T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
94.1 | More Info. | ODIXIE::WILSONJ | | Thu Oct 18 1990 10:44 | 5 |
| I don't know whether this is important but they were never married;
only dated for three months.
JMW
|
94.2 | Depends on the state guidelines | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Thu Oct 18 1990 14:30 | 13 |
|
I think it depends on your local/state laws. Most states will not TAKE your
income per se, but they might CONSIDER it in deciding whether he is able to
pay a certain amount. In many states, a prenuptual agreement will not matter
if they are allowed to consider your income.
As a matter of fact, it sometimes depends on the judge, not the laws (well
really they are guidelines, not laws). I know of one local judge who takes
the joint income and divides it in half (community property state) and then
considers that half when assigning child support. Most other judges use the
actual income, though.
Kristen
|
94.3 | | MEMV01::WILLIAMS | | Thu Oct 18 1990 14:39 | 5 |
| I DON'T KNOW WHAT STATE YOU LIVE IN BUT IN NEW HAMPSHIRE THE ONLY
INCOME THAT IS CONSIDERED IS THE IN COIME OF THE PARENTS AND THEY USE A
SET FORMULA BASED ON EARNING POWER AND PERCENTAGES AGAINST A PRE
DETERMINED LEVEL FOR EACH INCOME RANGE. I DON'T BELIEVE THAT YOUR
INCOME CAN BE COUNTED.
|
94.4 | Sunshine State | ODIXIE::WILSONJ | | Thu Oct 18 1990 15:13 | 2 |
| I live in Florida and I have a friend in a similar situation whose
income was counted because she married the father.
|
94.5 | ex | WILLEE::SKOWRONEK | | Fri Oct 19 1990 07:50 | 14 |
| My suggestion would be for you not to get married until after the
Child Support is ordered by the court. This might mean pushing
your wedding out quite awhile, but it might be worth it. I (speaking
as a custodial mom) feel that your income should not be considered
because you are not a parent of the child, therefore you should
not be responsible for helping to support the child ---- But,
unfortunately the courts have their own rules.
Good luck with whatever you decide to do, and with the court. Your
fiance sounds like a good father for wanting to have the support
increased --- it usually is not the NCP who wants this.
Debby
|
94.6 | I'll second that | SOARIN::GRAY | Follow the hawk, when it circles, ... | Sat Oct 20 1990 16:45 | 19 |
| .2> it sometimes depends on the judge, not the laws
In my brother's case, (Mass) his child support was
"adjusted" upwards. In the court order the Judge made note of
the fact that they (my brother and his girlfriend) were living
together and sharing expenses. She (the judge) then listed, but
did not directly calculate in, his girlfriend's salary. His
child support is now well above the "guidelines" and his appeal
was denied.
In discussions with his lawyer and his ex, he got the same
response. "Your girlfriend is making over $40,000/year. You can
afford to give your ex a lot more then the guidelines." My
brother's problem now is that if he ever breaks up with his
girlfriend, or he marrys her and she wants to stop working and
have children, he is going to be in a real finacial bind.
Richard
|
94.7 | | NRUG::MARTIN | GUN-CONTROL=Holding it with both hands | Sat Oct 20 1990 19:09 | 6 |
| I love it. And this is all in the name of proper support for the
"child(ren)".... yea, right...
This wouldn't happen to be that female judge that was being looked at
because of her, shall we say, less than balanced judgements....would
it?
|
94.8 | Justice Sheila E McGovern | SOARIN::GRAY | Follow the hawk, when it circles, ... | Sun Oct 21 1990 15:06 | 18 |
| .7> This wouldn't happen to be that female judge that was being looked at
.7> because of her, shall we say, less than balanced judgements....would
.7> it?
No this is not the one that Mass is trying to have removed.
This is Justice Sheila E. McGovern. She is one of the more
senior judges in the Probate & Family Court and she has a
reputation of being tough on men. It's all legal, it's just not
applied with the same rigor to both sides. Example: My brother's
ex supplied one paystub to have her income ($35,000+/year)
accepted as valid with no mention of her pension. The judge
required a second hearing to get "more" information from my
brother's company on his salary and pension value. So did she
consider both incomes before making a decision? Sure she did.
Richard
|
94.9 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Mon Oct 22 1990 10:51 | 1 |
| That seems to be the bottom line here. "Tough on men".
|
94.10 | For better or for worse!!??... | CSC32::N_WALLACE | Choices Happen | Mon Oct 22 1990 13:18 | 38 |
|
> My fiance currently pays $200 per month towards the support of his infant
> daughter. He is considering upping it to $300 because her mother
I say good for him. $300.00 per month is allot closer to
helping mom out with the *real* cost of raising a child
these days. Just wait till she want's to take ballet
lessons, needs braces for the overbite, and want's to
be on the cheerleading squad all in the same fiscal
year. Rule # 1 is........KIDS ARE EXPENSIVE!!
> constantly requests that he purchases her necessities. It almost
> appears that she contributes $0.00. This dollar amount was not court
I can assure you that if your hubby-to-be is only
sending her $200.00 per month, she is contributing
financially. Please see rule #1 above.
> After we are married and this should go to court, how do I keep my
> income out of it? Is there some type of prenuptual agreement or
Why is this so important to you? When you marry, you
marry the whole person, baggage and all. If that means
debts, kids, bad habits (dirty underwear on the
bathroom floor), etc, etc, than that is what it means.
I think you may want to sit down and ask yourself,
"Am I willing to accept all the BULL$#*% that comes
along with this-man-that-I-love". All of us have our
skeletons in the closet. This man's ex and this
man's daughter are not going to go away when You get
married. What's important is what's fair for everybody
concerned, especially the daughter, and learning to
accept REALITY for what it is.
-Neil
|
94.11 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Mon Oct 22 1990 13:48 | 17 |
|
Re: .0
Why worry about it? If you keep your finances separate so that in
looking at his financial records they don't see any of yours, how
will they know? This legal matter has nothing to do with you.
I asked this question before. Re: the girlfriend who makes 40K.
How did the court know that the girlfriend makes 40K? On what basis
did the court ask for that information? If I were the girlfriend I
wouldn't even go to the court hearing. It has nothing to do with her.
Other comments?
Steve
|
94.12 | | DELREY::PEDERSON_PA | Hey man, dig this groovy scene! | Mon Oct 22 1990 14:06 | 8 |
| re: .10
Sorry, I don't agree with your paragraph about including spouse
to-be's income.....My income should not be included in providing
for something that was obviously not of my doing. Who's to
know if the ex is *really* spending that-extra-money-from-the-
spouse-to-be on the child and not spending it at Casual Corner?
I am a spouse of an NCP, so draw on it what you will.
|
94.13 | $0.00 | ODIXIE::WILSONJ | | Tue Oct 23 1990 08:30 | 13 |
| -.10
The reason I say she contributes $0.00 is because he gives her $200 per
month and buys the baby clothes, food, pampers, 100% of the medical and
nursery. She does have a few outfits that my fiance did not purchase.
We recently had a 1 yr. birthday party and the baby's mother called my
fiance's mother to leave a list of the things to get for the party. WE
furnished everything for the party except a container of baked beans
which she picked up. His reason for wanting to increase the sum is
because she calls saying the baby is out of food, pampers etc. She
says she never has money which is why her phone is continuously
disconected. Funny how she always has on a new outfit.
JMW
|
94.14 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Tue Oct 23 1990 08:58 | 6 |
|
>Funny how she always has on a new outfit.
Yes, it is a funny value system that our society holds....... Funny
that in 1969 when we put men on the moon that the money spent on womens
cosmetics alone could have put 3-4 moon walks that year.
|
94.15 | screaching halt | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Tue Oct 23 1990 09:05 | 6 |
| When my ex kept giving me the 'ol sob story about how she needed more
more more, I told her that if she could not take care of the children, then
I'd *GLADLY* take them off her hands and see that they were taken care
of.
fred();
|
94.16 | | DELREY::PEDERSON_PA | Hey man, dig this groovy scene! | Tue Oct 23 1990 09:07 | 9 |
| re: .14
Let's not pick at women and their cosmetics :-) As my
mom used to say "...you haf to suffa to be beautiful".
