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Enforcing Family Law Agreements

46 bytes added, 00:23, 27 June 2022
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People who sign a family law agreement are signing a ''contract''. A contract is an agreement between two or more people that creates an obligation to do or to not do something. Other kinds of contracts include the rental agreement a tenant has with a landlord, the lease agreement you might have with a car company, or the purchase agreement you might have with the people from whom you've bought a house. Contracts can be enforced by the courts when someone doesn't do what the contract requires of them; in fact, that's the whole point of having a contract. You want a document that describes your legal obligations to each other and you want to have a way of making the other party do what they're supposed to do.
This section discusses how family law agreements can be enforced by the courts and by the [[https://www.clicklaw.bc.ca/helpmap/service/1082 Family Maintenance Enforcement Program]], an agency of the provincial government that can help with the enforcement of agreements for the payment of child support and spousal support.
==Introduction==