no. They owe your son, not you.What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? MI
17 year old son with a job.
If I request his paycheck from his employer, is it true they must give it to me?
Seems like a control type of thing -- if she gets the paycheck, she can use it to keep her son in check.Posting history.
Nope.Seems like a control type of thing -- if she gets the paycheck, she can use it to keep her son in check.
Actually it is what I said. You get the paycheck you think you control your son. Doesn't matter what was agreed to in therapy. Therapy is NOT a court order. And while JAL is correct it would be stealing, you can't sue your son because he was under your care, custody and control when he put the holes in the wall.Nope.
My son put holes in my wall a while back. In therapy, it was agreed upon that within 30 days of getting his first paycheck, he'd fix them. He hasn't, so I want to do that with his paycheck.
Actually it is what I said. You get the paycheck you think you control your son. Doesn't matter what was agreed to in therapy. Therapy is NOT a court order. And while JAL is correct it would be stealing, you can't sue your son because he was under your care, custody and control when he put the holes in the wall.
Doesn't sound to me like getting the money to fix the walls is looking at the root problem here.Nope.
My son put holes in my wall a while back. In therapy, it was agreed upon that within 30 days of getting his first paycheck, he'd fix them. He hasn't, so I want to do that with his paycheck.
I have a clue. If you are a parent, there is no question of control. And it does not belong to the child.Wrong. My son is the one who has control of this situation. He's the one who made the deal. He's the one who can follow through or not - he's the one in control.
I am parenting a diagnosed sociopath under the guidance of a trained, licensed mental health professional. I'll leave the psychological assertions that include control vs. parenting to her. Please do not tell me what I think. You don't have a clue.
You can take him to his place of employment to pick up his check, then take him to a bank to cash said check, and then make him fork over the money he owes you. That would make more of impact than stealing his check!Wrong. My son is the one who has control of this situation. He's the one who made the deal. He's the one who can follow through or not - he's the one in control.
I am parenting a diagnosed sociopath under the guidance of a trained, licensed mental health professional. I'll leave the psychological assertions that include control vs. parenting to her. Please do not tell me what I think. You don't have a clue.