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Income Deduction Order (Non-Title IV Case) Form. This is a Florida form and can be use in Family Law Statewide.
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Tags: Income Deduction Order (Non-Title IV Case), 12.996(a), Florida Statewide, Family Law
INSTRUCTIONS FOR FLORIDA FAMILY LAW RULES OF PROCEDURE FORM
12.996(a)
INCOME DEDUCTION ORDER (3/10)
When should this form be used?
This form should be used in non-Title D cases when the court has ordered that support be paid by the
obligor’s payor through an income deduction order.
This form includes several blanks that must be filled in as applicable. The obligor is the person who is
obligated to pay the support ordered by the court and the obligee is the person entitled to receive the
support awarded by the court.
In Paragraph 1, one of the three lines must be checked off. The court order that establishes the support
award and/or the settlement or mediation agreement entered into between the parties should state the
effective date of the Income Deduction Order. The appropriate effective date should be checked off in
Paragraph 1.
The blank lines in Paragraph 2 should be completed tracking the same terms of support as are in the
court order that establishes the support award and/or the settlement or mediation agreement. The first
blank in each line should state the amount of the support payment and the second blank in each line
should state the time period that covers said support award. For example, if the child support is $100
per month the first blank would say $ “100” and the second blank in that line would say “month”.
Similarly, if the payments are to be payable weekly, then the second blank would say “week”. If there
are any arrearages owed at the time the Income Deduction Order is entered, they must be included in
the line for arrears, along with the amount and frequency of the payments due for the arrears, which
shall be no less than 20% of the current support obligation. If the payments are to be payable through
the State Disbursement Unit, the actual dollar amount of the service fee for the support awarded in
your case (4% of each payment not to exceed $5.25 per payment) should be included on the appropriate
line.
Paragraph 6 must be completed to show what percentage, if any, of a one-time payment made to the
obligor should be applied to any arrearage in support that may be due to the obligee.
What should I do next?
For this order to be effective, it must be signed by the judge. This form should be typed or printed in
black ink. After completing this form, you must first send a copy to the other party or his or her
attorney, if he or she is represented by an attorney, for approval or objection to the form before you
send it to the judge assigned to your case. If the opposing party or his or her attorney, if represented,
approves the form order, you may send the original proposed order and two copies to the judge
assigned to your case with a letter telling the judge that you have first sent a copy of this proposed order
to the opposing counsel or party, if unrepresented, and that they have no objection to the judge signing
this order. If the other party or his or her attorney, if represented, has an objection to the proposed
order as completed by you, you must tell the judge that you have sent a copy of this proposed order to
Instructions for Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure Form 12.996(a), Income Deduction Order (3/10)
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the opposing party or his or her counsel, if represented, and that they specifically object to the entry of
the proposed form Income Deduction Order. You must also send stamped self-addressed envelopes to
the judge addressed to you and the opposing party or his or her attorney, if represented. You should
keep a copy for your own records. If the judge signs the Income Deduction Order, the judge will mail
you and the opposing party (or their attorney) copies of the signed order in the envelopes you provide
to the court.
Where can I look for more information?
Before proceeding, you should read “General Information for Self-Represented Litigants” found at the
beginning of these forms. The words that are in “bold underline” in these instructions are defined
there. For further information see section 61.1301, Florida Statutes.
Special Instructions...
When the Income Deduction Order becomes effective (either immediately or delayed until arrearage),
you must then also send a copy of the Income Deduction Order to the obligor’s employer along with a
Notice to Payor, Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure Form 12.995(b), for the Income Deduction
Order to take effect.
It is your responsibility to determine what extra steps and/or forms, if any, must be taken, supplied,
and/or filed to insure the Income Deduction Order is implemented.
Remember, a person who is NOT an attorney is called a nonlawyer. If a nonlawyer helps you fill out
these forms, that person must give you a copy of a Disclosure from Nonlawyer, Florida Family Law Rules
of Procedure Form 12.900(a), before he or she helps you. A nonlawyer helping you fill out these forms
also must put his or her name, address, and telephone number on the bottom of the last page of every
form he or she helps you complete.
Instructions for Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure Form 12.996(a), Income Deduction Order (3/10)
American LegalNet, Inc.
www.FormsWorkFlow.com
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE
IN AND FOR
JUDICIAL CIRCUIT,
COUNTY, FLORIDA
Case No.:
Division:
,
Petitioner,
and
,
Respondent.
