Maximum Child Support Limits
related pages
Early in his divorce proceedings, one SPARC member's attorney allowed
child support to be set at over 75% of his income, contrary to both State
and Federal Law. Since this was the amount shown on the standard CS
worksheet, he thought he had to pay 77% of his income. This message is to let
everyone know that you should not be paying more than the law allows. The
Federal Law is listed below and limits CS garnishments to 50% (if you're
remarried) and 60% (single) or 5% more than that if there is an arrearage
of more than 3 months. (Percentages given are of disposable income, which
means after taxes). Some states have similar statutes.
Often states
use a standard worksheet to calculate support. The worksheet does
not mention anywhere that if the amount owed exceeds these percentages,
there should be an adjustment. YOU HAVE TO ASK FOR THAT IN COURT!!! Make
sure you put in the remarks section on the worksheet that the calculated
amount would exceed Federal and/or State limits and the CS amount should
therefore be set at $XXX.XX (YY% of obligated parent's income).
In
WA State, these limits are 45% (50% if there is an arrearage) regardless
of marital status, though there is wording that would allow the judge to
increase it above this amount in special circumstances (see RCW
26.19.065). If you are paying more than the Federal or State limit, you
should consider an immediate petition for a change. The courts can not
normally adjust it retroactively beyond the date of your petition. If you
use the Federal Statute and then remarry or have another child, then you
should consider a petition for a modification to the support order to
reduce the support amount.
Federal Law, in the Consumer Credit
Protection Act, (CCPA),
15 USC 1673(b)(2) says:
2) The maximum part of the aggregate disposable earnings of an
individual for any workweek which is subject to garnishment to enforce any
order for the support of any person shall not exceed -
-
(A) where such individual is supporting his spouse or
dependent child (other than a spouse or child with respect to whose
support such order is used), 50 per centum of such individual's
disposable earnings for that week; and
-
(B) where such individual is not supporting such a
spouse or dependent child described in clause (A), 60 per centum of such
individual's disposable earnings for that week; except that, with
respect to the disposable earnings of any individual for any workweek,
the 50 per centum specified in clause (A) shall be deemed to be 55 per
centum and the 60 per centum specified in clause (B) shall be deemed to
be 65 per centum, if and to the extent that such earnings are subject to
garnishment to enforce a support order with respect to a period which is
prior to the twelve-week period which ends with the beginning of such
workweek.
You will also be interested in the other sections adjacent
to this. Sections
1671 through 1677 cover restrictions on garnishment.
If your employer withholds more than is legal, he has to foot the bill. Show your
employer this link to 29
CFR 870 and 29
CFR 531.39.
29 CFR 531.39 specifically states that "When the payment to a
third person of moneys withheld pursuant to a court order under which the withholdings
exceeds that permitted by the CCPA, the excess will not be considered equivalent
to payment of wages to the employee for purpose of the Fair Labor Standards Act."
In other words, that is money out of his pocket because he still has to pay you
that money.
It doesn't mean you don't owe the money, only that they cannot garnish
it. There are some pretty good examples in the links above.
If your employer or
income source (the bank) do take too much out of your check, contact the Department
of Labor, Wage and Hour Division
nearest you and ask how to get this corrected.
I would also start dealing in cash (or
travellers checks). It is much harder for a creditor to seize cash he doesn't know about
than to seize a bank account that is empty except for uncleared checks that will now bounce.
Money orders to pay bills are only $0.75 at the post office.
It is also a good idea to request a yearly payment summary from
the Support Enforcement Office. They will normally provide this at no cost
to you. The payment summary is a solid record that the Support Enforcement
Office cannot refute, since they provided it. Having a copy of the summary
can save you thousands of dollars if the payment history is ever contested
or if arrears are claimed when none exist.
If you are subject to a
wage withholding order, check in with the Support Enforcement Office even
more frequently - like every couple of months. In most States, if your wages are
withheld for support, and for ANY reason the money doesn't make to the
Support Enforcement Office (your employer makes a mistake, it gets lost in
the mail, WHATEVER), you are still on the hook. See the
Child Support Spreasheet or the Child Support sheet of the Parenting Time Tracker
for tips and assistance in auditing your CS payment history.
NOTE: This report is
for educational purposes only. Always seek the advice of a qualified attorney
on legal matters. This is intended to share what we have learned through experience.
We are not attorneys and cannot provide legal advice.