Monday, January 5, 2009

Legal Eaze #19 Child Support/ Home Purchase

Originally Printed: April 20, 2005

Maxine de Villefranche is an attorney and civil general practitioner with 13 years of experience. She operates her law practice from her new office in town, as well her Lancaster satellite office. She will answer legal questions posed to her by the readers, to the best of her abilities. Please forward your questions to maxinedev@msn.com.

Q. My ex-husband has owed $754 of ordered child support since February 1998. He also owes for two years of ordered day care charges totaling $540. He refuses to sign an interspousal grand deed on a piece of property awarded to me in our property settlement in 1997. What is my best course of action?
A. With regards to the back child support and the day care charges, you need to go into the same court that granted your divorce on an Order to Show Cause (OSC) and get the court to order arrearages to be paid through an assignment of your ex-husband’s wages. As for his refusal to sign the interspousal grand deed, you can double up on the same OSC and obtain a court order to the effect that the clerk of the court should sign your interspousal grant deed in order to get the property in your name only. Once you obtain your court order, you must find out who is in charge of signing your deed and how much it costs. You did not indicate where the property was located and what court granted your divorce. Every county has a different person in charge of signing deeds when the spouse who must sign refuses to do so, is deceased or cannot be found. However, the procedure is the same in every county. This is a fairly technical motion, so I advise you to contact an attorney to handle it for you.
Q. My husband and I made an offer to purchase a home about two weeks ago. We have not heard a word from the seller since. What’s the hold up and what can we do?
A. I simply do not have enough information to give you advice. Was your offer made to a real estate agent representing the seller? If so, contact the agent. Time is of essence in this hot real estate market and once an offer has been made, a response must come forth with a “yes” or “no” or a counteroffer. If you made your offer directly to the seller, then contact the seller. I presume no escrow has been opened and no deposit has been paid. It is possible that another offer was made at the same time as yours and the other offer was accepted. Nevertheless, you should be informed one way or another. You should not sit on an offer for two weeks, and this length of time tells me that either the house has already been sold or the seller is not very serious or some other major reason like an illness has gotten in the way. Patience is not necessarily a virtue here.

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