Child Support cannot be attached to pay a judgment.
No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.
In Illinois, each payment is a judgment.
Child Support Services, or the court where the judgment was made.
A good answer can be found in Wikipedia under Stipulated judgment.
yup
Yes.
There is no statute of limitations on collecting past-due child support.
Child support is not like any other judgment. In an ordinary judgment where your check is being garnished an agency is limited to 25% of your gross wages. With child support the amount that can be collected from your check is the amount the court has determined to be your monthly child support. Child support is not like any other judgment. In an ordinary judgment where your check is being garnished an agency is limited to 25% of your gross wages. With child support the amount that can be collected from your check is the amount the court has determined to be your monthly child support.
MOST JUDGMENTS, INCLUDING SMALL CLAIMS, CIVIL AND CHILD SUPPORT, WILL REMAIN ON YOUR CREDIT REPROT FOR 7 YEARS FROM THE FILING DATE.
Most jurisdictions separate child support matters from other civil suits. In any case, I suggest that you contact your State's child support agency. They have ways of collecting unpaid support.
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.