As time goes on, women depend more on cosmetics as men do
hair replacement systems :-) let's give equal time to
both genders.
|
94.17 | buy ma bell stock.. | CSC32::N_WALLACE | Choices Happen | Tue Oct 23 1990 09:27 | 9 |
|
.13
And I thought *I* was the only one with an ex who has the phone
disconnected on a regular basis. I'll bet the phone company just
*loves* people like that, at $40.00 per re-connect fee.
-Neil
|
94.18 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Tue Oct 23 1990 09:52 | 7 |
| .16 Understand that it is not a hit on women alone. It is that there
seems to be a different value system here that says that we put
ourselves above our children. Booze, butts, rec-drugs, are sometimes
placed above the basic needs of what children need. The NCP becomes the
bad boy, walking wallet here and this is wrong thinking. But, men as a
whole do not spend the countless millions on them selves for vanity as
women.
|
94.19 | No way | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Tue Oct 23 1990 10:14 | 40 |
|
re 10
Neil,
I agree with you in principal that when you marry someone you marry
the whole person baggage and all. But I disagree with your opinion
that she should support another woman's child. She has nothing to
do with this child's conception or birth and is not legally bound
to the child. Why do you feel that folks who are not the birth
parent's of a child should be legally required to help support the
child?
I am planning on marrying a NCdad. He and I live together. I make
a considerable amount more than he does. I love both he and his
daughter. Yet I refuse to be forced to legally support her. Her
being brought into this world was not my decision. Her mother made
that decision and knew full well at the start that she was going to
have to raise this child as a single mother.
Both John and I are college educated, she is not. She clearly is not
going to make nearly as much money as we do. Is that a reason why I
should have to support her child? WRONG!!!
I do help support this child when she is with us. I help pay for the
food that she eats, for the room that she sleeps in, for the clothes
that she wears. He is legally required to maintain a home which she
can be a part of when she is with us. I help contribute to that cost.
So in a way I am already supporting this child.
However, I refuse to allow my finances to be given over in child
support to this child's mom. I worked my a** off to go through school
on my own. I want children of my own. I will chose to go that route
so that I could afford to give my kids the best I can.
It is about time that the courts started making the people responsible
for bringing the children into the world resposible for supporting them
when they are on this earth!!
Michele
|
94.20 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Tue Oct 23 1990 10:49 | 5 |
| .19
HERE! HERE!! (Standing ovation on the tube!) There is alot of this crud
going on and the system punisish the responsible folk for what the
irresponsible one do.
|
94.21 | Life isn't fair... | CSC32::N_WALLACE | Choices Happen | Tue Oct 23 1990 11:40 | 56 |
|
Hi Michele,
A few quick points to help clarify my position. I kinda
figured my response in .10 would generate some questions.
> I agree with you in principal that when you marry someone you marry
> the whole person baggage and all. But I disagree with your opinion
> that she should support another woman's child. She has nothing to
But Michele, reality teaches us that, if .0 marries this man,
she *will* be supporting the child. Both financial and
emotional.
> I am planning on marrying a NCdad. He and I live together. I make
> a considerable amount more than he does. I love both he and his
> daughter. Yet I refuse to be forced to legally support her. Her
Nobody likes a gun to there head. I don't think you should
be legally required to support her either. My point in .10
was that this child is going to be an issue that both
husband *and* wife are going to have to deal with. That's
one of the things marriage is about, solving problems
together. Getting hung up on weather to consider the
spouses income in determining child support amount, in
my opinion, is a legal rathole. As I said in .10, What's
important is what's fair to *all* parties concerned,
including the spouse of the NCP. Clearly, it is not fair
to the NCP family to increase the amount of child support
due to an increase in income, when the current amount *is*
meeting the needs of the child.
> I do help support this child when she is with us. I help pay for the
> food that she eats, for the room that she sleeps in, for the clothes
> that she wears. He is legally required to maintain a home which she
> can be a part of when she is with us. I help contribute to that cost.
> So in a way I am already supporting this child.
Exactly my point!!
> It is about time that the courts started making the people responsible
> for bringing the children into the world responsible for supporting them
> when they are on this earth!!
I Totally agree....
-Neil
|
94.22 | exactly | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Tue Oct 23 1990 12:15 | 10 |
|
re -1
Neil
I think we agree on the same thing. Just the way it was worded in
.10 was not clear to me.
Michele
|
94.23 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Tue Oct 23 1990 12:39 | 40 |
|
Re: .21
> Getting hung up on weather to consider the spouses income in
> determining child support amount, in my opinion, is a legal
> rathole. As I said in .10, What's important is what's fair
> to *all* parties concerned, including the spouse of the NCP.
> Clearly, it is not fair to the NCP family to increase the amount
> of child support due to an increase in income, when the current
> amount *is* meeting the needs of the child.
I'm not so sure that you do agree with Michele. What you've
written here says to me that if the current amount doesn't meet
the child's needs then it is fair to increase it. Fine, I'll
agree with that, as long as the increase is based on the NCP's
ability to pay that increase and does not consider any other
person's income.
A second hitch is that here in NH, the child support amount is NOT
based on need. It is determined solely on the ability to pay as
outlined in a state generated norm. So following what I think you're
saying here is that the NCPs spouse's income should be fair game just
because he/she is now married to the NCP and the incomes together mean
there's now a deeper pocket.
It is NOT, in my opinion, a "legal rathole." Why should any court
have the right to do this. Based on what? According to what legal
principle?
Of course, your argument about marrying the entire package including
the baggage from the past is quite right. Any person who marries into
a situation like that and doesn't expect to become both emotionally and
financially involved in that past is living in lala land, BUT at that
point it's a question of volition. That person is making a choice
and along with the NCP works out an equitable way of dealing with the
situation. What people are objecting to here is the court/government
getting involved where they have no business doing so.
Steve
|
94.24 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Tue Oct 23 1990 12:56 | 7 |
| ..... And still the fun part is that more than 70% of the populas is
divorced! So you cannot go dumping this guy and sucessfully finding a
guy with no excess baggage! We are all in a fix and the only way out is
to fix the problem with good laws and better understanding of todays
CP/NCP! The only way out! Outside of getting together with some of the
folks here and renting a wood chipper and doing a two for one deal!:-)
Maybe a three for one! Wow! This could really be a solution!
|
94.25 | double talk | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Tue Oct 23 1990 14:32 | 9 |
| The key phrase here is "ability to pay". Very often the court will
say "since *ncp's spouse* is providing $X then that relieves some
of ncp's expenses. Therefore ncp has the *ability to pay* more".
In reality *ncp* is having to pay more because his spouse is working.
In reality, the spouse is paying child support to the ex.
This is &^%$#@!!!!!!!
fred();
|
94.26 | It's still not fair... | CSC32::N_WALLACE | Choices Happen | Tue Oct 23 1990 14:48 | 13 |
|
Steve,
I object to having the government/courts trying to put a gun to
my head and telling me how to fix this too. Especially when they
are doing such a lousey job of it. As i've said before, let's do
what's fair for everybody concerned, including the NCP's spouse.
I don't know what the laws are here in Colorado, but back in
Georgia, where I got the big D, my attorney advised me the court
looks at the NCP's income. Period.
-Neil
|
94.27 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Tue Oct 23 1990 14:48 | 17 |
| Re: 94.25
That is how I see it, too Fred. I have no problem with the
court asking what % of the household expenses are paid by me.
If I remarry, I can accept that the court might consider that
I have lower living expenses than I did before and ask me for
a new financial affidavit to consider whether I alone can afford
more, because the living expenses I personally pay have gone down,
but I would say no way to an outright demand to see what salary my
second wife makes so that they can tap that, too. It is none of
their business.
By the way, what happened to the .25 that Neil entered that
mysteriously disappeared while I was replying to it?
