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I
Have to Pay Child Support, Even if I Have No Income?
by
Paulette Galustian.
Most divorcing couples
who have minor children at the time of commencement of their divorce
proceedings, share the common concern of which parent will be
ordered to pay child support to the other. There are a number
of factors a court of competent jurisdiction takes into consideration
in determining who the payor of child support will by, and, what
amount, if any, of child support will in fact be paid.
One important factor
a court will look at is known as the "timeshare" between
a parent and a minor child. The actual timeshare is computed by
examining the percentage of time each child spends with a parent,
and is reduced to a percentage figure.
Equally important
are factors such as the parties' tax filing status, the number
of dependency exemptions claimed by each parent, as well as other
deductions, such as
deductions for mandatory union dues or retirement benefits, deductions
for health insurance or health plan premiums for the parent and
for any children the parent has an obligation to support, as well
as other hardship deductions.
Another significant
number a court factors in, in making a child support order is
each parent's annual gross income. Annual gross income is income
from whatever source derived and includes, without limitation,
income such as commissions, salaries, royalties, wages, bonuses,
rents, dividends, pensions, interest, trust income, as well as
disability insurance benefits and social security benefits.
In fixing the amount
for child support, the court may even go as far as considering
a parent's earning capacity in lieu of that parent's actual income.
The legislature of this state has made it abundantly clear that
a parent's first and principal obligation is to support his or
her children. Thus, family law courts, when applying the above-stated
policy principles, have established a number of methods in holding
obligors to the responsibility of supporting their children.
While in some cases
the court may impute income to a parent based on his or her income-producing,
or even non-income producing assets, in other cases the court
will look at a parent's prior earning history, a parent's education,
work experience, and marketable skills, and order child support
accordingly. Thus, even if a parent is currently unemployed, and
produces no income, the court has discretion to make an award
based on the parent's earning capacity. The interests of the children
have a place on the court's top priority list, and in turn, the
discretion of the court to ensure this priority is maintained
is fairly broad.
For more information,
contact The Reape - Rickett Law Firm, at 661-288-1000, located
at 23929 West Valencia Boulevard, # 404 in Valencia.
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