
Originally Posted by
JennSmallman
if you had a verbal arrgement with him that he would be paying you X amount each month they still deduct that from the child support. doesnt matter when you get a court order for him to pay child support, it could be a year down the road..he still paid.. im was in the same situation with that.he would give me 20 here and 20 there...i wrote it all down and it came back when he was given the court order to pay child support.
if he is getting paid under the table let the court know and they can have legal aid go into his workplace and they can tell them to put him on payroll. his payments shouldn't go down if hes on payroll or working for cash,but call your local court house and ask. i know his pay scale for paying child support was from the day she was born till we were in court.. he "quit" his job just before the court dates because he thought the court wouldnt make him have to pay if he didnt have a job...i laughed about that. the judge asked if he though people were stupid......lol............... if his pay would go up by any after the court order for him to pay it wouldnt make any difference on what he would be paying you. hope this helps..... ive been there ...i know what its like.
This is a legal forum, that sticks to legal advice.
While I am happy that it worked out for you, this is not accurate legal advice.
The court does not have to honor and most of the time will not honor verbal agreements. Legal Aid will not be assigned to go tell the company to pay him on the books.
Most likely they will assess the child support issue as a fresh issue basing it on his current verifiable income. They may ask for checking accounts records, but most likely will base it on his most recent check stubs. It is based on gross pay, so if he is having additional funds withdrawn for his W-2 that will not affect his ordered amount. Any time that you believe that he changes jobs and has a better income, you can have child support reevaluated for change of circumstance.
Take his last two income tax returns, the judge may allow your testimony of the verbal agreement and he may allow the tax returns if they are from the same place of employment, if you tell him you think that his company is helping him hide income. Better to have the information, if they will accept it.