At the request of the custodial parent or to recover assistance provided, the State may take various actions to collect past-due support, including garnishing wages, intercepting tax refunds and other government payments, placing liens on bank accounts, real estate and other assets, requesting suspension of drivers license, and/or asking the courts to put the obligor in jail for contempt.
In general, at the request of the custodial parent or to recover assistance provided, States may take various actions to collect past-due support, including garnishing wages, intercepting tax refunds and other government payments, placing liens on bank accounts, real estate and other assets, requesting suspension of drivers license, requesting revocation of passport, and/or asking the courts to put the obligor in jail for contempt.
See Link BelowChild Support-Contempt Of Court for Non-Payment?
They sure can in Michigan if it is a court ordered child support payment.
It's a federal law.
very likely they found mydad in North Carolina and extradited him..
Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.Report the missed payment to the court or child support enforcement- whatever agency placed him on probation.
If you were a resident of Michigan or had taxable income from sources in Michigan, then yes.
Can you make a monthly payment for your child support and not have it garnishment out of your payroll each week
You will have to pass that information through the court system where the child support was ordered to see how the payment will be credited.AnswerNo. Arrears are a separate issue from regular child support. Payment of arrears does not affect the current child support order.
No. Child support and visitation are separate.
In Illinois, each child support payment is a civil judgment.
If you referring to child support, then no. Child support is due to the custodial parent, not the child.
Request a printout from child support enfrocement