Steve
|
94.28 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Tue Oct 23 1990 14:52 | 10 |
|
Re: .26
Huh? I'm confused. What is the point about the "gun to your
head to fix this too." I don't understand.
I'd agree that Georgia has the right idea, though.
Steve
|
94.29 | Oh my gosh... | CSC32::N_WALLACE | Choices Happen | Tue Oct 23 1990 15:02 | 12 |
|
Steve,
I was just trying to make the point that I too object to the
courts *forcing* you to add your incomes together.
Sometimes I try just a little too hard. Maybe I have a future
in writing those cheep Sex novels they sell down at the First
Amendment Bookstore.
-Neil
|
94.30 | it's my territory | CSC32::K_JACKSON | It's not a dungeon-it's a F.U.D.I. | Tue Oct 23 1990 15:11 | 8 |
| > Sometimes I try just a little too hard. Maybe I have a future
> in writing those cheep Sex novels they sell down at the First
> Amendment Bookstore.
Watch it Neil, that's where I have been selling mine
and it hasn't been too profitable... :^)
|
94.31 | How's this for reasonable? | SOARIN::GRAY | Follow the hawk, when it circles, ... | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:14 | 47 |
|
Some background:
In a discussion about child support, one of the issues is the
contribution of the CP. How much is it, and is that "enough".
Some of the problems with trying to discuss this aspect are;
- you have no audit/accounting of how much money is
actually spent on the child(ren).
- the "cost of raising a child" is a subjective analysis.
What a school janitor spent to raise his children is
different then what the bank CEO spent to raise his.
So, for the sake of discussion, lets say that a married couple
spends 35% of their income to raise their children. Then a
reasonable support agreement might be;
Income Support
CP 20,000 7,000 Now they each pay 7,000/year
NCP 20,000 7,000 and it looks fair to me.
---------- ------
40,000 x 35% = 14,000
Now the problem:
It seems to me, that in this situation, if the NCP gets married again
and the NCP's spouse's salary is thrown into the calculation, we have;
Income Support
CP 20,000 7,000 Now the NCP and NCP-S pay
NCP 20,000 7,000 14,000 (see above) and the
NCP-S 20,000 7,000 total support is 21,000 which
---------- ------ is more then would be spent if
60,000 x 35% = 21,000 the CP and NCP had stayed married!
Another problem:
What happens to the above if, the CP earns less then her/his
potential by design? What happens if the CP quits work?
MY conclusion is that before the NCP's spouse contributes to the
support of the children, it sure would be nice to:
1) Account for the money labeled as child support
2) Have some legal lid on the "mandatory" contribution of the NCP
3) Have the legal system assess some "mandatory" contribution to be
made by the CP
Richard
|
94.32 | When does a CP pull the load ? | MFGMEM::DALRYMPLE | | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:27 | 9 |
| I saw mention of including the NCP's spouse in figuring a possible
support increase to the CP, BUT what happens when the CP has an
additional income , a new spouse , etc. Do we only make an adjustment
when an NCP seems to have additional ??? WHY ? MY X pays the mortgage
with my substantail support payments. Where and when does it get better
?
d.d.
|
94.33 | How they do it in NH | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Oct 24 1990 13:48 | 29 |
|
Re: .32
Yeah, my ex also pays the mortgage with my support payments and
has $655 a month left over!!! Tell me about it.
Re: .31
New Hampshire does something similar to your scenario. They
have a cookbook:
1) How much do the NCP and CP gross together monthly?
2) What % of combined gross incomes is earned by NCP and by CP.
3) How much should be available for support from that amount?
(The amount available for support is taken directly from a
state supplied chart.)
4) NCP pays % of support amount equal to % earned of combined
gross
For example: (These numbers are not real. Just made up to
show the process)
1) NCP makes $3500. CP makes $1500. Total: $5000
2) NCP makes 70% of $5K. CP makes 30% of $5K.
3) State chart shows support amount for 2 kids from $5K gross: $1800.
4) NCP pays 70% of $1800 to CP: $1260. CP responsible for balance.
Steve
|
94.34 | some just get greedy | MFGMEM::DALRYMPLE | | Wed Oct 24 1990 14:07 | 33 |
|
re.32:
Are you sure it's that way ? Or could it be like this : ?
judge: How much does the father gross per week ?
Father/lawyer: About $800.00 , your honor.
judge: let's take 33% of that.
final outcome:
33% of gross is almost 50% of net. where did the mother pay/be included
?
These are just fake numbers too, but this is what Mass. does. I know
for a FACT. Almost 3 years since I lived in my house and supporting
my 2 sons to the tune of over $34,000.00 , I have NOT seen $200.00
worth of clothes total. I have bought additional above my support,
paid for medical bills she refuses to pay (but is court ordered to pay)
and a whole lot more..... I have NEVER missed seeing my sons EVER and
have been denied 17 documented times. I work three jobs now. I have
to "exist" cuz it sure ain't living..................
ps. We should VOTE the judges out at the same time we get rid of the
other Mass. sludge in office... To bad they are appointed !?!?
d.d.
|
94.35 | oops | MFGMEM::DALRYMPLE | | Wed Oct 24 1990 14:11 | 4 |
| that should have been re:.33, excuse please...
|
94.36 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Oct 24 1990 15:55 | 8 |
|
Re:.34
Yes, NH does it just as I described. That is where I live and
pay support.
Steve
|
94.37 | support orders are tooooo much | SMC006::LASLOCKY | | Thu Oct 25 1990 10:20 | 22 |
| It seems to me that no matter which system your state uses, they all
seem to be out of touch with reality. Any system that takes close to
50% of your take home pay is not fair. Then you add the arbitrary
rulings from judges that are burnt out and don't want to hear about
what's fair and you have a system that is out of control.
I realize that in the past many of the custodial parents got the royal
shaft, but it isn't right to make those of us who filed under the new
guide lines pay for the past indiscrepencies. When I filed for
divorce, which was the month that the new guidelines took effect in
Mass., My lawyer put the timeing for this action in a phrase that
relates to "a day late and a dollar short". There are no options
available, your support is based on an arbitrary set of guidelines.
It isn't right that there is no accounting for the money used for child
support. My son comes to visit in clothes with holes in them and my ex
shows up in new outfits, new coats and a new car. My ex is a
Registered Nurse who refuses to get a full time job, and the court
dosn't care. (Just so you know my kids are 11 and 16 so she doesn't
need to be home for them.) You figure it out....I can't.
Bob
|
94.38 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Thu Oct 25 1990 12:09 | 8 |
| Bob,
Your wrong in some respects that she doesn't have to be home for them.
Esp the 11 year old. As a landlord, I have seen moms do this sort of
thing and the kids get into some trouble for there is no parential
mentor around. But what do I know about this, I am a NCP also.
Geo
|
94.39 | | RDVAX::COLLIER | Bruce Collier | Fri Oct 26 1990 14:23 | 39 |
| It seems far less obvious to me than to most people writing here that
fairness requires ignoring the income of a new spouse of a
non-custodial parent. I find it very difficult to generate some
general principle as to what "fairness" would be. But let me give one
hypothetical example.
I know a couple where one spouse is a mutual fund manager, making
perhaps $90,000 / year. At the time the couple was expecting their
first child, the other spouse received a pink slip as a teacher in the
Boston school system, so the teacher became a homemaker, and has since
been raising the now two kids in the family. Suppose they now got
divorced; presumably the manager would be a non-custodial parent,
called on for something like $30,000 per year in child support
payments.
Now, suppose the manager got remarried, perhaps to a V.P. in her firm
making $200,000. And suppose she decided to have another kid, and to
quit work to raise it. Now the two parents of the original children
(still pre-schoolers) have a combined income of $0. But the
non-custodial parent lives in a family with income of $200,000. Is it
obvious that child support to the custodial parent should be $0?
I do not know what Solomon would do in this case, nor in the more
common case where the non-custodial parent and the new spouse both have
more modest incomes. I can see the merit in the point that the new
spouse had no responsibility for the child(ren), and thus shouldn't be
taxed. But I can also see the merit in the notion that the
non-custodial parent should contribute support roughly in proportion to
his or her ability, and that acquiring a new spouse with significant
resources does clearly impact the NCP's financial ability. Fairness
here seems at least complicated.
