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Indiana-21 year olds emancipation

Started by unhappystepmom, Jan 17, 2007, 09:39:07 AM

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unhappystepmom

In October 2005, our attorney advised that we should seek emancipation from my (then) 20year old stepson.  He had not attended college for more than 4 months and he was employed full time.  However, he was still living at home with his mother.  When his mother found out we had filed, he quit his job and enrolled in school.  His CGPA is less than C (2.0).  

His mother wants us to pay room & board to her since he is attending college.  We have given her 2 choices-either all financial support ends or we will pay 100% until he turns 23, as long as he moves in with his father and I.  Our attorney continues to be wishy-washy and says that we need to attend court-ordered mediation although she was the one that requested it (she did not inform us that she was going to proceed this way).

1)  Did he meet emancipation criteria in October 2005?  
2)  Since he returned to school, does that change anything?
3)  Is there any way to get out of court-ordered mediation?  At this point, if she doesn't accept our offer, we want the court to decide.

Your help is greatly appreciated.

mistoffolees

What does your divorce decree state with respect to age limits?

If the decree says that you have to pay $xx per month as long as he's in college and up to a certain age, then you're going to have to pay that as long as he meets the requirements (his grades are irrelevant unless your agreement says he needs to maintanin a certain average.

It may not be fair, but you don't have much leverage. You have to do what the agreement says. You can't insist that he move in with you to obtain what the agreement says you'll give him.

In theory, I guess you could try to prove that he enrolled in school only to get money from you and had no intention of completing school, but I can't imagine any way in the world that I court would accept that argument - unless you had a letter stating that they did it only for that reason. Even then, I'm not sure you'd win.

unhappystepmom

The divorce decree says NOTHING about what age support will end nor anything about supporting him through college.  Basically, it says my husband will pay $$week, and cover health bills 100% until the order is updated.

mistoffolees

That seems odd, but if that's the case, then it would end under whatever the laws are in your state. You can probably find the relevant regulation in your state with Google.

I'm not sure, but I would guess that most states require support to age 18 or to age 22 (or 25) for full time students.

You could also ask Socrateaser, but he might just say it depends on the law in your state.

unhappystepmom

Believe me, I have MEMORIZED the Indiana Child Support guidelines.  From what I can see, she has no case against us.  But our attorney just seems to keep dragging this thing along.

The divorce decree was done about 18 years ago.  My husband didn't have money for an attorney and I don't think his ex's attorney covered her very well.

Any advise on mediation?  They want us to pay $200/hr for this!!!!

Ref

http://www.divorcenet.com/states/indiana/in_faq05

It looks to me that emancipation is 21 or younger in Indiana. You would have had the chance of having to pay some college expenses if she had filed for it prior to his 21st b-day, but it doesn't seem to be the case.

If it were me, I would stop paying now. The kid is 21 and has not filed for college expense. I would file for it myself. It seems pretty standard.


This is a forms link for emancipation.
http://www.in.gov/judiciary/selfservice/forms/eman_term.html

JMHO

Ref

unhappystepmom

Thanks, we did file for emancipation in October, 2005.  In November, 2005, the ex filed for college expenses.  For some reason our attorney will not explain to us, our attorney does not want to proceed with the emancipation.  She wants us to go through mediation.  We do not want to go through mediation, but she is saying that it is court-ordered.  

mistoffolees

I would suggest that the original poster take that link to the Socrateaser board and see what he says. If the law says it ends at 21 and he was not a student when he hit 21, your interpretation sounds reasonable. But it never hurts to get free legal advice to ensure that something that sounds reasonable really is.

Bolivar

It's time to Attorney Shop.

GET A NEW ATTORNEY. – you are being sold up the river.  (I know, I had an lawyer who did the same thing.  Years later after I learned a little about custody law I became aware my attorney did a horrible job for me.)

Ref

They make him go to mediation for any changes at all. It is just how things are done in his state.

He did bypass it last time by him and his ex (thru the attornies) agreeing that they will not come to any agreement in mediation and it would be a waste of time and expense. DH's attorney filed a motion to waive the mediation due to those factors and he and BM's attorney both signed it.

Maybe you can suggest filing a waiver based on that?

Ref