ChatterBank1 min ago
Halting maintenance payments for non compliance of court orders
Another AB'er(cazzz) said she thought she had heard somewhere that they can now sometimes halt maintance payments to the mother if she continually breaks court orders/contact orders. Does anybody have any info at all on this??
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hi Smow, i would be very surprised if this is the case and would caution against it for a couple of reasons
1) children ALWAYS need maintaining - whether they see the non custodial parent or not, they will always eat, need clothes and need to be housed!
2) If the girl really doesn't want to see her dad, then she is effectively being "punished" for that - not a great way to maintain a relationship or to keep the communication open
3) It is just another stick with which to beat your husband with and another reason for the mum to drip poison in the ear of the daughter (You make your husband sound like a right arse sometimes - is it possible the girl actually doesn't want to see him?)
4) Children should not be disadvantaged by their parents splitting up - if she has to accept a lesser lifestyle because there are no maintenance payments (ie no school trips, no after school activities because the mum cant afford them) Then in my opinion your husband has lost sight of the fact that his daughter is the most important thing in this whole situation
4)
1) children ALWAYS need maintaining - whether they see the non custodial parent or not, they will always eat, need clothes and need to be housed!
2) If the girl really doesn't want to see her dad, then she is effectively being "punished" for that - not a great way to maintain a relationship or to keep the communication open
3) It is just another stick with which to beat your husband with and another reason for the mum to drip poison in the ear of the daughter (You make your husband sound like a right arse sometimes - is it possible the girl actually doesn't want to see him?)
4) Children should not be disadvantaged by their parents splitting up - if she has to accept a lesser lifestyle because there are no maintenance payments (ie no school trips, no after school activities because the mum cant afford them) Then in my opinion your husband has lost sight of the fact that his daughter is the most important thing in this whole situation
4)
Well I think the daughter will come to resent her mother's actions when she's older and independent. This is actually what happened with my oldest two grandchildren when my son and his wide split up. She did everything she could to stop my son seeing his children and oh boy don't think children don't realise what's going on. My eldest GC has told me she hated what her mother did and thought she was wrong. Kids aren't daft.
I agree ladybirder - believe me, been there and done it.
Because I dont have a paper trail of what I did, my eldest daughter believed everything her father told her about me, mostly a pack of lies but hey, I can;t prove he didnt pay me any money for her, Cant prove he never went to court, cant prove he did nothing he said he was going to for her, so guess who is paying dividends for it? And now he's dead there is no chance she will ever know the truth
Because I dont have a paper trail of what I did, my eldest daughter believed everything her father told her about me, mostly a pack of lies but hey, I can;t prove he didnt pay me any money for her, Cant prove he never went to court, cant prove he did nothing he said he was going to for her, so guess who is paying dividends for it? And now he's dead there is no chance she will ever know the truth
Hi Tony, thanks for replying.He has an excellent solicitor, and has been through the courts for 8 years now, but she just ignores every single order. Last time he went back was about 2 months ago and the judge was very angry with her and said if he saw her again he would involve Social services, but she has continued to block contact. its just horrendous.
If the contact order was issued 8 years ago it probably did not have a warning notice attached. The courts are becoming more robust with the resident parent who continually has a reason to block the contact order, they are not well, they are out, they are visiting friends, they are with their other grand parents who are not well, they do not want to see you etc, are all frequently heard. It is also not unknown for the resident parent to paint a very black and unfair picture of the non-resident parent.
(I do not say this will happen only that it has been known to happen)
If his current solicitor agrees persistence will pay, every time a contact order is blocked report it to the court.
(I do not say this will happen only that it has been known to happen)
If his current solicitor agrees persistence will pay, every time a contact order is blocked report it to the court.
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