Child Law

In re: Marquita M.

Illinois Appellate Court
Civil Court
Juveniles
Citation
Case Number: 
2012 IL App (4th) 110011
Decision Date: 
Wednesday, June 13, 2012
District: 
4th Dist.
Division/County: 
Adams Co.
Holding: 
Affirmed.
Justice: 
TURNER
Court adjudicated minor, age 15, a delinquent minor for unlawful use of weapons. Minor was found to have a steak knife in pocket of her hooded sweatshirt at school, and minor admitted to school administrator that she was going to fight with another student that day. Minor was not in custody for Miranda purposes when she made the statements; only one police officer was present who did not restrain minor, display weapon, or show force, and questioning was of limited duration. Rational trier of fact could find minor possessed knife with intent to use it unlawfully against other student. (STEIGMANN and KNECHT, concurring.)

House Bill 5221

Topic: 
Child-support enforcement
(Pritchard, R-Sycamore; Silverstein, D-Chicago) does three things in the Income-Withholding for Support Act. (1) Requires that an action to collect a penalty from a payor may not be brought more than one year after the date of the payor's alleged failure to withhold or pay income. (2) Requires that the obligee must give written notice of the non-receipt of payment to the payor by certified mail with return receipt requested. Within 14 days of receipt by the payor the payor either (i) notify the obligee of the reason for the non-receipt of payment or (ii) make the required payment, together with interest at the rate of 9% calculated from the date on which the payment of income should have been made. If a payor fails to comply with this provision, the payor is subject to the $100 per day penalty provided under the Act. (3) Caps the total penalty for one occasion at $10,000 for a payor’s failure to withhold or pay to the SDU an amount designated in the income-withholding notice. Passed both chambers.

Senate Bill 3594

Topic: 
Disabled adullts
(Silverstein, D-Chicago; Feigenholtz, D-Chicago) prohibits the staying of enforcement or suspendion an order adjudicating a person disabled and appointing a guardian pending the filing and resolution of any post-judgment motion. It still allows the judge to do this. Passed both chambers.

Senate Bill 2569

Topic: 
Dissipation of marital assets and child support
(Mulroe, D-Chicago; Soto, D-Chicago) does two things affecting dissipation claims and child support. (1) Requires notice of intent to claim dissipation to be filed no later than 60 days before trial or 30 days after discovery closes, whichever is later. The notice must include an identification of the property dissipated and the date, dates, or periods of time during which the marriage began undergoing an irretrievable breakdown and when the dissipation occurred. No dissipation may be considered if it occurred five years before the filing of the petition for dissolution of marriage or three years after the party claiming dissipation knew or should have known of the dissipation. (2) Specifically grants the court the right to order one or both parties to make reasonable payments for health needs not covered by insurance, child-care, education, and extracurricular activities in addition to statutory child support. Passed both chambers.

Senate Bill 3549

Topic: 
Child-support enforcement
(Dillard, R-Westmont; Pihos, R-Glen Ellyn) authorizes a court to require a self-employed person who is found in contempt for failing to pay child support to (a) provide monthly financial statements from the business or the self-employment; (b) seek employment and report to the court information about his or her employment search; or (c) report to the Department of Employment Security for job-search services to find employment that will be subject to child support withholding. Passed both chambers.

House Bill 3960

Topic: 
Calculation of child support
(Tracy, R-Brown County; Martinez, D-Chicago) does not allow an obligor to use as a deduction in the calculation of net income any payments for premiums of court-ordered life insurance that reasonably secures payment of support for non-minor children and educational expenses, terms agreed to by the parties, or payment of maintenance (through existing or new life insurance). Passed both chambers.

House Bill 6192

Topic: 
Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act
(Burke, D-Evergreen Park) rewrites the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act. It is the work product of the Illinois Family Law Study Committee, which the General Assembly charged with doing a 30-year review of the Illinois Marriage and Dissolution of Marriage Act. It was just introduced.