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518A.46 PROCEDURES FOR CHILD AND MEDICAL SUPPORT ORDERS AND
PARENTAGE ORDERS IN THE EXPEDITED PROCESS.
    Subdivision 1. General. This section applies in cases in which support rights are assigned
under section 256.741, subdivision 2, or where the public authority is providing services under an
application for child support services.
    Subd. 2. Role of nonattorney employees; general provisions. (a) The county attorney shall
review and approve as to form and content all pleadings and other legal documents prepared by
nonattorney employees of the county agency for use in the expedited child support process.
(b) Under the direction of, and in consultation with, the county attorney, nonattorney
employees of the county agency shall have authority to perform the following legal duties:
(1) meet and confer with parties by mail, telephone, electronic, or other means regarding
legal issues;
(2) explain to parties the purpose, procedure, and function of the expedited child support
process and the role and authority of nonattorney employees of the county agency regarding
legal issues;
(3) prepare pleadings, including, but not limited to, summonses and complaints, notices,
motions, subpoenas, orders to show cause, proposed orders, administrative orders, and stipulations
and agreements;
(4) issue administrative subpoenas;
(5) prepare judicial notices;
(6) negotiate settlement agreements;
(7) attend and participate as a witness in hearings and other proceedings and, if requested by
the child support magistrate, present evidence, agreements and stipulations of the parties, and
any other information deemed appropriate by the magistrate;
(8) participate in such other activities and perform such other duties as delegated by the
county attorney; and
(9) exercise other powers and perform other duties as permitted by statute or court rule.
(c) Nonattorney employees of the county agency may perform the following duties without
direction from the county attorney:
(1) gather information on behalf of the public authority;
(2) prepare financial worksheets;
(3) obtain income information from the Department of Employment and Economic
Development and other sources;
(4) serve documents on parties;
(5) file documents with the court;
(6) meet and confer with parties by mail, telephone, electronic, or other means regarding
nonlegal issues;
(7) explain to parties the purpose, procedure, and function of the expedited child support
process and the role and authority of nonattorney employees of the county agency regarding
nonlegal issues; and
(8) perform such other routine nonlegal duties as assigned.
(d) Performance of the duties prescribed in paragraphs (b) and (c) by nonattorney employees
of the county agency does not constitute the unauthorized practice of law for purposes of section
481.02.
    Subd. 3. Contents of pleadings. (a) In cases involving establishment or modification of a
child support order, the initiating party shall include the following information, if known, in the
pleadings:
(1) names, addresses, and dates of birth of the parties;
(2) Social Security numbers of the parties and the minor children of the parties, which
information shall be considered private information and shall be available only to the parties,
the court, and the public authority;
(3) other support obligations of the obligor;
(4) names and addresses of the parties' employers;
(5) gross income of the parties as calculated in section 518A.29;
(6) amounts and sources of any other earnings and income of the parties;
(7) health insurance coverage of parties;
(8) types and amounts of public assistance received by the parties, including Minnesota
family investment plan, child care assistance, medical assistance, MinnesotaCare, title IV-E foster
care, or other form of assistance as defined in section 256.741, subdivision 1; and
(9) any other information relevant to the computation of the child support obligation under
section 518A.34.
(b) For all matters scheduled in the expedited process, whether or not initiated by the public
authority, the nonattorney employee of the public authority shall file with the court and serve on
the parties the following information:
(1) information pertaining to the income of the parties available to the public authority from
the Department of Employment and Economic Development;
(2) a statement of the monthly amount of child support, medical support, child care, and
arrears currently being charged the obligor on Minnesota IV-D cases;
(3) a statement of the types and amount of any public assistance, as defined in section
256.741, subdivision 1, received by the parties; and
(4) any other information relevant to the determination of support that is known to the public
authority and that has not been otherwise provided by the parties.
The information must be filed with the court or child support magistrate at least five days
before any hearing involving child support, medical support, or child care reimbursement issues.
    Subd. 4. Noncontested matters. Under the direction of the county attorney and based on
agreement of the parties, nonattorney employees may prepare a stipulation, findings of fact,
conclusions of law, and proposed order. The documents must be approved and signed by the
county attorney as to form and content before submission to the court or child support magistrate
for approval.
