Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 25 § 25.125 — Disposition of support obligation overpayments; liquidated debts in favor of
Oregon Revised Statutes Chapter 25 ·
Oregon Code § 25.125·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Disposition of support obligation overpayments; liquidated debts in favor of
state; rules.
(1)
The Department of Justice may return moneys to an obligor when the department
determines that the obligor has paid more moneys than are due under a support
obligation. However, when the obligor has an ongoing support obligation, the
department may give the obligor credit for the excess amount paid and apply the
credit to the future support obligation until the credit is fully used. When
the department applies a credit to offset a future support obligation, the
department shall so notify the obligee. The notice must inform the obligee
that, if the obligee requests, the department will conduct an administrative
review to determine if the record keeping and accounting related to the
calculation of the credit balance is correct. The department shall conduct the
administrative review within 30 days after receiving the request.
(2) An
overpayment in favor of the state is created when the Department of Justice,
under ORS 25.020, has transmitted moneys to any person or entity, including but
not limited to an obligor, an obligee, a child support agency of another state
or an agency of this state, and:
(a) The amount
transmitted is attributable in whole or in part to a tax refund offset
collection all or part of which has been taken back by the Internal Revenue
Service or the Department of Revenue; or
(b) The
Department of Justice performed an accounting adjustment that resulted in the
refund, reallocation or redistribution of the amount transmitted to the state
or any other person or entity.
(3)(a) The person
or entity to which the moneys were transmitted owes the amount of the
overpayment to the state. The Department of Justice shall:
(A) Attempt to
recover the overpayment if it is cost-effective to do so;
(B) Notify the
person or entity to whom the overpayment was made that the person or entity
owes money to the state and specify the amount of the overpayment to be
returned to the department; and
(C) Give the
person or entity opportunity to object.
(b) If the person
or entity does not file a timely written objection, the overpayment amount
determined by the department becomes a liquidated debt and creates an account
receivable owed to the department, and the provisions of subsection (4) of this
section apply. If the department does not resolve an objection to the persons
or entitys satisfaction, an administrative law judge assigned from the Office
of Administrative Hearings shall hear the objection. An order by the
administrative law judge becomes a liquidated debt and creates an account
receivable owed to the department. The person or entity may appeal the decision
of an administrative law judge to the circuit court for a hearing de novo.
(c)
Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this subsection, if an agency of this or
another state owes the overpayment, the agency shall return the amount of the
overpayment to the department without notice and opportunity to object.
(4)(a) The amount
of the overpayment specified in subsection (3)(a) of this section is a
liquidated debt owed to the state and an associated account receivable. The
Department of Justice may recover the debt by obtaining from the obligee an
agreement to apply all or a portion of future support payments to the account
receivable or in any other way permitted by law.
(b) Accounts
receivable are considered delinquent for purposes of this subsection and are
subject to the provisions of ORS chapter 293 if:
(A) The person or
entity fails to make full payment within 90 days of liquidation; or
(B) A period of
90 days elapses without a payment as required by a payment agreement between
the department and the obligated person or entity.
(5)(a) In
addition to the account receivable created under subsection (2) of this
section, a debt in favor of the state and an associated account receivable are
created when:
(A) The
Department of Justice receives payment for support amounts due from an obligor,
a withholder subject to an order to withhold under this chapter or another
issuer on behalf of an obligor;
(B) The
department transmits the amount to any other person or entity; and
(C) The payment
is dishonored or reversed.
(b) When a debt
is created under paragraph (a) of this subsection, the amount of money
specified in the payment is owed to the state, and the department may collect
the debt from one of the following:
(A) The obligor,
regardless of who presented the check.
(B) The
withholder, if the withholder presented the check.
(C) The other
issuer, if another issuer presented the check.
(D) The person or
entity to which the amount was transmitted by the department.
(c) The
department shall:
(A) Attempt to
recover the debt if it is cost-effective to do so;
(B) Notify the
obligor, withholder or other issuer who made the payment that the person or
entity owes the money to the state; and
(C) Specify the
am
Plain English Explanation
This Oregon statute addresses Disposition of support obligation overpayments; liquidated debts in favor of
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Key Points
01Part of Oregon statutory law
02Referenced as Oregon Code § 25.125
03Subject to legislative amendments
04Consult a licensed attorney for application to specific cases
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