Applicable NC Statutes (laws)
Child Support
50‑13.4. Action for support of minor child
(a) Any parent, or
any person, agency, organization or institution having
custody of a minor child, or bringing an action or
proceeding for the custody of such child, or a minor
child by his guardian may institute an action for the
support of such child as hereinafter provided.
(b) In the absence of
pleading and proof that the circumstances otherwise
warrant, the father and mother shall be primarily
liable for the support of a minor child. In the
absence of pleading and proof that the circumstances
otherwise warrant, parents of a minor, unemancipated
child who is the custodial or noncustodial parent of a
child shall share this primary liability for their
grandchild's support with the minor parent, the court
determining the proper share, until the minor parent
reaches the age of 18 or becomes emancipated. If both
the parents of the child requiring support were
unemancipated minors at the time of the child's
conception, the parents of both minor parents share
primary liability for their grandchild's support until
both minor parents reach the age of 18 or become
emancipated. If only one parent of the child requiring
support was an unemancipated minor at the time of the
child's conception, the parents of both parents are
liable for any arrearages in child support owed by the
adult or emancipated parent until the other parent
reaches the age of 18 or becomes emancipated. In the
absence of pleading and proof that the circumstances
otherwise warrant, any other person, agency,
organization or institution standing in loco parentis
shall be secondarily liable for such support. Such
other circumstances may include, but shall not be
limited to, the relative ability of all the
above‑mentioned parties to provide support or the
inability of one or more of them to provide support,
and the needs and estate of the child. The judge may
enter an order requiring any one or more of the
above‑mentioned parties to provide for the support of
the child as may be appropriate in the particular
case, and if appropriate the court may authorize the
application of any separate estate of the child to his
support. However, the judge may not order support to
be paid by a person who is not the child's parent or
an agency, organization or institution standing in
loco parentis absent evidence and a finding that such
person, agency, organization or institution has
voluntarily assumed the obligation of support in
writing. The preceding sentence shall not be construed
to prevent any court from ordering the support of a
child by an agency of the State or county which agency
may be responsible under law for such support.
The judge may order
responsible parents in a IV‑D establishment case to
perform a job search, if the responsible parent is not
incapacitated. This includes IV‑D cases in which the
responsible parent is a noncustodial mother or a
noncustodial father whose affidavit of parentage has
been filed with the court or when paternity is not at
issue for the child. The court may further order the
responsible parent to participate in work activities,
as defined in 42 U.S.C. § 607, as the court deems
appropriate.
(c) Payments ordered for the support of a minor child
shall be in such amount as to meet the reasonable
needs of the child for health, education, and
maintenance, having due regard to the estates,
earnings, conditions, accustomed standard of living of
the child and the parties, the child care and
homemaker contributions of each party, and other facts
of the particular case. Payments ordered for the
support of a minor child shall be on a monthly basis,
due and payable on the first day of each month. The
requirement that orders be established on a monthly
basis does not affect the availability of garnishment
of disposable earnings based on an obligor's pay
period.
The
court shall determine the amount of child support
payments by applying the presumptive guidelines
established pursuant to subsection (c1) of this
section. However, upon request of any party, the Court
shall hear evidence, and from the evidence, find the
facts relating to the reasonable needs of the child
for support and the relative ability of each parent to
provide support. If, after considering the evidence,
the Court finds by the greater weight of the evidence
that the application of the guidelines would not meet
or would exceed the reasonable needs of the child
considering the relative ability of each parent to
provide support or would be otherwise unjust or
inappropriate the Court may vary from the guidelines.
If the court orders an amount other than the amount
determined by application of the presumptive
guidelines, the court shall make findings of fact as
to the criteria that justify varying from the
guidelines and the basis for the amount ordered.
Payments ordered for the support of a child shall
terminate when the child reaches the age of 18 except:
(1)
If the child is otherwise emancipated, payments shall
terminate at that time;
(2)
If the child is still in primary or secondary school
when the child reaches age 18, support payments shall
continue until the child graduates, otherwise ceases
to attend school on a regular basis, fails to make
satisfactory academic progress towards graduation, or
reaches age 20, whichever comes first, unless the
court in its discretion orders that payments cease at
age 18 or prior to high school graduation.
In the case of
graduation, or attaining age 20, payments shall
terminate without order by the court, subject to the
right of the party receiving support to show, upon
motion and with notice to the opposing party, that the
child has not graduated or attained the age of 20.