    Subd. 5. Administrative authority. (a) The public authority may take the following actions
relating to establishment of paternity or to establishment, modification, or enforcement of support
orders, without the necessity of obtaining an order from any judicial or administrative tribunal:
(1) recognize and enforce orders of child support agencies of other states;
(2) upon request for genetic testing by a child, parent, or any alleged parent, and using the
procedure in paragraph (b), order the child, parent, or alleged parent to submit to blood or genetic
testing for the purpose of establishing paternity;
(3) subpoena financial or other information needed to establish, modify, or enforce a child
support order and sanction a party for failure to respond to a subpoena;
(4) upon notice to the obligor, obligee, and the appropriate court, direct the obligor or other
payor to change the payee to the central collections unit under sections 518A.54 to 518A.56;
(5) order income withholding of child support under section 518A.53 and sanction an
employer or payor of funds pursuant to section 393.07, subdivision 9a, for failing to comply
with an income withholding notice;
(6) secure assets to satisfy the debt or arrearage in cases in which there is a support debt
or arrearage by:
(i) intercepting or seizing periodic or lump sum payments from state or local agencies,
including unemployment benefits, workers' compensation payments, judgments, settlements,
lotteries, and other lump sum payments;
(ii) attaching and seizing assets of the obligor held in financial institutions or public or
private retirement funds; and
(iii) imposing liens in accordance with section 548.091 and, in appropriate cases, forcing the
sale of property and the distribution of proceeds;
(7) for the purpose of securing overdue support, increase the amount of the monthly support
payments by an additional amount equal to 20 percent of the monthly support payment to include
amounts for debts or arrearages; and
(8) subpoena an employer or payor of funds to provide promptly information on the
employment, compensation, and benefits of an individual employed by that employer as an
employee or contractor, and sanction an employer or payor of funds pursuant to section 393.07,
subdivision 9a
, for failure to respond to the subpoena.
(b) A request for genetic testing by a child, parent, or alleged parent must be supported by
a sworn statement by the person requesting genetic testing alleging paternity, which sets forth
facts establishing a reasonable possibility of the requisite sexual contact between the parties, or
denying paternity, and setting forth facts establishing a reasonable possibility of the nonexistence
of sexual contact between the alleged parties. The order for genetic tests may be served anywhere
within the state and served outside the state in the same manner as prescribed by law for service
of subpoenas issued by the district court of this state. If the child, parent, or alleged parent fails
to comply with the genetic testing order, the public authority may seek to enforce that order in
district court through a motion to compel testing. No results obtained through genetic testing done
in response to an order issued under this section may be used in any criminal proceeding.
(c) Subpoenas may be served anywhere within the state and served outside the state in the
same manner as prescribed by law for service of process of subpoenas issued by the district court
of this state. When a subpoena under this subdivision is served on a third-party recordkeeper,
written notice of the subpoena shall be mailed to the person who is the subject of the subpoenaed
material at the person's last known address within three days of the day the subpoena is served.
This notice provision does not apply if there is reasonable cause to believe the giving of the notice
may lead to interference with the production of the subpoenaed documents.
(d) A person served with a subpoena may make a written objection to the public authority or
court before the time specified in the subpoena for compliance. The public authority or the court
shall cancel or modify the subpoena, if appropriate. The public authority shall pay the reasonable
costs of producing the documents, if requested.
(e) Subpoenas are enforceable in the same manner as subpoenas of the district court. Upon
motion of the county attorney, the court may issue an order directing the production of the
records. Failure to comply with the court order may subject the person who fails to comply to
civil or criminal contempt of court.
(f) The administrative actions under this subdivision are subject to due process safeguards,
including requirements for notice, opportunity to contest the action, and opportunity to appeal the
order to the judge, judicial officer, or child support magistrate.
    Subd. 6. Sharing of information. The public authority may share available and relevant
information on the parties in order to perform its duties under this section or under Supreme Court
rules governing the expedited child support hearing process under section 484.702, subject to the
limitations of sections 256.87, subdivision 8; 257.70; and 518.005, subdivision 5.
History: 1999 c 107 s 66; 1999 c 196 art 1 s 7; 2000 c 343 s 4; 2000 c 403 s 1-3; 1Sp2001
c 9 art 12 s 8; 2002 c 379 art 1 s 113; 2004 c 206 s 52; 2005 c 164 s 29; 1Sp2005 c 7 s 28;
2006 c 280 s 17

Official Publication of the State of Minnesota
Revisor of Statutes