Oregon Code § 25.167·Enacted ·Last updated March 01, 2026
Statute Text
Procedure for determining arrearages.
This section establishes procedures for determining the amount of arrearage and
for making a record of arrearage of support payments. All of the following
apply to this section:
(1) A record of
support payment arrearage may be established by:
(a) Court order;
(b) A governing
child support judgment issued under ORS 25.091 or 25.531;
(c)
Administrative order issued under ORS 25.513 or 25.540;
(d) Stipulation
of the parties; or
(e) The
procedures under subsection (2) of this section whenever an existing child or
spousal support case enters the Department of Justice records system without a
current payment record maintained by any court clerk.
(2) When allowed
under subsection (1) of this section, arrearage amounts may be established
under this subsection. All of the following apply to this subsection:
(a) The obligee
or obligor may execute a certificate in a form acceptable to the Department of
Justice that states the total amount owed or the payment history in as much
detail as is necessary to demonstrate the periods and amounts of any arrearage.
(b) The person
making the certificate shall file the original certificate with the court in
which the support judgment was entered. When a governing child support judgment
has been issued, the person making the certificate shall file the original
certificate with the court that issued the governing child support judgment.
(c) The person
making the certificate shall serve a true copy of the certificate upon the
other party together with a notice that the certificate will be the basis of a
permanent record unless the other party files objections.
(d) For
objections to be valid under paragraph (c) of this subsection, the other party
must file the objection with the court within 30 days from the date of service
of the certificate and must serve true copies of the objections on both the
party who filed the certificate and the entity responsible for child support
services under ORS 25.080. Service under this paragraph may be by regular first
class mail or, if authorized by the recipient, electronic mail or other
electronic delivery method described by the administrator by rule.
(e) If objections
are filed within the time allowed, the party filing the certificate must file a
supplemental certificate that is in a form acceptable to the department and
that provides any information concerning the payment history that the
department determines necessary.
(f) If objections
are filed within the time allowed, the district attorney or the Division of
Child Support shall cause the case to be set for a court hearing. At the
hearing, the court shall consider the correctness of the certificate but may
not consider objections to the merits of the support judgment. The parties may
settle the case by written agreement anytime before the court hearing. Notice
of the court hearing shall be served upon the party filing the objections as
authorized in ORCP 9 B.
(g) If no
objections are filed under this subsection within the time allowed, the amount
of arrearage stated in the certificate is the amount owed for purposes of any
subsequent action. The district attorney or the Division of Child Support shall
file with the court a certificate stating the arrearage established under this
paragraph.
(3) When an
application to enroll in child support services is made under ORS 25.164, an
agency or court may not take or allow any ex parte enforcement action on
amounts owed as arrearage from before the time that the Department of Justice
commences support accounting and disbursement until the amount is established
under this section. This subsection does not prohibit or limit any enforcement
action on support payments that become due subsequent to the departments
commencement of support accounting and disbursement under ORS 25.164.
(4) In any
determination under this section, a canceled check, payable to the obligee,
indorsed by the obligee or deposited to an account of the obligee, drawn on the
account of the obligor and marked as child support shall be prima facie
evidence that child support was paid to the obligee in the amount shown on the
face of the check. It is immaterial that the check was signed by a person other
than the obligor, provided that the person who signed the check was an
authorized signatory of checks drawn on the account. [Formerly 25.330; 2003
c.146 §7; 2003 c.576 §298; 2009 c.352 §7; 2011 c.318 §1; 2025 c.99 §16]
Plain English Explanation
This Oregon statute addresses Procedure for determining arrearages. AI-powered analysis coming soon.
Key Points
01Part of Oregon statutory law
02Referenced as Oregon Code § 25.167
03Subject to legislative amendments
04Consult a licensed attorney for application to specific cases
Frequently Asked Questions
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