If an arrearage for
child support or fees due exists at the time that a
child support obligation terminates, payments shall
continue in the same total amount that was due under
the terms of the previous court order or income
withholding in effect at the time of the support
obligation. The total amount of these payments is to
be applied to the arrearage until all arrearages and
fees are satisfied or until further order of the
court.
(c1) Effective July
1, 1990, the Conference of Chief District Judges shall
prescribe uniform statewide presumptive guidelines for
the computation of child support obligations of each
parent as provided in Chapter 50 or elsewhere in the
General Statutes and shall develop criteria for
determining when, in a particular case, application of
the guidelines would be unjust or inappropriate. Prior
to May 1, 1990 these guidelines and criteria shall be
reported to the General Assembly by the Administrative
Office of the Courts by delivering copies to the
President Pro Tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of
the House of Representatives. The purpose of the
guidelines and criteria shall be to ensure that
payments ordered for the support of a minor child are
in such amount as to meet the reasonable needs of the
child for health, education, and maintenance, having
due regard to the estates, earnings, conditions,
accustomed standard of living of the child and the
parties, the child care and homemaker contributions of
each party, and other facts of the particular case.
The guidelines shall include a procedure for setting
child support, if any, in a joint or shared custody
arrangement which shall reflect the other statutory
requirements herein.
Periodically, but at
least once every four years, the Conference of Chief
District Judges shall review the guidelines to
determine whether their application results in
appropriate child support award amounts. The
Conference may modify the guidelines accordingly. The
Conference shall give the Department of Health and
Human Services, the Administrative Office of the
Courts, and the general public an opportunity to
provide the Conference with information relevant to
the development and review of the guidelines. Any
modifications of the guidelines or criteria shall be
reported to the General Assembly by the Administrative
Office of the Courts before they become effective by
delivering copies to the President Pro Tempore of the
Senate and the Speaker of the House of
Representatives. The guidelines, when adopted or
modified, shall be provided to the Department of
Health and Human Services and the Administrative
Office of the Courts, which shall disseminate them to
the public through local IV‑D offices, clerks of
court, and the media.
Until July 1, 1990,
the advisory guidelines adopted by the Conference of
Chief District Judges pursuant to this subsection as
formerly written shall operate as presumptive
guidelines and the factors adopted by the Conference
of Chief District Judges pursuant to this subsection
as formerly written shall constitute criteria for
varying from the amount of support determined by the
guidelines.
(d) In non‑IV‑D
cases, payments for the support of a minor child shall
be ordered to be paid to the person having custody of
the child or any other proper person, agency,
organization or institution, or to the State Child
Support Collection and Disbursement Unit, for the
benefit of the child. In IV‑D cases, payments for the
support of a minor child shall be ordered to be paid
to the State Child Support Collection and Disbursement
Unit for the benefit of the child.
(d1)
For child support orders initially entered on or after
January 1, 1994, the immediate income withholding
provisions of G.S. 110‑136.5(c1) shall apply.
(e)
Payment for the support of a minor child shall be paid
by lump sum payment, periodic payments, or by transfer
of title or possession of personal property of any
interest therein, or a security interest in or
possession of real property, as the court may order.
The court may order the transfer of title to real
property solely owned by the obligor in payment of
arrearages of child support so long as the net value
of the interest in the property being transferred does
not exceed the amount of the arrearage being
satisfied. In every case in which payment for the
support of a minor child is ordered and alimony or
postseparation support is also ordered, the order
shall separately state and identify each allowance.
(e1)
In IV‑D cases, the order for child support shall
provide that the clerk shall transfer the case to
another jurisdiction in this State if the IV‑D agency
requests the transfer on the basis that the obligor,
the custodian of the child, and the child do not
reside in the jurisdiction in which the order was
issued. The IV‑D agency shall provide notice of the
transfer to the obligor by delivery of written notice
in accordance with the notice requirements of Chapter
1A‑1, Rule 5(b) of the Rules of Civil Procedure. The
clerk shall transfer the case to the jurisdiction
requested by the IV‑D agency, which shall be a
jurisdiction in which the obligor, the custodian of
the child, or the child resides. Nothing in this
subsection shall be construed to prevent a party from
contesting the transfer.
(f) Remedies for enforcement of support of minor
children shall be available as herein provided.
(1) The court may
require the person ordered to make payments for the
support of a minor child to secure the same by means
of a bond, mortgage or deed of trust, or any other
means ordinarily used to secure an obligation to pay
money or transfer property, or by requiring the
execution of an assignment of wages, salary or other
income due or to become due.
