LD 986
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Page 29 of 77 An Act To Enact the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act Amendments of 1996 an... Page 31 of 77
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LR 467
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tribunal of the child's current home State. If that State has
not issued a support order, Subsection (b)(2) looks next to the
order most recently issued. Finally, Subsection (b)(3) provides
that if none of the existing multiple orders are entitled to be
denominated as the controlling order because none of the
preceding priorities apply, the forum tribunal is directed to
issue a new order, given that it has personal jurisdiction over
the obligor and obligee. The new order becomes the controlling
order, establishes the continuing, exclusive jurisdiction of the
tribunal, and fixes the support obligation and its nonmodifiable
aspects, primarily duration of support, see Sections 604 and
611(c), infra. The rationale for creating a new order to replace
existing multiple orders is that there is no valid reason to
prefer the terms of any one of the multiple orders over another
in the absence of a fact situation described in Subsections
(b)(1) or (b)(2).

 
As originally promulgated, UIFSA did not come to grips with
whether existing multiple orders issued by different States
might be entitled to full faith and credit without regard to
the determination of the controlling order under the Act. The
drafters took the position that state law, however uniform,
could not interfere with the ultimate interpretation of a
constitutional directive. Fortunately, this question has
almost certainly been mooted by the 1996 amendment to 28
U.S.C. Section 1738B, Full Faith and Credit for Child Support
Orders. Congress incorporated the multiple order recognition
provisions of Section 207 of UIFSA into FFCCSOA virtually word
for word in the PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY AND WORK OPPORTUNITY
RECONCILIATION ACT OF 1996. Pub. L. 104-193, Aug. 22, 1996,
110 Stat. 2221.

 
It is not altogether clear whether the terms of UIFSA apply to
a strictly intrastate case; that is, a situation in which
multiple child support orders have been issued by multiple
tribunals of a single State and all parties and the child
continue to reside in that State. This is not an uncommon
situation, often traceable to the intrastate applicability of
RURESA. A literal reading of the statutory language suggests
the section applies. Further, FFCCSOA does not make a
distinction regarding the tribunals that issued multiple
orders. If multiple orders have been issued by different
tribunals in the home State of the child, most likely the most
recent will be recognized as the controlling order,
notwithstanding the fact that UIFSA Section 207(b)(2)(B) and
FFCCSOA 42 U.S.C. Section 1738B(f)(3) literally do not apply.
At the very least, this section, together with FFCCSOA,
provide a template for resolving such conflicts.

 
Subsection (c), added in 1996, clarifies that any party or a
support enforcement agency may request a tribunal of the forum
State to identify the controlling order. That party is
directed


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