T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
951.1 | | CSC32::WOLBACH | | Fri Jan 12 1990 15:29 | 26 |
|
I'm answering this question based on what I've learned about
Colorado laws. The info may or may not be valid in your state.
In our degree it was specified that child support payments would
be made thru <drat, now I"ve forgotten the actual name of the
department> the court system. Department of Family Services or
some such thing. Anyway, that particular branch of the court
system is relatively worthless in my opinion. However, someone
at the department did tell me that if my exhusband was not making
payments thru the system as specified then they regard that as
payments were not made and he could be prosecuted for non-support.
Since he pays by check, he has a record of payment, but the implication
was that I could sue for non-support should I so desire (not that I
would do so), and the court system would pursue the case simply be-
cause they had no record of payments being made.
It's also possible that your children's mother has been advised that,
should she cash the checks, she is tacitly agreeing to the change
(reduction?) in child support.
Sounds as if your best course of action is to consult an attorney.
Deb
|
951.2 | Is your ex playing games???? | CSCMA::PERRY | | Mon Jan 15 1990 09:40 | 8 |
| Deb has a good point. If she is not cashing your checks then she
could very well be proteting herself legally. See your lawyer.
Your getting the account for your daughter was in good faith and
all - - but we all know how the law works (and not necessarily
fair either). I'm with Deb. Talk to legal counsel...
joe
|
951.3 | money orders | GIAMEM::MACKINNON | | Mon Jan 15 1990 11:39 | 9 |
|
Talk to a lawyer, but if it helps send her money orders.
My boyfriend has been advised to do this. He keeps the
carbons and other materials attached (a tracer if needed).
It works well for him because he no longer needs to wait
for her to cash them to keep his bank account current.
Just an idea!
mi
|
951.4 | Sounds fishy to me! | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Wed Jan 17 1990 12:54 | 19 |
| I have a friend who has been having trouble getting regular payements from
her ex for a long time. He pays occasionally, varying amounts of money.
Unfortunately she was divorced (in Texas) long before the current standard
of automatic payment through the courts, and wage garnishment, etc.
She cannot afford a lawyer so she contacted the court, which will provide
assistance free of charge. The FIRST thing they told her was to not accept
ANY money from her ex while they put together a case, or while the case was
pending. If she accepted any money from him then she is, in effect, agreeing
to the payment. So.... she just settles for what she can get because the
backlog is more than 1 year in her county. Something is better than nothing!
Perhaps your wife has been advised similarly.
Kristen
P.S. It is the same way with bounced checks. I had a roommate bounce some
checks to me. An attorney told me to not accept any partial repayment
of any kind or the court would not handle the case.
|
951.5 | HERE'S ANOTHER OPINION | WMOIS::JETTE | | Fri Jan 19 1990 15:35 | 26 |
| Sounds as though your ex is gathering evidence against you for breach
of contract. Granted, you really are still supporting the kids, but
the check is supposed to go directly to your ex. This could be a
tricky one. In Mass. (IMHO) anything goes depending on what judge you
get if this does come down to another visit to court. When I got
divorced (and this was 8 years ago so things may be a little different
now), the money one got for child support took in a whole realm of
things (as the word support denotes). It really means more than
clothes and food, it also means providing a home and the costs in main-
taining that home. Afterall, if there was only one child, one wouldn't
need more than a 2-bedroom residence vs. if there are 2 children of
different sexes, one would need a 3-bedroom residence which, in moist
cases costs more to own/rent, etc. Am I making any sense to you? The
child-support I got went to helping me stay in the marital home for my
kids. If I didn't have them, the home would have been sold as I didn't
need all that room just for myself. So, I would think the courts MIGHT
view it as I am trying to explain it and, therefore, you could be in a
little hot water if your ex wants to really push this to the max. Hope
this helps! I would ask a lawyer for advise ASAP!!! Also, you might
just want to ask your ex where the cancelled checks are because it is
making it difficult for you to maintain an accurate balance in your
checkbook and see what she (I am assuming you are the ex husband) has
to say about it and that might give you a rela big clue right there.
Good luck!
|
951.6 | there might be a reason | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Fri Jan 19 1990 15:51 | 15 |
| Did you try talking to your ex about WHY your daughter is paying
for her own clothes? We expect Kat to pay for her own clothes out
of her allowance now, at 16, as part of learning how to manage
money while she's still at home and it won't be a disaster if she
screws up a time or two. When she starts earning her own money, I
imagine we'll expect her to pay for even more of her own expenses,
and the money we have been spending on her is going into a college
fund.
