DUPED FATHER RESUMES FIGHT
The Weekend Australian, October 14/15 2006, by Natasha Robinson
Duped father Liam Magill and his current partner took their battle
against
the Child Support Agency to the Victorian County Court yesterday as
men's
rights advocates handed out pamphlets in the court room.
Cheryl King stepped up to the bar table yesterday to represent her
partner,
who claims the federal agency refused to correct a gross miscalculation
that left
him with just $200 a week to live on. The CSA refused to return the
money
Mr Magill had paid for two children that DNA tests revealed he did not
father,
according to his statement of claim. Mr Magill had been paying child
support
for the two children for eight years before he discovered the children
were not
his own.
He is seeking damages for loss of earnings, loss of enjoyment of
life,
pain and suffering and medical expenses. Ms King faced the bizarre task
of
questioning her partner in the witness box yesterday as he described his
distress
at the discovery that $553.79 in child support payments would be
deducted from
his fortnightly gross salary pf $1019, leaving him with little more than
$200 to live on.
The "inflated" deductions came about because Mr Magill drew tens of
thousands of
dollars from his superannuation, increasing his declared income. This
left him $40,000
in arrears in his payments. " This episode here was the start of my
ongoing decline
into anxiety and depression which I am finding very hard to control"
said Mr. Magill
who now lives on the disability support pension.
After questioning her partner, Ms King had to step into then witness
box herself to be questioned by the Judge. Graham Anderson.
The CSA denies receiving four letters and faxes Mr Magill and Ms King
claim they sent
pointing out the miscalculation. Defence witness Lauren Fahey, a CSA
official told the
court a search of the agency's records had found no trace of the
correspondence.
"You can be assured that we did send them" Ms King told the witness,
before demanding to know how the miscalculations had come about. "Could
you live on $217 a week ?" Mr Magill's
child support payments were recalculated in 2001 after the Federal
Magistrates Court found
two of the children were fathered by another man.
He made legal history when he won a compensation case against his
former wife. But the Victorian Court of Appeal later over turned the
$70,000 damages award. Ms King told the court yesterday that the
department acted to reclaim Mr Magill's supposed $40,000 arrears debt
only after Meredith Magill realised she had been massively overpaid for
the two children that were not Mr Magill's, and feared she would have to
pay the money back. Ms Fahey rejected the assertion.
The case resumes on Monday for final submissions.
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