130.613 - Jurisdiction to modify child-support order of another state when individual parties reside in this State. [Effective until the date that the provisions of The Hague Convention on the Interna

130.613  Jurisdiction to modify child-support order of another state when individual parties reside in this State. [Effective on the date that the provisions of The Hague Convention on the International Recovery of Child Support and Other Forms of Family Maintenance is ratified by the President and the United States deposits its instrument of ratification.]

      1.  If all of the parties who are natural persons reside in this State and the child does not reside in the issuing state, a tribunal of this State has jurisdiction to enforce and to modify the child-support order of the issuing state in a proceeding to register that order.

      2.  A tribunal of this State exercising jurisdiction under this section shall apply the provisions of NRS 130.0902 to 130.209, inclusive, and 130.601 to 130.713, inclusive, and the procedural and substantive law of this State to the proceeding for enforcement or modification. The provisions of NRS 130.301 to 130.507, inclusive, and 130.801 and 130.802 do not apply.

      (Added to NRS by 1997, 2327; A 2007, 136; 2009, 140, effective on the date that the provisions of The Hague Convention on the International Recovery of Child Support and Other Forms of Family Maintenance is ratified by the President and the United States deposits its instrument of ratification)

      NRS 130.614  Notice to issuing tribunal of modification.  Within 90 days after the issuance of a modified child-support order, the party obtaining the modification shall file a certified copy of the order with the issuing tribunal that had continuing and exclusive jurisdiction over the earlier order and in each tribunal in which the party knows the earlier order has been registered. A party who obtains the order and fails to file a certified copy is subject to appropriate sanctions by a tribunal in which the issue of failure to file arises. The failure to file does not affect the validity or enforceability of the modified order of the new tribunal having continuing and exclusive jurisdiction.

      (Added to NRS by 1997, 2327)