If your daughter was doing something similar, the money you think
was being wasted might be going for something different but
equally beneficial to your daughter. In that case I don't blame
your ex for being upset.
--bonnie
|
951.7 | word to the wise | WMOIS::B_REINKE | if you are a dreamer, come in.. | Fri Jan 19 1990 19:50 | 10 |
| in re the checks
quite a few years ago my brother in law took a second mortgage on
his house. After a period of time the man who held the second
mortgage stopped cashing his checks. Bro in law made the mistake
of not keeping enough money in his account to cover the uncashed
checks. Result: the man came with in a hair of taking the house
for non payment of the mortgage.
Bonnie
|
951.8 | Even though it's logical, it might not be legal | UCOUNT::WALKER | | Mon Jan 22 1990 13:30 | 18 |
| This happened to me while I was growing up. My parents were divorced,
and I was living on my own (boarding school and then a summer job
on a farm). Since I wasn't living at home (at ALL, not even
vacations), my father sent me my part of the child support. My mother
continued to receive the child support for the other 3 kids. Although
this seemed/seems rational, especially since my mother hadn't had
any communication with me in years (no gifts, medical bills, clothing,
etc.), it was still ILLEGAL since the agreement was that she was
to receive the child support. When my mother finally took him to
court, I believe they did change the "order" to say that I would
receive my portion, but even though my father had documents to show
that he had been giving me the money in the past, he still had to
back-pay my mother, since that was done without the courts approval.
Hope this helps. I suggest you talk with an attorney.
Lisa
|
951.9 | | FRAGLE::PELUSO | There's ALWAYS room for ONE more | Mon Jan 22 1990 13:47 | 7 |
|
Sorry to break into this discussion, but I have a related question.
My friend has been layed off form a well paying job. He was paying
1/3 of his salary for child support. Now he is on unemployment. Does
he still have to pay Child support or is it waived (for lack of a
betterword)?
|
951.10 | | ICESK8::KLEINBERGER | I am a rock, I am an island | Mon Jan 22 1990 15:24 | 6 |
| Child Support is not waived unless he goes to court with a request for
an adjustment. He is required to pay the amount, and if he doesn't
when he does get a new job, all that salary can be garnished until
it is paid in full...
Tell him to consult a lawyer quickly...
|
951.11 | Do lawyers REALLY help? | FENNEL::GODIN | FEMINIST - and proud of it! | Tue Jan 23 1990 13:50 | 7 |
| All these suggestions to contact a lawyer -- I have to guess you've all
had better luck doing that than I have. On each of the three occasions
I have found it necessary to contact a lawyer, it cost me more than it
saved me and not just in money, either. Isn't there any other solution
in this society than to take something to court?
Karen
|
951.12 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Tue Jan 23 1990 14:08 | 6 |
| Contacting a lawyer does not imply going to court. Indeed, if you want to
AVOID going to court, contacting a lawyer may be your best bet. I've never
regretted the times I've chosen this path. Those who avoid lawyers may
not see the hidden cost until some years down the road.
Steve
|
951.13 | varies by state, too | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Tue Jan 23 1990 15:41 | 6 |
| In some states, his payments can be suspended while he's not
employed. But he'll have to notify the judge/court/service that
collects the money, and they'll tell him when he doesn't have to
pay.
--bonnie
|
951.14 | | GEMVAX::CICCOLINI | | Tue Jan 23 1990 16:07 | 4 |
| When you do talk to your lawyer, it might be beneficial to bring
up the fact that she appears to be managing just fine without the
child support. If she's plotting something, it could backfire into
having the amount of the payments reduced.
|
951.15 | You never know........... | JULIET::BOGLE_AN | | Tue Jan 23 1990 17:14 | 2 |
| Maybe your ex is saving the checks for a major purchase for your
daughter. Like a car, or college tuition.
|
951.16 | | DEC25::BRUNO | An Innocent Man | Tue Jan 23 1990 19:07 | 6 |
| RE: .15
If that was the case, wouldn't it make more sense for the ex to
cash the checks and put the money in an interest-bearing account?
Greg
|
951.17 | Get it notarized | COMET::BOWERMAN | | Wed Jan 24 1990 17:40 | 57 |
| Recently my ex called and asked if he could count on me to let him
claim our child on his income tax return so that he could take
advantage of a child care plan that is in effect in his company.