What do others think is "fair" in a case where physical custody is
being split 50/50, and both parents have comfortable incomes, but one
makes some 25% more than the other? That's roughly my current
situation, and I don't think the court system will know what formula to
apply to whom.
- Bruce
|
94.40 | | FRAGLE::WASKOM | | Fri Oct 26 1990 15:12 | 19 |
| Bruce -
For specifics in your instance. When I was in this situation with my
ex, neither of us contributed anything to the other. Housing and food
were split 50/50 by virtue of the half-time living arrangement.
Daycare/summer camp costs were paid either weekly, with the 'on-call'
parent for that week footing the bill, or split evenly with two checks
sent to the provider. Clothing wound up being split fairly evenly,
with a fairly complete wardrobe at both homes. (I bought winter
parkas, 'cause I took the kid skiing and they had the "need" with me.)
All those miscellaneous fees got paid by the parent 'on-call' the week
the fee came due, and it pretty much evened out.
Worked well for us, your mileage may vary. (Nearly gave the judge a
coronary, but we'd already been operating that way quite amicably for
about two years by the time we got to court, so it got rubber-stamped
to continue.)
Alison
|
94.41 | Responsibility!!! | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Mon Oct 29 1990 04:58 | 38 |
|
re 39
Bruce,
In my opinion, the only two people who should be financially supporting
a child of their own is the mother and father of said child.
Regardless of money of other parties brougt into subsequent
relationships, the responsibility still lies with the natural parents
of the child. This is one place where the court system has gone wrong.
By allowing non-natural parent's income into the picture, they have
allowed the natural parent(s) to reneg on their responsibility to their
child.
Now I agree that the good of the children should and must come first,
but at what cost? That may sound cynical, but I see absolutely no
logical reason why a non-natural parent should have to pay for a
child that is not their responsibility. The courts by doing so have
sent a message to parents in such a situation that it is ok for
them to ignore their responsibility. Now by allowing them to reneg
on their financial responsibility, don't you think that some parents
will take advantage of this and reneg on their emotional and physical
responsibility to their child?
Somehow a message has to be sent to parents that no-one else is
responsible for their children but them. When I decide to have
a child, I know that myself and the father will be the only two
people on this earth that are responsible for that child. I
may be marrying a NCDad. So a great deal of his income already
goes to support one child, I will have to make up the difference
with our own child. I have no objections to that becuase I want
to do so. Now each of us make a good years salary, but neither
of us could afford to stay home to raise a child. Why should the
mother of his first child be allowed to do so simply because he
now has a higher combined income? Why should she be allowed to
reneg on her responsiblity to her child?
Michele
|
94.42 | Voluntary vs. Non-voluntary | SCAACT::COX | Kristen Cox - Dallas ACT Sys Mgr | Mon Oct 29 1990 20:09 | 36 |
|
I think there are two issues here:
(1) Voluntary reduction in ability to support
(2) Non-voluntary reduction in ability to support
Bruce's extreme example was a voluntary reduction. In this instance,
if the parent makes the decision to reduce his/her income, then that
parent has a responsibility to find the means to continue supporting at
the present level (new spouse or other means, however s/he can find
it). If the reduction is non-voluntary (loss of job, hospital, etc.),
then some alternative should be sought - reduction or elimination
(temporary) of support, etc.... In neither of these cases should the
non-parent (i.e. spouse of either parent) be ORDERED to help out.
There is no legal tie to these children.
I don't mind cooking, cleaning, doing laundry, listening to, helping
with homework, etc... for David's kids - and I don't even mind that a
portion of my hard-earned salary goes to provide for them (now WHAT
portion is another story!). But the day someone ORDERS any part of my
salary to support these children is the day I'm in the divorce courts
too (which ends up HURTING them because their support would have to be
reduced in order for David to pay me $.10!). I'm sorry, but my support
of them - emotional, physical, financial, etc. - is my choice and
nobody will order me to provide it. They have two parents and should
live within the means of THEIR TWO parents - even if the means are
different than the two parents of my children.
As you can see, I don't feel very strongly about this....
Kristen
P.S. I am told that the Texas courts have a method for handling
temporary changes in support due to non-voluntary measures. If it is
voluntary, then the NCP better have a way to pay the same support. We
haven't tested this, and hope to not!
|
94.43 | Hmmm, how about ... | SOARIN::GRAY | Follow the hawk, when it circles, ... | Tue Oct 30 1990 08:36 | 31 |
|
How about this for a minor twist to cloud the issue? Is there a
notion in the judicial system that goes like this:
If an NCP loses his/her job and can't support them self,
there is no public safety net. The NCP depends on savings (ha
ha), parents and relatives. If that support is not present, the
NCP is in the street. (read, it doesn't cost the taxpayer any
money)
If the CP loses his/her job and can't support them self,
then the CP depends on savings, parents, relatives AND the public
safety net, AFDC. (read, it cost the taxpayer money)
Hence, the judicial system trys to get whatever it can from
the NCP or people directly related to the CP or NCP. Under this
scenario, "related" would include parents, siblings and new
spouses of both CP and NCP.
The problem with going after parents and siblings, I think,
is that there is a lot of history and precedent against
collecting a debt from a relative who hasn't signed some dotted
line, but a spouse is fair game.
Every time I ask an attorney this question, I get a political non
answer. I sure would like to know how judges and attorneys view
this part of the issue.
Richard
|
94.44 | equal rights??? | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Tue Oct 30 1990 10:09 | 13 |
| re .43
I don't know if it is the Judicial system or the Legislative that
is the problem here, but in recent years there has been a *big*
push to collect child support payments from the NCP (ie saves
states money from AFDC). However, there has been little or
nothing done to support the visitation rights of the children
and NCP (ie, doesn't cost the state anything so so-what).
Personally I am in favor of the NCP providing child support, but
I find this Legislative/Judicial approach *HIGHLY* hopochritical.
fred();
|
94.45 | What!!!!!!!!???????? | SQM::MACDONALD | | Tue Oct 30 1990 12:43 | 16 |
|
Re: .43
Frankly I think the idea is ridiculous.
My brother hasn't paid support for years as far as I can determine,
and you are suggesting that perhaps they should go after my parents,
me, my sister, or other brothers? Are you for real?! Even thinking
someone might be considering such an idea, gets my blood boiling.
Why would you be asking an attorney such a question? Where is this
coming from? Inquiring minds want to know. I expect this is a
joke, right?
Steve
|
94.46 | | NRUG::MARTIN | GUN-CONTROL=Holding it with both hands | Tue Oct 30 1990 15:34 | 5 |
| UM, Steve... I think you misunderstood what he was saying. Corect me
if youd like, but I think he was saying that as well as depending upon
the rels and family members, the CP ALSO has the safety net of Welfare.
YEs?
|
94.47 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Oct 31 1990 06:34 | 11 |
|
Re: .46
You are right. He is saying that, but that was in the second
paragraph and the note went on to say something about historical
precedent against collecting from someone who hadn't signed on
the dotted line. It wasn't all that clear, which is why I wrote
what it seemed to be saying to me and asked for clarification.
Steve
|
94.48 | Some clarification of .43 | SOARIN::GRAY | Follow the hawk, when it circles, ... | Wed Oct 31 1990 07:43 | 50 |
|
.45> you are suggesting that perhaps they should go after my parents,
.45> me, my sister, or other brothers?
NO WAY, ABSOLUTELY NOT !!!
I'm saying they might like to, but they don't try because
.43> there is a lot of history and precedent against collecting
.43> a debt from a relative who hasn't signed some dotted line
.45> Why would you be asking an attorney such a question? Where is this
.45> coming from? [...] I expect this is a joke, right?
This is definitely not a joke. It comes from trying to make sense
out of the system. Here is my example.
In 1989, I had a support order that required I pay all
expenses (I was still living in the marital home). In March of
1989, my ex succeeded in having the court force me to leave.
