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Obligee
The person who is receiving child support.
Question: How much taxes will I receive from obligee parent? Is there a way to find out how much taxes I will receive from another parent owing 1900 in arrears child support????
Answer: YES. Wait until you receive the check. Can take up to 6 months, due to bureaucracy.
Question: Is joint obligee possible under a surety bond? If so, what are the conditions and how can this be done?
Answer: Yes, but the only time you can do it, is when the joint obligees are related (one controls the other), or one of them is a governmental entity (example - Houston Water Authority and Joe Smith Plumbing).
And it only works for the one, described job.
You can't list two seperate, unrelated obligees for one job, on one bond - or, worse, two seperate jobs.
Question: does the state of oregon pay for child support if the obligee is in prison?
Answer: No. Oregon has various forms of welfare available, but does not pay child support. Similarly, if a married parent goes to prison, the state does not support the spouse and child of the prisoner.
Question: the party transferring a right in an assignment is called the; assignee or assigor or obligor or obligee? which amendment extends due process protection to state acts?
laws that are enacted by the legislature are typically referred to as; administrative law or bills or common law or statues?
Answer: The party transferring the right is the "assignor" and the person to whom it is assigned is the "assignee."
The due process question I answered in a different post (it's the 14th amendment).
"Legislation (or "statutory law") is law which has been promulgated (or "enacted") by a legislature or other governing body. The term may refer to a single law, or the collective body of enacted law, while "statute" is also used to refer to a single law. Before an item of legislation becomes law it may be known as a bill, which is typically also known as "legislation" while it remains under active consideration."
Question: a debt is owed, a 3rd party offer to pay the debt for a performance of duty.Original obligee, a intended bene?
Answer: Yes, they would be the intended beneficiary. Dont pay the debtor.. pay the party they owe the money to..
Hope this helps...
Question: Insurance Terms (for a Surety Bond): "Principal", "Obligee", "Surety" .. who is who? [I am about to take the (California) State Exam to obtain my Fire & Casualty license and I keep getting confused on the Surety Bonds]
Actually, I know the 'Surety' is the Insurance Company ..
But I keep getting confused on who the "Principal" is and who the "Obligee" is ..
AND is there a "Guarantor" as well? Or is the term "Guarantor" not included in a Surety Bond? or is "Guarantor" just another term for the "Surety"?
Please tell me whether or not this is correct:
[using a Construction Contractor who is building someone a home as an example]
"Surety" - The Insurance Company.
"Principal" - The Contractor.
"Obligee" - The person the home is being built for.
IS this CORRECT?
... and it says a "Surety Bond" is a contract among at LEAST 3 parties. Are their specific names for these other parties? Or do the 3 terms ("Principal", "Obligee" and "Surety") cover everything I will need to know for the exam?
Or do other entities (like the Bank) have a term for their position as well?
Answer: You are correct:
Surety is the Surety (insurance) company
Principal is the contractor
Obligee is the owner of the project
The three parties they are referring to are the surety, the principal and the obligee. Occasionally (very rare) you may have multiple obligees and even more rare would be to have multiple sureties or multiple principals. The bank financing a project is generally not a party included in a performance and payment bond, unless they are also the owner of the project.
Good luck to you!
Question: WHAT DOES OBLIGEE MEAN? WHAT DOES Obigee and Obligor mean?
Answer: Neither are in common English usage nowadays. I have not come across them before.
An obligee is someone who is obligated to someone else. That is, they owe something to someone, whether that is money or returning a favour or whatever.
An obligor is the person to whom the obligee is obligated,. That is, the person who lent the money/did the favour/helped the person out.
Question: how do you pronounce obligee?
Answer: It is pronounced awe-blih-GEE
Question: In the case of child support, when a obligor gets a financial settlement is the obligee entitled to 17 % ? My daughter's father got a settlement of several million dollars from an accident. AS part of that settlement he was to set aside a specific amount for our child's education. He did but then he closed out the account. Now it is time for her to enter college and there is NO money in those accounts. He works and is very well off so paying her college fee would not present a hardship for him. I want to know if I can sue him for that money to pay for her education? The money and the specific way in which it was to be spent is a matter of court records from his civil suit. Also I was wondering if since there is an open child support case if I should present it there or get an attorney?
Answer: you probably can take him to court but the money would be put in your daughters name with his not yours. He would dispense the money as needed for school.
Question: is a petitioner an obligee?
