Legal Question in Family Law in New Mexico
Child Support
I have a step-daughter whose Mother sets the Child Support amount that we pay. Over the last two years the amount has grown considerably and she is now trying to have him, my husband, thrown in jail due to a past due amount that she has set at $13,000.00. She is constantly verbaly abusing the child and us. We have no problelm paying the child suppport, we would just like to get it set at a resonable amount, not the $175.00 a week that she is insisting on, coming from a minimum wage job.
1 Answer from Attorneys
Re: Child Support
The easy answer and course of behavior here is to
take the mother to court. However, what you have
not said makes me want to ask more questions.
First, you did not say whether your husband and the
child's mother were previously married. Were
they? Does he have a court order directing him
to pay child support? If not, why not. The
court exists to put an end to disputes. From what
you write I see a dispute between the two house-
holds and the daughter is caught in the middle.
Because, as you say, the mother keeps changing the
amount due the way to deal with that point is to
file a motion (or petition) with the court and
ask for a hearing.
Next, and before you go to the hearing, send a
certified letter (return receipt requested - and
keep a copy of the letter) to the mother and ask
her for a copy of her last year's income tax
return (or W-2 statement) and for year to date
income information. When you make this request
enclose the dad's similar information with the
letter to the mother and say in the letter, "I have
put a copy of the dad's similar information in
this letter for you to see. After you have
received the information from the mother go to the
public library and ask the reference libraian to
point you to the New Mexico Statutes Annotated.
They are BIG red books. Once you get to them find
the one (usually in Book numbered 7) for Chapter
40 Section 4-11.1. that's the Child Support law.
You will find therein a table of numbers and at the
end of that table of numbers you will find what
is called Worksheet A. There are instructions
there to tell you how to fill it out. You have
to add mother's monthly income and father's monthly
income to get a total monthly income. Once you
have the total monthly income for both parents
then you use the charts. Follow the instructions.
After you have calculated the math you will know
(with some [not exact] certainty what a judge will
set child support at. If the child is very young
and the mother has daycare you will have to use
the day care number as a part of what and how
you establish child support.
Last and foremost - when you go to court - tell
the truth and keep it short. Don't argue with
the judge and when the judge starts talking - you
start writing down what he/she says.
You are welcome to write back with more questions.
Good luck.