Subsection (b) establishes the priority scheme for recognition |
and prospective enforcement of a single order among existing |
multiple orders regarding the same obligor, obligee, and |
child. The 2001 amendment to Subsection (b) clarifies that a |
tribunal requested to sort out the multiple orders and |
determine which one will be prospectively controlling of |
future payments must have personal jurisdiction over the |
litigants in order to ensure that its decision is binding on |
all concerned. For UIFSA to function, one order must be |
denominated as the controlling order, and its issuing tribunal |
must be recognized as having continuing, exclusive |
jurisdiction. In choosing among existing multiple orders, none |
of which can be distinguished as being in conflict with the |
principles of UIFSA, Subsection (b)(1) gives first priority to |
an order issued by the only tribunal that is entitled to |
continuing, exclusive jurisdiction under the terms of UIFSA, |
i.e., an individual party or the child continues to reside in |
that State and no other issuing State meets this |
criterion. If two or more tribunals would have continuing, |
exclusive jurisdiction under the Act, Subsection (b)(2) first |
looks to the |