Child Support and Assets in Arizona Arizona family court utilizes a standard calculation based on the income of both parties and parenting time awarded to both parties to
determine child support awards and amounts.
Not exact matches
Once paternity is
determined, the court can
award child custody, establish a visitation schedule, and order
child support.
Start Date for Temporary
Support in Arizona Arizona laws are used to determine spousal maintenance, child support and family support awards and a
Support in Arizona Arizona laws are used to
determine spousal maintenance,
child support and family support awards and a
support and family
support awards and a
support awards and amounts.
The court will generally presume that modification is appropriate if the difference between an existing
award and the amount
determined by a new analysis and application of the current
child support guidelines varies by at least 15 %.
Other, better - known examples of such safety mechanisms are found in the
Child Support Guidelines, a regulation that presumptively determines the quantum of support awards according to the payor's income and the number of children for whom support is bein
Support Guidelines, a regulation that presumptively
determines the quantum of
support awards according to the payor's income and the number of children for whom support is bein
support awards according to the payor's income and the number of
children for whom
support is bein
support is being paid.
Arizona
child support guidelines
determine, with only a few exceptions, the amount of
child support payments by considering the income of each parent, day care costs, medical and health insurance expenses, and the amount of parenting time / custody each parent has been
awarded in the divorce decree.
Unlike state
child support laws, the court has no set guidelines to use in
determining if spousal maintenance is to be
awarded, or its amount and duration.
(D.B.) v. G. (S.R.), 2006 SCC 37 (S.C.C.)(«D.B.S.») is the landmark precedent setting out the factors to be considered in
determining whether a retroactive
award of
support is appropriate, but that case dealt with
child support, and the factors were:
While these items come up in every divorce case, it is possible to
determine the likelihood of being
awarded child support or alimony based on the basics that family judges use to make these
awards.
The amount of
support (
child support, spousal
support or alimony pendente lite) to be
awarded pursuant to the procedures under Rules 1910.11 and 1910.12 shall be
determined in accordance with the
support guidelines which consist of the guidelines expressed as the
child support schedule set forth in Rule 1910.16 - 3, the formula set forth in Rule 1910.16 - 4 and the operation of the guidelines as set forth in these rules.
Where
children are residing with the spouse obligated to pay spousal
support or alimony pendente lite (custodial parent) and the other spouse (non-custodial parent) has a legal obligation to
support the
children, the guideline amount of spousal
support or alimony pendente lite shall be
determined by offsetting the non-custodial parent's obligation for
support of the
children and the custodial parent's obligation of spousal
support or alimony pendente lite, and
awarding the net difference either to the non-custodial parent as spousal
support / alimony pendente lite or to the custodial parent as
child support as the circumstances warrant.
The Court of Appeals correctly identified the constitutional standard for
determining whether § 36 - 820, as construed by the Tennessee courts to authorize an
award of a veteran's disability benefits as
child support, conflicts with federal law, and is therefore preempted under the Supremacy Clause.
To
determine whether and the amount to
award disabled
child support or college educational expenses, a court will consider the financial resources of the parents, the standard of living the
child enjoyed before the divorce, the financial resources of the
child, and the
child's academic performance.
During the divorce, spouses divide their property and
determine custody of their
children, and a court may
award spousal
support and
child support.
Other issues are
determined more or less automatically, like setting
child support,
awarding the dependency exemption, or
determining custody.
By submitting your case to the court's jurisdiction, the judge now has the power to
determine the custody and
child support awarded in your case.
Compare this to
child support awards that are largely
determined by a formula in North Carolina.