INCOME DEDUCTION ORDER (Non-Title IV Case)
TO:
ANY PRESENT OR SUBSEQUENT EMPLOYERS/PAYORS OF OBLIGOR
{name}
YOU ARE HEREBY ORDERED to make regular deductions from all income due and payable to the
above-named obligor in accordance with the terms of this order as follows:
1. This Income Deduction Order shall be effective
[ Choose one only]
immediately.
upon a delinquency in the amount of $
but not to exceed one month’s
payment, pursuant to the order establishing, enforcing, or modifying the obligation.
beginning {date} __________________.
2. You shall deduct:
$
$
$
$
per
per
per
per
for child support
for permanent alimony
for rehabilitative alimony
for
arrears totaling $
The deduction for arrears shall be no less than 20% of the current support obligation. After the full
amount of any arrears is paid, you shall deduct for attorneys’ fees and costs owed until the full amount
is paid.
$
per
for attorneys’ fees and costs totaling $
$
per
for State of Florida Disbursement Unit fee
(4% of each payment not to exceed $5.25 per payment)
Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure Form 12.996(a), Income Deduction Order (3/10)
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$
Total amount of income to be deducted each pay period
3. You shall pay the deducted amount to the “State of Florida Disbursement Unit”, and mail it to
the State of Florida Disbursement Unit P.O. Box 8500, Tallahassee, FL 32314-8500, (tel.) (877)
769-0251. All payments must include the obligor’s name (last, middle, first), obligor’s social
security number, obligee’s name (last, middle, first), name of county where court order
originated, and case number. !ll payments must be made by check, money order, cashier’s
check, certified check, or through the Internet with access provided by the State of Florida
www.floridasdu.com No credit will be given for any payments made directly to the obligee
without a court order permitting direct payments.
4. If a delinquency accrues after the order establishing, modifying, or enforcing the obligation has
been entered and there is no order for repayment of the delinquency or a preexisting arrearage,
a payor shall deduct an additional 20 percent of the current support obligation or other amount
agreed to by the parties until the delinquency and any attorneys’ fees and costs are paid in full.
No deduction may be applied to attorneys’ fees and costs until the delinquency is paid in full.
5. You shall not deduct in excess of the amounts allowed under the Consumer Credit Protection
Act, 15 U.S.C. §673(b), as amended.
6. You shall deduct ( Choose one only) ( ) the full amount, ( )
%, or ( ) none of the
income which is payable to the obligor in the form of a bonus or other similar one-time
payment, up to the amount of arrearage reported in the Income Deduction Order or the
remaining balance thereof, and forward the payment to the State of Florida Disbursement Unit.
For purposes of this subparagraph, “bonus” means a payment in addition to an obligor's usual
compensation and which is in addition to any amounts contracted for or otherwise legally due
and shall not include any commission payments due an obligor.
7. This Income Deduction Order shall remain in effect so long as the underlying order of support is
effective or until further order of the court.
ST!TEMENT OF OBLIGOR’S RIGHTS, REMEDIES, !ND DUTIES
8. The obligor is required to pay all amounts and fees specified within this Income Deduction
Order.
9. The amounts deducted may not be in excess of that allowed under the Consumer Credit
Protection Act, 15 U.S.C. §1673(b) as amended.
10. This income deduction order applies to all of the obligor’s current and subsequent payors and
periods of employment.
11. A copy of the Income Deduction Order will be served upon the obligor’s payor or payors.
Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure Form 12.996(a), Income Deduction Order (3/10)
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12. Enforcement of the Income Deduction Order may only be contested on the ground of mistake of
fact regarding the amount owed pursuant to the order establishing, enforcing, or modifying the
obligation, the arrearages, or the identity of the obligor, the payor, or the obligee.
13. The obligor is required to notify the obligee and, when the obligee is receiving IV-D services, the
IV-D agency, within 7 days of any changes in the obligor’s address, payors, and the addresses of
the obligor’s payors.
14. In a Title IV-D case, if an obligation to pay current support is reduced or terminated due to
emancipation of a child and the obligor owes an arrearage, retroactive support, delinquency, or
costs, income deduction continues at the rate in effect immediately prior to emancipation until
all arrearages, retroactive support, delinquencies, and costs are paid in full or until the amount
of withholding is modified.
ORDERED on
.
CIRCUIT JUDGE
COPIES TO:
Obligee
Obligor
Other:
Florida Family Law Rules of Procedure Form 12.996(a), Income Deduction Order (3/10)
American LegalNet, Inc.
www.FormsWorkFlow.com