LD 986
pg. 36
Page 35 of 77 An Act To Enact the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act Amendments of 1996 an... Page 37 of 77
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LR 467
Item 1

 
support throughout the entire existence of the support
obligation. Sections 205(f) and 206(c) state that the procedures
of UIFSA are not available to a responding tribunal to modify
the existing spousal support order of the issuing State. This
marks a radical departure from RURESA, which treated spousal and
child support orders identically. Under UIFSA, "interstate"
modification of spousal support is limited to a procedure
whereby a proceeding may be initiated outside of the issuing
State, but only the tribunal in the original issuing State may
modify the order under its law. This approach was expected to
have minimal effect on actual practice, a prediction that
appears to have been accurate. Interstate modification of pure
spousal support was relatively rare under RURESA, and plays
almost no part in the activities of support enforcement
agencies.

 
The prohibition of modification of spousal support by a
nonissuing state tribunal under UIFSA is consistent with the
principle that a tribunal should apply local law to such cases
to insure efficient handling and to minimize choice of law
problems. Avoiding conflict of law problems is almost
impossible if spousal support orders are subject to
modification in a second State. For example, States take
widely varying views of the effect on a spousal support order
of the obligee's remarriage or nonmarital cohabitation. Making
a distinction between spousal and child support is further
justified because the standards for modification of child
support and spousal support are very different. In most
jurisdictions a dramatic improvement in the obligor's economic
circumstances will have little or no relevance in a proceeding
seeking an upward modification of spousal support, while a
similar change in an obligor's situation typically is the
primary basis for an increase in child support. This disparity
is founded on a policy choice that post-divorce success of an
obligor-parent should benefit the obligor's child, but not the
obligor's ex-spouse.

 
Finally, UIFSA does not provide for shifting the continuing,
exclusive jurisdiction over a spousal-support order by mutual
agreement. That procedure is limited to child support under
Section 205(b)(1). Note that the Act is silent rather than
preclusive on the subject. If the parties wish to enter into
such an agreement, it is up to the individual States to decide
whether to recognize it. A waiver of continuing, exclusive
jurisdiction and subsequent modification of spousal support by
a tribunal of another State simply is not authorized by UIFSA,
rather than prohibited.

 
Sec. 11. 19-A MRSA §3001, as enacted by PL 1995, c. 694, Pt. B, §2
and affected by Pt. E, §2, is repealed and the following
enacted in its place:


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