When they re-wrote the support order, the second support order
referenced the first support order in such a way as to require
that I pay support of $450/month MORE THAN MY INCOME! Obviously
and error, right?
Well, I filed a motion for reconsideration and the hearing
wasn't scheduled until June. Now keep in mind, I'm getting behind
in bills at the rate of $450/month PLUS my own living expenses!
At the hearing in June, I'm last on the list. The judge takes
the lawyers in chambers and says "The order needs to be changed,
but we don't have time today", so the hearing is rescheduled to
August. In August, I get the same deal, rescheduled to
September. In September, the telephone, electric and gas are
shut off at the marital home. My ex (who has refused to get a
job) has filed for emergency welfare aid. Now the judicial
system finds the time to hear my case. I get a new support order
(but the debt caused by the first is still my responsibility).
I start thinking, the court is busy and they have to choose
which cases they hear and how they fix problems. Fair is not
just, him, her and the kids. It also includes the taxpayer.
Does the court try to take as much as it can, from who ever it
can, before it makes the taxpayer pay?
Richard
PS When I was no longer directly responsible for her bills, my
ex broke down and started substitute teaching to supplement
the alimony and child support payments. No welfare.
|
94.49 | | ICS::STRIFE | | Wed Oct 31 1990 07:46 | 5 |
| re .43
I'm going to stay totally away from the new spouse issue here but, I
know of NO case law or statutory law that allows the courts to order
relatives -- grandparents, aunts, uncles etc. -- to pay child support.
|
94.50 | another one for you | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Wed Oct 31 1990 08:13 | 11 |
| Here's a scarry one if you have kids.
More and more the *parents* of teen age fathers are being required
to pay the child support for their sons.
Before you jump on me for what the parents of the *mother* get stuck
with, *much* more often than not the teen age mother will leave home
and go on welfare and W.I.C. I have never heard anything about the
mother's parenst being requred to help reimburse the welfare payments.
fred();
|
94.51 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Wed Oct 31 1990 08:41 | 2 |
| Is there a court case? An actual docket number that I could read at the
local law lib?
|
94.52 | more info please | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Wed Oct 31 1990 08:49 | 19 |
|
re -1
Fred
Could you provide more info on this. I have never heard of such
a thing. Having lived in a location where there were a new crop
of teenage parents each year I am curious as to how this has come
about. Also, it is a common myth that the majority of teenage
mothers go on public aid. In fact, I have witnessed quite the
opposite. The teenage mother's were living with her parents or
the father's parents. Granted, there are many that do go on
public aid. This is an area that really has yet to be addressed
in the courts.
I don't see how it would be legal to force either set of grandparent's
to support the grandchild.
Michele
|
94.53 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Oct 31 1990 11:39 | 32 |
|
Re: .48
.45> you are suggesting that perhaps they should go after my parents,
.45> me, my sister, or other brothers?
.48> NO WAY, ABSOLUTELY NOT !!!
.48> I'm saying they might like to, but they don't try because ...
Well, that is certainly clear, but the following confuses me:
.48> I start thinking, the court is busy and they have to choose
.48> which cases they hear and how they fix problems. Fair is not
.48> just, him, her and the kids. It also includes the taxpayer.
.48> Does the court try to take as much as it can, from who ever it
.48> can, before it makes the taxpayer pay?
The final question above is the confusing part, it seems to be
contradicting what you said above. If the court goes after the CP
and the NCP and can't get enough to support the children, then
who would it be appropriate for the court "to take as much as it
can" from before going to the taxpayer? It seems relatives of the
NCP/CP would be the only place; you say that that is not what
you are suggesting; and yet this final question appears to be
advocating a court which goes for whomever has money before going
to the taxpayer.
This sounds great to me too, but if it isn't the relatives, where
will the money come from?
Steve
|
94.54 | | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Wed Oct 31 1990 13:16 | 27 |
|
re -1
Steve,
Why shouldn't the parents of the child be the ONLY ones responsible?
Why should relatives have to pay support for children that are not
their own?
I can understand if someone is unemployed and needs help that the
family if it is financially able should help out as much as it
possibly can. But to have that mandated by the courts is quite another
thing. One is out of a sense of compassion and family duty, while the
other is being forced upon someone.
However, if a parent looses a job which helps support thier child, they
should look for another job. It may not be the job they want, and it
may very well be flipping burgers. There are plenty of jobs out there
to be had. Why is it that it is common occurance for NCP to have
to work two or three jobs to meet their support payments and to exist
on the remainder, but unemployed folks can expect to live off of other
people? Why does this country still advocate non-responsibility on
the part of the parent?
Makes no sense!!
Michele
|
94.55 | my information is second hand--but | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Wed Oct 31 1990 14:23 | 17 |
| RE .52. Michael (parents responsible for tean ager's child support)
I don't have any direct case numbers or experience on this. Where
I got my information was from a ToughLove group that I belong to
and was fairly active in up until about six months ago. One of
the parents said that one of their friends was being put into this
situation and that some states (I believe Indiana was mentioned) are
getting really nasty about this.
The fact is that parents can be held liable for legal and financial
responsibility of minor children (unless the child has been
"emancipated"). Along the same line I *do* know of one case where
a criminal act took place that destroyed certain property. The
property owner took the *parents* to court--and won a judgement
against them.
fred();
|
94.56 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Wed Oct 31 1990 14:52 | 14 |
|
Re: -1
Michele,
I am agreeing with you. Relatives should NOT be responsible.
I'm only agreeing that it would be terrific if when the parents
can't pay, that there be some other place but the taxpayer. We
all know, however, that terrific or not it's wishful thinking.
That is the point I was making.
Steve
|
94.57 | One more try at this ... | SOARIN::GRAY | Follow the hawk, when it circles, ... | Thu Nov 01 1990 09:47 | 48 |
|
.53> If the court goes after the CP
.53> and the NCP and can't get enough to support the children, then
.53> who would it be appropriate for the court "to take as much as it
.53> can" from before going to the taxpayer? It seems relatives of the
.53> NCP/CP would be the only place; you say that that is not what
.53> you are suggesting; and yet this final question appears to be
.53> advocating a court which goes for whomever has money before going
.53> to the taxpayer.
Steve, I seem to be having a problem making this clear enough.
I am NOT ADVOCATING anything !!!!
I am trying to 'guess at' and or 'understand' how THE COURT
thinks. They keep doing things, I think, are totally unreasonable
and going after money from people who would not otherwise pay.
What possible reasoning could THEY be using to do this. I DON'T
think its right. I just want to know, WHAT THE &%#* do they
think they are doing.
Another war story (I believe this was one of Judge Shirley McGovern's)
This guy looses his job and is out of work for more than six
months. His new wife gets a promotion in a neighboring state (she
is a middle level manager), so he moves out of Mass. He now owes
over $5,000 in child support and lives out of state. His ex
invites him back to his child's christening, and the police
arrest him. The Judge puts him in jail for "contempt of court"
because he hasn't paid his child support. The judge makes it
clear that he isn't getting out until it is paid in full. What
happens, his new wife and his parents sign for a loan and pay!
In a normal family, if the parents are out of work, then
there is less money or no money and THAT'S THE END OF IT. How
does the court get a man with no job to pay a bill? The court
knows, that if his relatives have money, and they put enough
pressure on, then one of the relatives will pay! I think this
stinks!!!
However, I would like to know: Why would the court WANT to
do this? What gives them the JUSTIFICATION to do it? Does our
culture here in the USA think this is OK?
Have I cleared my position up, or made in worse?
Richard
|
94.58 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Thu Nov 01 1990 09:57 | 12 |
|
Re: .57
Ah, yes, it is cleared up now. It was not clear that what you
were doing was trying to "get into their heads" to see what they
were thinking. It appeared to me as if that was what YOU were
thinking.
Thanks for taking the trouble to explain. I'm with you now.
Steve
|
94.59 | Another point of view.... | GENRAL::C_ANDERSON | | Thu Nov 01 1990 10:38 | 31 |
| I have another point of view to share here and, since I'm a CP, I guess
I see things from a slightly different way.......