He does pay the daycare profider directly and the method of payment
was not specific in our case. I have sole custody and usually get the
tax credit.
I thought about it and discussed this with my husband and consulted
a lawyer(breafly over the phone). I finally agreed to the change for
"the tax year 1990 filed in April 1991". Following the advise of
my lawyer we wrote up a brief statement explaining this and then
went to a notary public and had it formalized.
I consulted a lawyer to verify if it was ok to let him claim the credit
for one year and not any others(he didn't have physical custody and in
the state of CO the tax credit is awarded to the parent with physical
custody). The lawyer explained that just because it is usually awarded
to the party who has physical custody doesn't mean we cant make our
oun arrangement as long as only one parent claims the child in a given
tax year. He did suggest that it would be safest for all parties to
formally accknowlege the agreement by getting it notorized so we did.
My oun advise when working with divorce agreements is talk about what
you want to do and see if both parties are in agreement with whatever
is proposed then get it formalized with the notory.
The expence in lawyer fees is when the two people are in disagreement
about something then you must present your case and let the unbias
judge decide what the agreement is going to be.
In another situation In a different divorce involving child support the
judge was told that the father, who was not awarded custody, was
currently unempoyed and the judge set the child support payments at
$30.00 a week til he got a job. Needless to say he did not pay
child support for many years (accumulating to more than $5000.00).
Eventually He did start sending me the money addressed to my daughter.
After much coresponence He has finally started wiring payments to a
savings account. Since He is working I guess I could take everything
back to court and ask about what the payments are suppose to be when he
is working.
He is not really making a great hit with his daughter who has seen him
all of three wks and two days in the last eight years. He did not send
a christmas package for her and nothing for her birthday....and he had
the nerve to ask me when I saw him last why I acted like I did not like
him. This Christmas my daughter did pick out two presents for her
father and I wrapped them up and sent them off and again no present or
card for Christmas or her birthday. The thing I dislike most is that he
talked to her on the phone and asked her what she wanted for Christmas
and basically let her believe that she would recieve these idems and
then nothing shows up.
Some people you can make agreements with and they will stick to them
and others will stick to them if it is convinient for them so get it in
writing and notarized.
janet
|
951.18 | get both sides | JETSAM::EYRING | | Wed Feb 21 1990 12:17 | 14 |
| RE: .0
Was it such a wise idea to change the prcess here based on the fact
that a 17 year old claims to have to buy her own clothes. Most kids I
know are prefectly able to spend more than you give them and on things
that you might rather not have them spending money on. Maybe she has
defined "clothes" as "the fad stuff I want to wear, not what my Mother
buys for me", and your ex was using the money for clothes. I'd have
talked to my ex anyway to get both sides of the story before making any
such changes, which, as several people have pointed out, may constitute
a violation of the original agreement.
My 2 cents.
|
951.19 | Response from anonymous author of base note | QUARK::HR_MODERATOR | | Wed Feb 21 1990 14:42 | 37 |
| Thanks to everyone for their input. I can't take the time for a
reply-by-reply response, but in general here's my response:
I didn't break the agreement until my ex had already broken it in at
least three different (and documented) ways. I'm still not sure I
broke it, since I am still paying all the child support required - and
more. Only a court could issue the ultimate decision about this, since
the decree doesn't specifically state I have to pay the support TO my
ex, only that I have to pay it.
I'm currently looking for a lawyer for advice. But I definitely would
prefer to avoid a court confrontation. I'd like to think we're adults
and can negotiate these things without a judge in attendance. Maybe
I'm wrong.
Many of the other points raised are good observations, but don't apply
to our case. For example, I know my ex isn't dependent on the child
support for paying college tuition, since my daughter is paying about
65% of her own tuition through scholarships and her earnings and the
balance is divided equally between my ex and me. And, yes, I can trust
my daughter to tell me the truth about who's buying her clothes. She's
not your average teenager - and I know that for a fact; it's not just a
proud parent talking. I mean, she came to me during the winter
holidays
and had to take money out of the account I'd set up to buy underwear.
And the first item on her Christmas list was socks -- plain, white
socks!
Does this sound like someone whose clothes are being bought for her?
As for talking to my ex, I've tried. I've called, and not had my calls
returned. I managed to make contact last week, only to be told "this
isn't a good time to talk about this." It's a week later and I still
haven't heard back at a "better" time.
As I said, I'm going to talk with a lawyer, to protect myself, but
I'm not going to fold on this one like I have on so many of the others.
|