amberlea434
Member
What is the name of your state? TN
My husband and his ex recently had their CO revised. In the new order, it states...
"Mother shall provide, postmarked by the last day of each month, copies of all medical records, deductibles or co-payments, and other medical expense invoices to the Father via USPS. Upon Mother providing required information, Father shall have thirty (30) days to reimburse his pro-rata share of expenses."
He interprets this to mean, basically, if she wants to be reimbursed, she has to send all of that information to him first. She disagrees and says it's not her responsibility to send him any kind of records because he can call the doctors and get them himself. Their child goes to the doctor a lot, so he receives medical bills every month. But, all it ever is is a pharmacy print-out showing what medications she bought throughout the month and a generic receipt from the doctor's office showing that she was, in fact, there. But, no copies of what the doctor did or a diagnosis.
To him, the order is obvious in what she is supposed to provide to him. Is he wrong?
My husband and his ex recently had their CO revised. In the new order, it states...
"Mother shall provide, postmarked by the last day of each month, copies of all medical records, deductibles or co-payments, and other medical expense invoices to the Father via USPS. Upon Mother providing required information, Father shall have thirty (30) days to reimburse his pro-rata share of expenses."
He interprets this to mean, basically, if she wants to be reimbursed, she has to send all of that information to him first. She disagrees and says it's not her responsibility to send him any kind of records because he can call the doctors and get them himself. Their child goes to the doctor a lot, so he receives medical bills every month. But, all it ever is is a pharmacy print-out showing what medications she bought throughout the month and a generic receipt from the doctor's office showing that she was, in fact, there. But, no copies of what the doctor did or a diagnosis.
To him, the order is obvious in what she is supposed to provide to him. Is he wrong?