Answer: I can't be sure what country you are talking about, or what type of petitioner, but I'll give you an example. If someone in the US is the petitioner for a fiance visa and th couple do marry in the US and the new spouses status changes, the petitioner is financially responsible for a period of ten years.
Question: One more time - failure to pay child support and license revocation? Most states penalize you by suspending your license if you fail to meet your obligations under a child support order. I'm not claiming or encouraging fathers not to pay but how exactly is this a beneficial and effective tool to promote/encourage men to pay?
How is placing a license on suspension beneficial?
Here are my arguments;
You have to find alternative means to get to and from employment.
If you personally drive and get pulled over the punishment for driving with a suspended license is punishable by jail time.
If you're placed in jail you become further in debt as an obligee.
If you become further in debt, you'll find yourself struggling to make your personal ends meet because they're getting you for unpaid arrears.
So, exactly how is it beneficial to revoke someone's license?
Anyone have any alternative ideas?
And what about those who have no money and are unemployed temporarily? How does it work for them?
Easy; no, everyone keeps coughing out opinions and not providing anything with substance, including you.
Tianjian; Thank you for your first hand experience.
Hillary; Did you read the question? Did I say this was my issue? No, I said I didn't understand and provided arguments for it. Get a clue.
Answer: Not all men who come out of a divorce come out of it financially ahead. I can't imagine how that fallacy is maintained. (Well, I can, but that is another matter.) It must make perfect sense, according to these minds, that anyone who can't keep up might perform a little better with additional burdens loaded onto their backs.
The pendulum swings back and forth. While some social inequities are ignored for generations, once it is decided to take corrective action, it is often extreme to the point of transferring victimization to the other party, or perceived party. It may take generations before our society is willing to embrace the idea of equal treatment under the law in the matter of divorce and father's rights.
Good luck.
Question: will this texas law be the same in florida? custodial parent voluntarily allows child to live with the parent order to pay child support. this is called voluntary relinquishment. if the obligee voluntarily gave actual control and possession of the child to the obligor for a long period of time than the court ordered periods of possession , and actual support of the child was supplied by the obligor, then the obligr is entitled to a credit up to the ammount of the preriodic payments previously ordered for the time the child primarily lived with him or her.
if so please tell me where you founded it and how to find it !
Answer: family law is different in every state..
not to mention that decisions relating to a child/ custody are based in the law of the HOME STATE, which is usually where the original case is filed.
Long way of saying that this is not a good place to be getting this.. you HAVE TO have a lawyer in the correct state who can explain what applies to you.
Question: what does this mean when you are applying to get a business started? Each individual solicitor is required to post a $5,000 personal surety bond, in the name of the individual solicitor -- not the company -- naming the Prince William Board of County Supervisors as obligee at 1 County Complex Court, Prince William, VA 22192. The bond may be obtained through an insurance agency
does this mean i have to pay 5,000 dollars up front, and can easily appear in court whenever they want me too?
what does this mean???
Answer: No. The bond can be purchased for LESS than the face value.
Basically, it's like an insurance: you did something wrong, they would have at least $5000 in their pocket for damages, even if you run. Then the bond enforcement folks come after you for the rest, and that has nothing to do with them. :)
And you are guaranteeing the bond as a PERSON, not as the business, which is a separate entity.
Question: Abby and Bob enter into a contract. This contract may not be delegated if:? a. performance depends on the personal skills or talents of the obligor.
b. special trust had been place in the obligor.
c. performance by a third party will vary materially from the performance expected by the obligee under the contract.
d. all of the above.
Answer: Answer is D
Question: Business contracts and 3rd party rights? When assigning rights and delegating duties to a of a contract to a 3rd party, are rights and duties interchangeable? For example, if Alex promised to build a house for Billy for $500,000, Alex has the right to collect money from Billy, but also has a duty to build the house...and Billy also has the right to get his house, but has a duty to pay Alex...is this correct?
So, would that mean that the assignor and assignee be interchangeable also? Excluding any rules/exceptions, Alex could assign someone else to build the house, and Alex could assign someone else to pay, correct?
Lastly, if Alex (assuming he needed the money now but is still building the house) assigned his right to receive his payment to 3rd party Chris, is Chris now the obligee? And Billy remains to be the obligor (one who owes duty being transfered)?
Answer: Aside from the fact that your qustion is as clear as Mississippi Delta water, I'll try to answer it.
If party A contracts with party B to perform a duty (build a house, in this case), then party A has no legal recourse against party C (subcontrctor hired by party B).
