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He informed them over a month ago of the standing court order and I have seen nothing..Last time he switched jobs it was processed in 1 week..Thanks in advance..

2007-09-12 02:59:11 · 9 answers · asked by Brat25 4 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

We have a court order which was first filed in 2003..He is working for a new company who has had this court order since the end of July...Will the court go after the company? Since they do have the order?

2007-09-12 03:24:49 · update #1

Yes there is an order to garnish his wages that the company has..

2007-09-12 05:42:33 · update #2

9 answers

If the company has been notified that deductions must be made from his salary then by law they are required to do so. If the company does comply with the court order they can be fined. Contact the bureau that made this order and notify them that your ex husband has changed his employment and you are not receiving your court ordered payments. They will contact his current employer and let them know of the court order. If his employer still doesn't remit the court ordered payments report them to the bureau so they can take proper action against the company.

2007-09-12 03:15:39 · answer #1 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

Here is the information my county clerk's office gave to me just last week. The company is responsible because they're being court ordered to do so. However, if you know where he works send a copy or a certified copy of the court order to them where they have to sign for it. You can do this through the post office. If this doesn't work you will have to take your husband back to court for contempt. The judge will ask him under oath which company he works for and then the judge will decide what to do with the company. Your husband won't get in trouble if he has faithfully tried to help you. Call the family court in the county where you live to find out more information. Here it's only $50 to reopen the case.

2007-09-12 03:13:18 · answer #2 · answered by run_becky 6 · 0 0

Depends.

If the court order was to attach the wages and the company failed to do so then not only the company but the person responsible for payroll can end up in contempt.

The court would have sent notice to the company via the IRS. It's always a pleasant phone call.

2007-09-12 03:05:10 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

What are you talking about? Does this have anything to do with child support and an order of garnishment?

EDITED BASED ON ADDITIONAL INFORMATION:

Simply because you have a court order does NOT mean the company is required by law to follow it. The company is a third-party to any order between you and your ex.

That's why I specifically asked if there was an ORDER OF GARNISHMENT. If you do not have that specific order, then you need to return to court and ask the judge to issue one.

If you do, then you need to file it with the company yourself (proof of service) and file a motion to show cause for contempt.

2007-09-12 03:04:39 · answer #4 · answered by hexeliebe 6 · 0 0

The company must actually have the order to have all the required information, just telling them doesn't really mean anything. The child support disbursment unit or AG or whoever ordered the withholding should be sending them the order.

2007-09-12 03:04:07 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The court order is against the husband, not whatever company he works for. He is in contempt if the child support" isnt paid. So you have to go after him.

2007-09-12 03:02:39 · answer #6 · answered by Bob D 6 · 1 1

Consult your lawyer. Whether a third party can be held in contempt of court depends on whether the court has ordered it to do anything. There may be statutes in your jurisdiction that affect the answer. Consult your lawyer.

2007-09-12 03:03:32 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Does the courtroom order require that your husband no longer divulge the reality that he will pay toddler help? I very plenty doubt that the order makes the form of requirement, because of the fact the courtroom checklist is probable public. provided that your husband violates words of the courtroom order can he be cutting-edge in contempt of courtroom. His ex can, of direction, report any pleadings she needs. triumphing, whether, seems impossible. curiously you permit your husband's ex and her mom get to you. Neither you nor your husband is obligated to take heed to screaming. there's a great device on each and every telephone I even have used. this is the "fool button". whilst an fool has mentioned as you, in simple terms press the button (in purple on maximum telephones) and the sound of the fool is going away.

2016-11-15 00:55:02 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Possible but depends on for what!

2007-09-12 03:03:00 · answer #9 · answered by Sami V 7 · 0 0

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