spatterpattern
New Member
Not only does the new hubby's income have nothing to do with the situation, but the laws vary widely (as someone else said) from state to state. In one state I know of, the support is calculated by a complication logorhythm (log-o-ri-thim, say it slowly, the Dissomaster, and into that formula goes the amount of TIME spent with the child by each parent and the income of the custodial parent, insurance, real estate taxes, other children in the household and a few other bits. Then it pops out a number, some times the custodial parent may have to pay the non-custodial parent. Fair? No, but that's the way it is. In CA, for instance, they have a law that says that the Judge can equilize incomes if one party makes less than the other party or demand reiumbursement for legal fees to the poorer party. So for instance, a non-custodial parent CAN get all the legal fees back from the custodial parent if the Judge deems it so. I think it was created to fix the rich producer/actor/director running a poorer parent into the ground with endless legal arguements to bankrupt them. Mind you, the Judge doesn't HAVE to do this, just can if so inclined. So much of it IS based on the Judge you get.
In my custody case, the stupid Judge decided that my son couldn't decide for himself where he wanted to live because he was two weeks shy of his 14th birthday! Two weeks. Made the kid come back to court a month later. At which point my son told the Judge he wanted to live with ME. Two weeks is nothing; why put my kid through tthat? But the Judge did. Different state, different laws.
Best advice? Talk to an attorney in YOUR state to find out how the support is calculated. Just because someone else says that you should get $500/month doesn't mean that the law says that. An attorney can tell you whether it's worth your while to go after more money, usually for a free consultation. So ask someone who knows, that us in the peanut gallery. For all you know, we could be your ex giving you crappy advice! How's that thought?
SP
In my custody case, the stupid Judge decided that my son couldn't decide for himself where he wanted to live because he was two weeks shy of his 14th birthday! Two weeks. Made the kid come back to court a month later. At which point my son told the Judge he wanted to live with ME. Two weeks is nothing; why put my kid through tthat? But the Judge did. Different state, different laws.
Best advice? Talk to an attorney in YOUR state to find out how the support is calculated. Just because someone else says that you should get $500/month doesn't mean that the law says that. An attorney can tell you whether it's worth your while to go after more money, usually for a free consultation. So ask someone who knows, that us in the peanut gallery. For all you know, we could be your ex giving you crappy advice! How's that thought?
SP