Uniform Interstate Family Support Act, Uniform laws passed by each state that govern the procedures for the interstate establishment and enforcement of paternity and child Support. Replaced the old URESA laws.
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act, Title 14, Article 5, Colorado Revised Statutes (C.R.S.) which governs interstate case processing.
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act which replaces URESA and is a Model Act which all states were required to adopt verbatim. It is used to enforce and manage interstate child support cases.
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act. Model state child support enforcement law under which employers must put into effect a child support withholding order from another state's child support enforcement agency if the order appears regular on its face..
Common name for the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act, which in many states has replaced URESA as the basis for interstate enforcement of support orders. ultimate fact At trial, evidence is considered an ultimate fact if its existence is necessary to prove a required element of the crime. A foundation of facts must often be established before the court will allow an ultimate fact to be introduced into evidence. The mere statement by a witness that "John is a crook" is not sufficient to prove John committed a larceny. underinsured motorist Insurance coverage where one may make a claim against one's own insurance to recover damages that exceed what the negligent partys' insurance will cover. uninsured motorist Automobile insurance coverage allowing for recovery when one is injured due to the negligence of a person without liability insurance coverage.
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act- a law which provides a mechanism for establishing and enforcing support obligations when the non-custodial parent lives in one State and the custodial parent and child(ren) live in another
An abbreviation for "Uniform Interstate Family Support Act." Pertains to support actions where the parents do not live in the same state.
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act. Legislation adopted nationwide as of January 1998. It is designed to streamline the interstate process and replaces URESA as the acting interstate legislation.
The Uniform Interstate Family Support Act, the set of laws which govern interstate child support enforcement.
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act, the successor of URESA (which see). The uniform child and spousal support legislation already adopted and implemented by most states and expected to be law throughout the USA soon. It is a long-arm statute, giving the state which issues the first support order jurisdiction over the support payor anywhere in the USA for the purposes of varying that order
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act. A federal law governing laws enacted at the state level to provide mechanisms for establishing and enforcing child support obligations in interstate cases. Among the law's provisions is the ability of state IV-D agencies to send withholding orders to employers across state lines.
Uniform Interstate Enforcement of Support Act. Chapter 88. Florida Statutes
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act. and Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act (URESA) -laws enacted at the State level which provide mechanisms for establishing and enforcing support obligations when the noncustodial parent lives in one State and the custodial parent and the children live in another
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act. A nationwide law that encompasses registration, enforcement and modification provisions regarding child support and spousal support.
Uniformed Interstate Family Support Act. Law that permits establishment and enforcement of support orders when the child lives and the non-custodial parent reside in different states. The previous act was the Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act (URESA).
Uniform Interstate Family Support Act. Uniform state laws that provide mechanisms for establishing and enforcing child support obligations in interstate cases (when a noncustodial parent lives in a different state than his or her child and the custodial parent).