Legally, I don't know whether the courts have a right to enforce
relatives, new spouses, etc. to foot the bills for support, but IMHO I
don't see that much of a problem with it. The "relatives" part of it
is actually harder for me to see than the new spouse. Let me
explain.....
I realize that jobs are being lost, people are out of work, homes are
being lost, etc. by parents directly responsible for support payments
to their children, but the simple fact remains that the child(ren)
STILL need to live (i.e. food, clothes, school activites, etc.). For
ANY parent, either CP or NCP, that child should be the first priority,
not a new husband/wife, a new family, or a new way of living. As a
CP, I did not CHOOSE my new lifestyle when my spouse chose to divorce
me nor did my chldren. We were victims of a lifestyle change that cut
our income in half overnight. Before any ex thinks about taking on a
"new lifestyle", both they and the person that they may be choosing to
share it with SHOULD be aware and responsible enough to know that their
first priority is to the children that they parented, not to their
present lifestyle.
I feel that some of us have become irresponsible to these children, and
we feel that society should "pick up the tab" for their life because
we're out of work, having hard times, etc. If, as a parent, you choose
to start a new life, members of that new life take on joint
reponsibilities with you.....and IMHO, that includes your chidren.
After all, we're parents for life, not until we start a new family.
Chris
|
94.60 | $0.02 | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Thu Nov 01 1990 11:33 | 25 |
| re. 59 chris
I agree with most of what you say about being responsible for the
children. BUT---
What we are discussing here is: Should the NCP become *unable* to
pay due to *involuntary* circumstance (ie, lost job, injured, etc)
should the NCP's spouse/relatives be required to pick up the child
support payments?? If the NCP was still living with the family
(still married) and was laid-off and/or injured, would the court go
to the NCP's parents/relatives and *require* that they help out
with the family expenses?
In Colorado and it appears most other states if you are
injured/laid-off, then the child support does not get reduced until
the court orders the reduction. The court system being backed up
the way it is, this may not happen for several months. The NCP
may not have the financial capability to higher a lawyer should this
happen. The back payments become a legal debt, and the court often
goes after the NCP's spouse (who had nothing to do with bringing
the children into the world) to collect that debt.
fred();
|
94.62 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Thu Nov 01 1990 13:10 | 53 |
|
Re: .59
Chris,
I'm feeling just a little angry with your reply so you might want
press 'next unseen' if you don't care to read what I have to say.
> As a CP, I did not CHOOSE my new lifestyle when my spouse chose
> to divorce me nor did my chldren. We were victims of a lifestyle
> change that cut our income in half overnight.
What you've just written sounds real familiar to me. It takes on
a tone of blaming your ex-spouse for it all and leaves you as a
"victim." Well maybe, maybe not. I often heard this from my ex and
still do occasionally, but it takes two to tango which is something
that she didn't seem to understand since she didn't then and still
doesn't accept any of the responsibility for the condition of our
relationship which even she agreed was pretty bad.
> Before any ex thinks about taking on a "new lifestyle", both they
> and the person that they may be choosing to share it with SHOULD
> be aware and responsible enough to know that their first priority
> is to the children that they parented, not to their present lifestyle.
I agree to a point. I have two children and I have responsibilities to
them which precede any others I might enter into. If I remarry, it
will be with the understanding that I have responsbilities to my
children which will affect a marriage to someone else and that entering
into a second marriage does not alter those responsbilities in any way.
Does that mean that a second wife should accept these responsbilities
as hers AND make them a first priority. No way, Jose! That is my
problem, not hers. I think you're engaging in a little wishful
thinking here.
> If, as a parent, you choose to start a new life, members of that
> new life take on joint reponsibilities with you.....and IMHO,
> that includes your chidren.
Get real, Chris. I'm glad you wrote IMHO, because your saying so
doesn't make it so. I can agree that taking on that "new life" as
you call it doesn't free me from being a father to my children and I
wouldn't want or expect it to. I would agree that a second spouse will
be affected by this, will become involved in my children's lives and
will from time to time have to do some things she may resent or not
want to do, but does that make her responsible to them? I don't think
so.
Steve
|
94.63 | Yet another point of view... | NUTMEG::GODIN | Naturally I'm unbiased! | Thu Nov 01 1990 13:30 | 37 |
| I certainly wouldn't presume to second-guess how the courts of this
land think, but there is another possibility that hasn't been mentioned
here.
If either natural parent of the child were to die, the courts would
probably award custody to the surviving parent (presuming there are no
criminal abuse reasons to the contrary). If both natural parents were
to die (whether married to each other or divorced at the time), the
courts would probably award custody to willing relatives (grandparents,
aunts, uncles, etc.) before considering foster placement -- unless, of
course, there were non-related guardians named in a will. If there
were no willing relatives, and the spouse of a non-custodial parent
were to step forward and volunteer to assume custody, I'd guess the
courts would look more favorably on such a placement than on the foster
care system. In other words, I believe the courts would try to place
the child with a known and willing relative or step-parent before
placing the child in a state-supported environment.
It would seem somewhat logical to me, then, that the court would
consider the same relatives and step-parents as likely sources for
additional support for that child when additional support is needed.
I'm not saying that I agree with this. Yet, I can see the logic behind
it and understand why, in the case of parental death, it makes sense.
Why not in the case of parental neglect? The difference, of course, is
in the willingness of the non-parental party to assume the responsibility
that cannot be forced by law.
I'd also guess that if a spouse of a non-custodial parent were to be
assessed support payments, and were to get a good lawyer, legal history
could be made in forcing the courts to realize the gross unfairness of
requiring an unrelated third party to assume financial responsiblity.
Assuming, of course, one had the time and money to fight such a battle.
Karen
|
94.64 | There is another way. | SQM::MACDONALD | | Thu Nov 01 1990 13:46 | 16 |
|
Re: .63
> Assuming, of course, one had the time and money to
> fight such a battle.
There is another way. Simply say, "No." More than one person
has stood in front of a court and for reasons of principle and
conscience said no. Not too long ago a man here in NH was jailed
by the court when he refused to comply with what he believed was
unjust. He wasn't in jail too long when the judge let him out
realizing that it wasn't going to resolve the issue.
Steve
|
94.65 | I stand firm in my thoughts of support! | GENRAL::C_ANDERSON | | Thu Nov 01 1990 14:58 | 58 |
| re: .60
I see your point of feeling that the courts should not "legally" hold
the new spouse financially responsible for a child that isn't their's,
but IMHO I still feel that the new spouse SHOULD be willing to come
forward and legally accept that responsibility (let me say that I'm not
that much of a dreamer....I know that it isn't going to happen unless
it's "court ordered"....which is what all the fuss is about). I guess
I just see things differently....if the new spouse enters into the
relationship KNOWING that they may be called upon to handle the burden
of a child emotionally, physically (as in the death of the parent) and
financially, then that means taking on all that that responsibility
entails....including having your income go to support the child of the
parent that you've chosen to live with.
re: .62
No, I did not hit next unseen......I'm always interested in different
views and opinions. I DO NOT see myself or my children as "victims" in
the divorce, but rather as victims in the financial mess that ensued by
one parent leaving a relationship, assuming another relationship and
household, and then trying to support both families with less income.
The divorce was created by both of us, the mess that ensued was not.
It was caused by one parent taking on a second family unit at the cost
of the original children.
In no way am I placing any blame for this. It was decision that was
made and everyone lived through it, even though it was very difficult
and painful. The reason I mention this is actually to make a point.
It does seem difficult to accept that the new spouse should be
financially responsible for children that they had nothing to do with,
but what about the following circumstance.
My spouse desired a divorce after an 18 year marriage, and entered into
another relationship shortly afterward. The demands of that family
unit plus our child support caused him to file bankruptcy. He stopped
the divorce and I was financially responsible for all bills (both his
and joint ones from the marriage) which meant that I was "forced" into
bankruptcy with him. Now, I could contend that since our marriage was
over and these bills were his "personal" ones, then I'm not responsible
for paying them, but as his legal "wife", I take on that moral and
financial responsiblity. My point is, so does a new spouse upon
marrying a CP or NCP!
