LD 986
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Page 5 of 77 An Act To Enact the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act Amendments of 1996 an... Page 7 of 77
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LR 467
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responding State, Sections 601-604. However, the registered
order continues to be the order of the issuing State, Sections
605-608. The role of the responding State is limited to
enforcing that order except in the very limited circumstances
under which modification is permitted, infra.

 
D. Modifying a Support Order

 
1. REGISTRATION. The first step for a party (whether obligor
or obligee) requesting a tribunal of another State to modify
an existing child support order is to follow the identical
procedure for registration as when enforcement is sought. All
modification requests are subject to strict rules, infra,
although different sequences are allowable: i.e., registration
for enforcement and a later request for modification; or, a
request for contemporaneous modification and enforcement.

 
2. MODIFICATION STATUTORILY RESTRICTED. Under UIFSA, the only
tribunal that can modify a support order is one having
continuing, exclusive jurisdiction over the support issue. As
an initial matter, this is the tribunal that first acquires
personal and subject matter jurisdiction over the parties and
the support obligation. If modification of the order by the
issuing tribunal is no longer appropriate, another tribunal
may become vested with the continuing, exclusive jurisdiction
necessary to modify the order. Primarily this occurs when
neither the individual parties nor the child reside in the
issuing State, or when the parties agree in a record that
another tribunal may assume modification jurisdiction. Only
then may another tribunal with personal jurisdiction over the
parties assume continuing, exclusive jurisdiction and have
jurisdiction to modify the order, Sections 205, 206, 603(c),
609-612. Further, except for modification by agreement,
Section 205 and 207, or when the parties have all moved to the
same new State, Section 613, the party petitioning for
modification must be a nonresident of the responding State and
must submit himself or herself to the forum State, which must
have personal jurisdiction over the respondent, Section 611.
The vast majority of the time this is the State in which the
respondent resides. A colloquial short-hand summary of the
principle is that ordinarily the movant for modification of a
child support order "must play an away game."

 
A 2001 amendment adds that even if the parties and child have
moved from the issuing State they may agree that the tribunal
that issued the controlling order will continue to exercise
its continuing, exclusive jurisdiction, Section 205. This
recognizes the fact that it may be preferable for the parties
to return to a tribunal familiar with the issues rather than
to be required to fully inform another tribunal of all the
facts and issues that have been previously litigated. This
exception may be


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