has filed a lien against you in error. If you mean payments to pay your mortgage, and you are not paying your assessments, your association filed a lien to collect monies that you owe in past-due assessments. (You have to pay both: mortgage and assessments.) If your assessments are up to date, check with the board to better understand why a lien has been filed by the association on your title.
No, it stays in the state of the obligor parent, as it should.