You first scenario is correct. In exchange for money, Alex has a duty to build the house. Subject to the terms of the contract, Billy has a duty to pay Alex (provided Alex has fulfilled his duties).
While Alex can assign the duty of building the house under a separate contract to someone else, it woiuld not relieve him of his responsibilities under the contract with Billy. Any penalties for delays, for example, would be payable from Alex to Billy, irrespective of the other party.
If Alex is contracted to build the house, he cannot assign liability to a third party, regardless of the payment structure he sets up. Chris is not obliged under any covenents of the contract between Alex and Billy, he is merely a payee, like a bank. Alex is always and forever bound to deliver whatever he promises in his original contract.
If I make a contract with Alex to build a house, ready to move into by a certain date, and he does not deliver it, for whatever reason, my beef is with Alex, not the painters he hired, or the framers, trim crpenters, electricians, plumbers, etc. Alex is the only one I can sue, and he canniot assign that liability to anyone else.
Question: In general, illegal agreements; cannot be enforced but restitution is available or cannot be enforced and? there is no remedy [which is correct?
The party transferring a right in an assignment is known as the; obligee or obligor or assignee or assignor?
The length of a life estate is usually measured by the life of the; grantor or grantee?
Answer: illegal agreements cannot be enforced and there is legal restitution as long as you were tricked into the agreement
Question: Is the concept of 'noblesse oblligee' still valid? Are the nobles still obligated to care for those historically under their care and the communities in which they live? How many generations seperated from the last title-bearing ancestor does the duty of noblility and peerage does noblesse obligee still affect their descendants?
I am wondering because I am of noble descent, living in America.
Answer: Absolutely dear boy. Why only today I helped an elderly lady across the road.
This afternoon I shall be helping out at a shelter for battered corgis. One hopes to accumulate brownie points with Her Majesty The Queen!
Question: Insurance coverage after divorce? My ex says I am to pay 18% of the co-payment our court order states-The obligor (my ex) shall obtain and maintain health insurance coverage for the above named minor child, as coverage is available at a reasonable cost through a group policy, contract, or plan offered by the obligor's employer or through any other group policy, contract, or plan available to the obligor and is not available for a more reasonable cost through a group policy, contract, or plan available to the obligee (me). O.R.C. 3119.30(A), this box is marked, the box where it says I am to pay 18% along with other boxes are not marked. Am I to pay any of the co-payment? We live in Columbiana County, Ohio. I do not work, so I don't have insurance coverage for our child.
Also, I have been paying all the co-payments till now so we would not need to deal with my ex, (he refuses to have anything to do with our son), but him and his wife keep sending us letters trying to state the law to us?! So I figured if they want to harass us, they can pay their bills also, any way... the co-payments I have paid... does he my ex have to pay them back to me?
Yes my ex does have VERY good insurance, he also makes close to $100,000. per year, when my present husband only makes about $50,000.,also, I am unable to work because of brain tumors.
Answer: call your case worker / lawyer at child support and get them to make it clear for you...............they tried to get my ex to pay this one as well but he stopped work so that they could not take out his wages..........
IF at all possible get a job........cos kids with no medical cover is NOT fun...............
Sorry for your poor health.was not aware of that during my 1st reply..........maybe if it is possible you could ask for a review of your CSO......and have this part of it brought up in court remember the Child support people do NOT represent you but the CHILD and as such you would have a very good case for having them adjust things in your child's favour.............ie NO co pay at all esp. as he is making so much money.....what a prig, and you sound well out of it................Take care
Question: 1] the federal court receive their power from:? the respective states in which they sit or the Constitution or the administrative agencies or the Congress?
2]in general, illegal agreements; can still be enforced or can only be enforced in a supreme court or cannot be enforced and there is no remedy available?
3]the party transferring a right in an assignment is known as the; obligee or obligor or assignee or assignor?
Answer: 1) Constitution (doctrine of separation of powers)
2) Cannot be enforced (illegal agreements are illegal!)
3) no idea, but should be assignor based on meaning of each word.
Question: Cash jobs for child support? How many people are the obligee "The one that get's the child support" and the ex keeps trying to lower it without having a paycheck, they only work for cash? What's your story
Answer: My "story" is that if I had proof my ex was working "Under the table" I'd be at the IRS with that proof. That way I would be assured of getting the right amount of child support, because the Government would be in the middle of him and any income and my children would get their's off the top...
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