(2) If the court
requires the transfer of real or personal property or
an interest therein as provided in subsection (e) as a
part of an order for payment of support for a minor
child, or for the securing thereof, the court may also
enter an order which shall transfer title as provided
in G.S. 1A‑1, Rule 70 and G.S. 1‑228.
(3) The remedy of
arrest and bail, as provided in Article 34 of Chapter
1 of the General Statutes, shall be available in
actions for child‑support payments as in other cases.
(4) The remedies of
attachment and garnishment, as provided in Article 35
of Chapter 1 of the General Statutes, shall be
available in an action for child‑support payments as
in other cases, and for such purposes the child or
person bringing an action for child support shall be
deemed a creditor of the defendant. Additionally, in
accordance with the provisions of G.S. 110‑136, a
continuing wage garnishment proceeding for wages due
or to become due may be instituted by motion in the
original child support proceeding or by independent
action through the filing of a petition.
(5) The remedy of injunction, as provided in Article
37 of Chapter 1 of the General Statutes and G.S. 1A‑1,
Rule 65, shall be available in actions for child
support as in other cases.
(6)
Receivers, as provided in Article 38 of Chapter 1 of
the General Statutes, may be appointed in action for
child support as in other cases.
(7) A
minor child or other person for whose benefit an order
for the payment of child support has been entered
shall be a creditor within the meaning of Article 3A
of Chapter 39 of the General Statutes pertaining to
fraudulent conveyances.
(8) Except as
provided in Article 15 of Chapter 44 of the General
Statutes, a judgment for child support shall not be a
lien against real property unless the judgment
expressly so provides, sets out the amount of the lien
in a sum certain, and adequately describes the real
property affected; but past due periodic payments may
by motion in the cause or by a separate action be
reduced to judgment which shall be a lien as other
judgments and may include provisions for periodic
payments.
(9) An order for the
periodic payments of child support or a child support
judgment that provides for periodic payments is
enforceable by proceedings for civil contempt, and
disobedience may be punished by proceedings for
criminal contempt, as provided in Chapter 5A of the
General Statutes.
Notwithstanding the
provisions of G.S. 1‑294, an order for the payment of
child support which has been appealed to the appellate
division is enforceable in the trial court by
proceedings for civil contempt during the pendency of
the appeal. Upon motion of an aggrieved party, the
court of the appellate division in which the appeal is
pending may stay any order for civil contempt entered
for child support until the appeal is decided, if
justice requires.
(10) The remedies
provided by Chapter 1 of the General Statutes, Article
28, Execution; Article 29B, Execution Sales; and
Article 31, Supplemental Proceedings, shall be
available for the enforcement of judgments for child
support as in other cases, but amounts so payable
shall not constitute a debt as to which property is
exempt from execution as provided in Article 16 of
Chapter 1C of the General Statutes.
(11) The specific
enumeration of remedies in this section shall not
constitute a bar to remedies otherwise available.
(g) An individual who brings an
action or motion in the cause for the support of a
minor child, and the individual who defends the
action, shall provide to the clerk of the court in
which the action is brought or the order is issued,
the individual's social security number. The child
support order shall contain the social security number
of the parties as evidenced in the support proceeding.
(h) Child support orders initially
entered or modified on and after October 1, 1998,
shall contain the name of each of the parties, the
date of birth of each party, the social security
number of each party, and the court docket number. The
Administrative Office of the Courts shall transmit to
the Department of Health and Human Services, Child
Support Enforcement Program, on a timely basis, the
information required to be included on orders under
this subsection. (1967, c.
1153, s. 2; 1969, c. 895, s. 17; 1975, c. 814; 1977,
c. 711, s. 26; 1979, c. 386, s. 10; 1981, c. 472; c.
613, ss. 1, 3; 1983, c. 54; c. 530, s. 1; 1985, c.
689, s. 17; 1985 (Reg. Sess., 1986), c. 1016; 1989, c.
529, ss. 1, 2; 1989 (Reg. Sess., 1990), c. 1067, s. 2;
1993, c. 335, s. 1; c. 517, s. 5; 1995, c. 319, s. 9;
c. 518, s. 1; 1997‑433, ss. 2.1(a), 2.2, 4.4, 7.1;
1997‑443, ss. 11A.118(a), 11A.122; 1998‑17, s. 1;
1998‑176, s. 1; 1999‑293, ss. 3, 4;
1999‑456, s. 13; 2001‑237, s. 1; 2003‑288, s. 1.)
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