Maybe instead of discussing "legality" in "forcing" new spouses to
support children that aren't their's, we should be looking at the
morality of realizing that children's needs (and I'm not talking about
the other parent who has managed to buy a new car, new clothes, or a
new house etc. on the child support payments!) MUST be met.....it isn't an
option.
P.S. At the bankruptcy, my still-husband walked away with a clean
slate (no bills or payments). I kept all joint bills, arranged lower
payments, and slowly paid them all off over the next 6 years. It can
be done, but it "costs" a great deal (and I don't mean money....)
And, in case you're wondering, there is no anger or regret....we all
learn, grow, and start fresh each day!
|
94.66 | | FSTTOO::BEAN | Attila the Hun was a LIBERAL! | Fri Nov 02 1990 07:01 | 36 |
| I suspect there will be no "general" rule that could ever be applied.
I am brought to think (by several of the previous replies) this
thought:
When you enter into a marriage, there exist two kinds of property:
separate and joint. It is my understanding that the stereo system I
owned when I got married remains my separate property, as does the car
and house and savings, etc. The property acquired after the marriage
is jointly owned by me and my spouse.
I also understand this applies to liabilities. So, when I got
re-married, my child support obligation remains my separate obligation
(my spouse's willingness to help notwithstanding). Now, if
circumstances change, and I am unable to fulfill that obligation, a
debt begins to acrue. Are we saying that that debt, acquired AFTER the
marriage, remains the separate liability or are we changing rules here?
What happens if I lose my job and can't pay my car payments. I bought
the car (entered the obligation) before I re-married... does my spouse
become liable? When I married my ex, she owed several thousand, and I
owed nada. She lost her job (we moved) and I paid the debt. But,
there was no court action, of course, and at the time, I felt there was
no problem with that. BUT...was I *legally* obliged to pay? I don't
know.
At the same time, I ABSOLUTELY disagree that as long as I am paying the
court ordered child support, regularly and without fail, then it should
be absolutely inconceivable to tap into my new wife's income to
increase that payment, just because it's there. Furthermore, if my new
wife were to lose her job, my FIRST obligation would continue to be to
the children...
just some thoughts.
tony
|
94.67 | | SQM::MACDONALD | | Fri Nov 02 1990 07:24 | 32 |
|
Re: .65
Thank you, Chris. Your response was worth reading, although
you and I disagree significantly.
Re: .66
Tony, how you summarize it is just as I see it.
My marriage has been over for five years although the divorce
was final just a year ago. I have been seeing someone for close
to a year and we are discussing marriage. If we marry, and my
ex goes for increased child support, and the state tries to
consider my new wife's income, then I will refuse to comply.
If they want to send me to jail, then good luck to them. At that
point the state can figure out how to pay the support, because I
sure as h*** wont't be able to pay anything from a jail cell.
If they ask only for financial disclosure from me, consider
my personal living expenses to be only half of the household
bills assuming that my new wife will be paying the other half,
and award increased support based on that then I'll pay without
a gripe. Actually, I'm already willing to make periodic
adjustments to my support payments without being ordered to do
it. At my next pay increase, I plan to increase it on my own.
If that isn't good enough for them, well you all know the answer
to that I'm sure ;^).
Steve
|
94.68 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Fri Nov 02 1990 07:25 | 13 |
| The shoes were on the other foot for me. I have a future ex bolt,
taking my daughter across state lines, to a mans home in Maine she met
on weekend. I was close to filing myself. She had cleaned out the
account of the mortgages of the marital home and an income property
that we own. I started into the game with 10-15K of stocks and 15k with
cash of a mobile home sales. I have to give her half of all, pay the
marital debts, pay for the lawyer, pay for child support, and drive
400+ miles to Maine every weekend to see my daughter. Yes, life isn't
very fair is it. I can definatly sympathise the senerio.
I wish there was a way to make things better. But with the way the
courts are, I don't see that anyone gets a fair shake. Financially and
morally responsible? Those who want to do things right get the sharp
end of the stick.
|
94.69 | | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Fri Nov 02 1990 08:07 | 52 |
|
re 59
Chris,
I agree that if a person is to marry a parent, that the person will
be accepting the children of the parent. However, they do not have
to accept any responsibility for the children.
You obviously got the short end of the stick in your sitation, and
you and your children are feeling the financial affect of it. However,
that was the fault of the bankruptcy judge. I am assuming that your
ex is actually paying child support to you. If so, then both he and
you are being financially responsible to your kids. His choice to
start a new family has not affected your support payments or has it?
He now has to support two sets of children. The fact that you got
stuck with the debts and he didn't is what is making it tough for
you financially not his new family.
If you truly believe as you do, if you remarry and your ex goes into
court to have the support payments reduced due to your increase in
family income, would you object to this? Afterall, it would be fair
according to how you believe.
Why do you believe that a new spouse should have to be financially
responsible for your chidren? I can understand being emotionally and
physically responsible, but not financially responsible. You brought
up the part about if a parent dies the new spouse will be responsible
for the children. This does not happen. John and I have researched
this with lawyers and got the following answer: If custodial parent
dies, custody goes to non-custodial parent. If non-custodial parent
then dies, custody automatically goes to a blood relative of the child.
If you are a step-parent, you have no legal rights to a child that is
not of your blood (unless of course you adopted the child prior to the
parent's death). Even if it is written in a will, the blood relatives
may petition the court to get custody of the child. If this happens,
the blood relatives win hands down. So custody of the child will
not go to the step-parent unless the blood relatives do not want
custody of the child.
So you are saying that a step-parent should be financially responsible
for a child that they have no legal rights to. They can not even sign
a release form if the child is injured and requires medical attention
while in their care. It makes no sense.
I think that most spouses of parents do out of love for the parent
love the parent's children and want to do what ever they can to
help that child. But it is a choice not a legal requirement.
Michele
|
94.70 | 2nd families are a CHOICE, unlike children already born | GENRAL::C_ANDERSON | | Fri Nov 02 1990 09:14 | 37 |
| <<< CSC32::DOCROOT:[NOTES_CSCCS]NON_CUSTODIAL_PARENTS.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Welcome to the Non-Custodial Parents Conference >-
================================================================================
Note 94.70 Child Support Issue 70 of 70
GENRAL::C_ANDERSON 19 lines 2-NOV-1990 09:00
-< Second families are a CHOICE.... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
re: .69
Michele,
To answer your questions......yes, he is and has been paying support
regularly since it became court ordered. I disagree with you, though,
saying that it isn't his "new family" that has caused the financial
problems but rather the bankruptcy courts. The way I see it (MHO) is
that his second family (and being in involved with them while still
being married) was a CHOICE, rather than the way you put it...."now he
HAS to support two sets of children." First priority should have been
our children, and it wasn't that way. It seems to me that getting
involved with others while still deeply tied to other financial
responsibilites only causes problems all around (unless you're
independently wealthy and fully able to take on the financials of two
complete families without skipping a beat!)
Actually, this may come as a shock to most people, but if I remarried
and my ex-spouse filed for a reduction in child support payments based
on my new family's income, I would DEFINITELY support his doing so.
Actually, I would suggest (without ever going to court) that he lower
or drop the child support based on our child's needs, based on our new
combined incomes. I'm afraid that whatever person I chose to start a
new life with would have to understand that....I'm not out to "take" my
ex, I'm only out to support our children.
Chris
|
94.71 | depends on how you look at it | LUNER::MACKINNON | | Fri Nov 02 1990 09:54 | 49 |
|
re -1
Chris,
I agree that his responsibility is to his children whether they be
from you or another woman. However, in your note, I get the feeling
that you feel that he should not have had any more children if he
could not afford to support yours. But he has been able to support
yours. Why should he not be allowed to start a new family?
