Child support is one of the most contentious issues in family law. Many parents feel that their support amounts are vastly unjust, whether they are too high or too low. Parents will commonly fight against co-parents who want to ask for child support, and there is often huge pushback against high support amounts. If the payor misses payments, child support disputes can become nasty. If you are involved in a child support dispute in California, call the child support dispute attorneys in Santa Barbara at the Law Offices of Bamieh and De Smeth today. Our attorneys can schedule a free consultation with you to listen to your case and start planning a strategy to approach your child support dispute. To schedule your free legal consultation, call our law offices today at (805) 643-5555.
Getting Child Support Payments Enforced in California
One of the primary issues in child support cases is non-payment and enforcement. The court and your LCSA are often responsible for enforcing child support payments – not the recipient. A recipient who has back payments owed to them should not take matters into their own hands, but should instead hire a lawyer and talk to their LCSA to get help enforcing child support orders. Courts in California commonly order child support paid through wage garnishment. In some states, this is used as an enforcement procedure after a payor has shown to be unreliable, but in California it is used almost across the board.
This means that payments are taken directly from the parent’s paycheck or bank account, and the parent usually has little access to stop the payments, guaranteeing a steady stream of payments. However, if the payments are stopped anyway, you may need to turn other enforcement techniques to get the child support you are entitled to. Child support orders are court orders, meaning that violating the order can have serious penalties. Willful non-payment or underpayment can result in criminal charges and fines against the payor. This means that if you get caught paying less than you are supposed to, you could actually face further court proceedings and even arrest.
Other penalties and enforcement procedures are also available. For instance, an individual who has back child support on their record may be barred from renewing their driver’s license. This is a serious inconvenience that forces people to address their back payments in order to restore other rights they would typically have. This can push people toward paying as ordered. Recipients who are not getting the child support they deserve should hire an attorney and work with their LCSA and the court to enforce payments in this kind of dispute.