| | |
the same manner as if the order had been issued by a tribunal of | | this State. Section 3153 applies to the contest. |
|
| | | Sec. 32. 19-A MRSA §3101-F, sub-§2, śC, as enacted by PL 1997, c. 669, | | §21, is amended to read: |
|
| | C. The person or agency designated to receive payments in | the income-withholding order or, if a person or agency is | | not designated, to the obligee. |
|
| | | (This is Section 506 of the Uniform Act.) |
|
| | | This section incorporates into the interstate context the law | | regarding defenses an employee-obligor may raise to an | | intrastate withholding order. Generally, States have accepted | | the IV-D requirement that the only viable defense is a | | "mistake of fact." 42 U.S.C. Section 666(b)(4)(A). This | | apparently includes "errors in the amount of current support | | owed, errors in the amount of accrued arrearage or mistaken | | identity of the alleged obligor" while excluding "other | | grounds, such as the inappropriateness of the amount of | | support ordered to be paid, changed financial circumstances of | | the obligor, or lack of visitation." H.R. Rep. No. 98-527, | | 98th Cong., 1st Sess. 33 (1983). The latter claims must be | | pursued in a separate proceeding in the appropriate State, not | | in a UIFSA proceeding. |
|
| | | This procedure is based on the assumption that valid defenses | | to income withholding for child support are few and far | | between. Experience has shown that in relatively few cases | | does an employee-obligor have a complete defense, e.g., the | | child has died, another contingency ending the support has | | occurred, the order has been superseded, or there is a case of | | mistaken identity and the employee is not the obligor. An | | employee's complaint that "The child support is too high" must | | be ignored. |
|
| | | However, situations do arise where an employer has received | | multiple withholding notices regarding the obligor-employee | | and the same obligee. The notices may even allege conflicting | | amounts due, especially for payments on arrears. Additionally, | | many employees claim to have only learned of default orders | | when the withholding notice Is delivered to the employer; this | | leads to claims that the order being enforced through income | | withholding was entered without personal jurisdiction over the | | obligor-employee. |
|
| | | The 2001 rewording of Subsection (a) affirms that a simple. | | efficient, and cost-effective method for an employee-alleged | | obligor to assert a defense is to register the withholding | | order |
|
|