A good answer can be found in Wikipedia under Stipulated judgment.
Child Support cannot be attached to pay a judgment.
In Illinois, each child support payment is a civil judgment.
No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.No. A judgment creditor cannot take possession of child support payments to satisfy a lien.
In Illinois, each payment is a judgment.
Child Support Services, or the court where the judgment was made.
yup
Yes.
There is no statute of limitations on collecting past-due child support.
You can stop child support payments on the grounds that the child is not your biological child only if you did not know that when you agreed to the support, and if a Court approves your request to stop.
Child support is not like any other judgment. In an ordinary judgment where your check is being garnished an agency is limited to 25% of your gross wages. With child support the amount that can be collected from your check is the amount the court has determined to be your monthly child support. Child support is not like any other judgment. In an ordinary judgment where your check is being garnished an agency is limited to 25% of your gross wages. With child support the amount that can be collected from your check is the amount the court has determined to be your monthly child support.
Yes, a judgment for child support can go against a limited liability company (LLC). Although an LLC provides liability protection for its owners, it does not protect against personal obligations such as child support. If a member of the LLC owes child support, a court can issue a judgment and potentially seize the member's share of the profits or assets of the LLC to satisfy the child support debt.
Yes, assuming the question refers to the garnishment of an obligated parent's salary for child support obligations. In some states it requires a court order separately from the original child support judgment. In the majority of states when the payment is made via the state's child support enforcement agency it can be accomplished without a support hearing/judgment order.