I agree that he should not have been seeing another woman while he
was still married to you. That IMO is just dead wrong. But as long
as he is still paying support, I see no reason why he should not
be allowed to start a new family. If he did not have another family,
do you feel that you would be able to get more support out of him?
re 2nd families are a choice, unlike children already born. The same
could be said about first families being a choice. Unless a pregnancy
is a surprise, most are a choice of both parents regardless of the
marital status of both parents.
It seems to me that you feel some sense of resentment at the fact that
he does have a new family which is understandable. It may very well
be that you feel he would be able to give your children more financial
support if he were not re-married. If you feel that he would have been
able to give more if he were not remarried it does not matter to the
court. In Mass anyway there is a formula that basically does not take
into account the living expenses required for the NCP. They just take
a set percentage of his income.
Now if you think that by him having a new family he is not readily able
to give monies above the court appointed support amount then I agree.
However, he is not required to do so and neither are you for that
fact. I lived in a single parent household and went without some
things due to my mom's finanical situation, and I am not any worse off
now than anyone else. Now if it is a matter of going without the basic
necessities of life such as food or clothing, then it is a different
story, but you still have the capability to change that with
supplemeting your income with another job if that is what it takes.
It may not be fair, but the courts determine how much he pays, and
unfortunately you must make up the difference.
I applaud your stance on agreeing to decrease the amount of support
if you remarried. Most folks would not take such a stance.
Take care,
Michele
|
94.72 | | AIMHI::RAUH | Home of The Cruel Spa | Fri Nov 02 1990 10:09 | 2 |
| It was his choise to start a new family, but it was both of your
choises to start one too.
|
94.73 | child support? | DELNI::JDAVIS | | Wed Dec 26 1990 20:02 | 16 |
|
My soon to be ex and I have been talking about our children coming
to live with me for a while. I have no problems with this at all,
and I welcome the opportunity to have them live with me because I
do miss them a lot. So, if this happens as planned, it will be the
second week of the new year. But I do have a question. I pay child
support and when my children come to live with me I will be filing
a modification in District Court. Is this a simple process were I
could go in and arrange a hearing or should I seek the help of a
lawyer? To me using a lawyer seems to be expensive for something that
appears to be routine as appearing before the court showing some proof
that I do have custody. But somethings are always not so obvious. So
what is the real deal about filing for modification for child support?
Peace,
jd
|
94.74 | Use the old papers as quide | CSC32::HADDOCK | All Irk and No Pay | Thu Dec 27 1990 08:19 | 5 |
| If you have a copy of the papers from a previous support hearing
you can probably use them as a pattern to file the request for
modification. Wheather or not you need a lawyer may depend on
how much opposition you expect from your ex.
fred();
|
94.75 | community property laws etc. | BENONI::JIMC | illegitimi non insectus | Fri Jan 04 1991 12:53 | 38 |
| RE: 66 - In Mass as well as many other states there are community
property laws which basically state that when you get married, it
belongs to both of you. This has been most notably contested
unsuccessfully in cases where one of the people owned substantial
property before the marriage and the other had very little, when they
divorced, they both got an equal share unless they "agreed" to some
other arrangement. This is the reason rich people often make
prenuptual contracts.
I do not, however, agree that the new spouse of and NCP should have
their income included in any support agreement. I have been advised
by lawyers in two states: 1) never, ever, volunteer more information
than is asked for specifically. 2) Even if the court asks for the
spouses financial info, "just say no" because they have no grounds for
making that request.
RE .73 - I am currently going thruogh a very similar situation. The
first thing my lawyers and I are trying to do is get my daughters
mother to sign a "consent decree" which we will then sign and file with
the court. Essentially, that is an agreement to amend the original
agreement and we work out the terms. As long as EVERYBODY who is a
party to this agreement is willing, there is no problem (the courts are
so full of people disagreeing that they will accept anything that seems
outwardly fair. so if you can get a written agreement, great). You
are liable for all the terms of the original agreement until the court
recognises a new agreement. In part this means that you can both agree
to temporarily ignore the old agreement (but you better be real careful
here because if you, for instance, stop paying child support before a
new agreement goes into effect (after all you have the kid and the
other parent said it seemed fair to them) and then the other parent
ambushes you for back support, you are up the creek). Basically,
proceed with caution. If you can get the agreement, all you need to do
is file it with the court properly and once they recognise it, you are
clear.
Hope that helps. (hope that really works out that easily in my case)
jimc
|
94.76 | Custodial parent moving out of state...is this legal? | QUOKKA::5734::DREYER | Make new friends, but keep the old! | Mon Jul 18 1994 13:16 | 46 |
| This is my first time in this file, and though I've only had a little time to
browse through here, boy does alot of this hit home!
We have a situation that is kinda lengthy to explain, but I'm hoping someone
can answer some questions.
10 years ago, my fiance had a daughter, Sarah, with the woman he was living
with. One year later, they split up, and it was not on good terms to say the
very least. He agreed to have nothing to do with Sarah, and in exchange the
mother agreed he would not have to help support her. (I'm not saying I agree
with this, I wasn't in the picture until 4 1/2 years later.) Anyway, last
summer the court got in contact with Steve, wanting child support. Welfare
initiated this action, not the mother. The case was finally settled in April,
and along with the support, Steve got visitaion rights.
I know many people would condemn Steve as being negligent, but he did care.
The day he met me he told me about Sarah, and often he would get misty
eyed thinking about her, especially on Valentine's Day, her birthday. Steve
was afraid Sarah would want nothing to do with him after all these years, but
I pushed him to get visitaion rights. Sarah was thrilled, and desperately wants
and needs her father in her life. She's grown attached to several men her
mother has had relationships with, only to have them yanked out of her life and
her heart broken.
Last night, her mother called, and informed Steve that they are moving to
Florida Sept. 1. Is this legal? She does have sole custody, but Steve has
court ordered visitation rights. Also, I'm wondering, since the cost of living
is substantially less in Florida than Massachusetts, is there any way we can
get the child support reduced? Currently he's paying $100 per week support,
$20 a week insurance, and is liable for 1/2 of any uncovered medical fees.
There's also a matter of $15,000 arrears even though he was never requested to
pay before, wasn't earning the money he's earning now before, and the mother
was not on welfare all the time the court calculated it. The court did tell
us this would never be brought up unless he misses a payment.
Thanks for any help or pointers of where we can get help!
I'm also really interested to read about what could happen if we were to marry.
We were going to marry this year, but now that all this is happening I can't
risk it. Steve is living with me in my house, I make more money than him and
have a nice little nest egg. No way am I going to risk it for something I had
absolutely no part of creating. This is so frustrating, I could scream!
Laura
|
94.77 | | QUOKKA::3737::RAUH | I survived the Cruel Spa | Mon Jul 18 1994 15:40 | 22 |
| Life has its down sides. And it does stink they way it goes. I would
start fighting like hell for visitations. And if she moves, then fight
like hell for vacation times. And if she doesnt give out her forwarding
address and phone number, she is in violations of visitations. And you
have something to fight for. Children have a built in bullsh*t metter
that can tell if a parent is tell in the truth or is pulling the wool.
And if he is telling truth, she will understand and will want to see
her father.
If you do not fight, and allow the ex to do with Saraha as she sees.
Then the child will hate all, esp when she gets older. And to me, its
not worth the risk of having someone hate me to my grave. Esp the love
of a child, esp if the child is mine.
Do what is right, and gamble with the rest of us the consequences. It
is a life, not an investment that your dealing with.
If Charles Dickens were alive, today, the stories he could write about
the late 20th century and the pains of children. And we as adults put
them thru.
|
94.78 | | QUOKKA::11773::BAKER | | Mon Jul 18 1994 16:19 | 14 |
| I would talk to an attorney on this one. You can set up
an appointment to discuss your issue with him/her at
an hourly rate. (I'll be doing the same for a visitation
issue).
It is legal for the mother to take the child out of state.
There's nothing stopping her from doing this unless it's stated
in the court order. If your fiance' had joint-legal custody it
would help.
As far as percentage of Child support, I believe it's up to
the judge's discretion wether or not your income can be
added in to the equation.
|