Just a bit of a quick query without going into too much detail - suppose someone has been overpaying maintenance toward their child for a year or two, can they legally stop paying without notice until the overpaid maintenance has been eroded to nil?
Just a bit of a quick query without going into too much detail - suppose someone has been overpaying maintenance toward their child for a year or two, can they legally stop paying without notice until the overpaid maintenance has been eroded to nil?
Just a bit of a quick query without going into too much detail - suppose someone has been overpaying maintenance toward their child for a year or two, can they legally stop paying without notice until the overpaid maintenance has been eroded to nil?
I refer your girlfriend's partner to my previous answer,and the word of advice is .....................beware.
Blimey there are some moralistic answers here...surely the adage is you pay what can actually afford and what think is fair to do the very best you can and if that's genuinely best can do then that has to be reasonable! And I say this is as someone who happily pays for my child irrespective of whatever my relationship with her mum is like....
Blimey there are some moralistic answers here...surely the adage is you pay what can actually afford and what think is fair to do the very best you can and if that's genuinely best can do then that has to be reasonable! And I say this is as someone who happily pays for my child irrespective of whatever my relationship with her mum is like....
Ha. Jumping to a few conclusions here, eh? It's not my child - my girlfriend's partner has thrown his toys out of the pram a bit. He has had a private agreement where he's paid slightly higher than the CSA guidelines and has now decided to stop paying until the "overpaid" amount is reduced. Looking online, it looks like he can't legally do this. Hmm. Thanks to all.
The thing is though if he could not have afforded it he could not have overpaid in the first place