skier208
Dec 21, 2014, 03:30 AM
My ex-husband and I divorced in Idaho. Immediately after the divorce, my children and I moved to Colorado, with my ex-husband's permission. My ex-husband stayed in Idaho. Subsequently, the court in Idaho relinquished child custody jurisdiction to Colorado. Jurisdiction on all other matters, including child support, remain in Idaho. After a very long, very costly court battle, the Colorado family court modified our original visitation agreement by issuing an Order of Supervised Visitation. Ever since then, my ex-husband never once made an attempt to see our children.
Fast forward to today: My ex-husband now lives in Canada, is years in arrears on child support and Idaho is garnishing his wages through a reciprocal agreement with British Columbia. He now filed paperwork in the BC Provincial court to enforce our original child visitation agreement (the one the Colorado district court modified by issuing an Order of Supervised Visitation). And more importantly, he is asking the Canadian court to cut his child support payments in half and wipe out his arrearage over my supposed refusal to let him see our children.
My question is this: Can a Canadian court modify an existing Idaho child support order and an existing Colorado child visitation order? As in, will the family courts in Idaho and Colorado respectively honor a possible judgment by a Canadian court in my ex-husband's favor? I say "in his favor" because I do not have the financial means to engage in yet another costly court battle and re-litigate our divorce in Canada. It also means that any Canadian court proceedings would most likely take place without me present. My children and I are Colorado residents with no connection to Canada other than the fact that their father now happens to live there.
Fast forward to today: My ex-husband now lives in Canada, is years in arrears on child support and Idaho is garnishing his wages through a reciprocal agreement with British Columbia. He now filed paperwork in the BC Provincial court to enforce our original child visitation agreement (the one the Colorado district court modified by issuing an Order of Supervised Visitation). And more importantly, he is asking the Canadian court to cut his child support payments in half and wipe out his arrearage over my supposed refusal to let him see our children.
My question is this: Can a Canadian court modify an existing Idaho child support order and an existing Colorado child visitation order? As in, will the family courts in Idaho and Colorado respectively honor a possible judgment by a Canadian court in my ex-husband's favor? I say "in his favor" because I do not have the financial means to engage in yet another costly court battle and re-litigate our divorce in Canada. It also means that any Canadian court proceedings would most likely take place without me present. My children and I are Colorado residents with no connection to Canada other than the fact that their father now happens to live there.