Yes, I did revoke wage garnishment. According to TX Payday law:
Deductions for voluntary wage assignments, i.e., for things that benefit the employee, may take an employee's wages below minimum wage, provided the employer does not profit thereby (includes such things as employee contributions to a health or retirement plan (see 29 C.F.R. 531.40(c)) and FOH, Section 30c10(a)).
Employers in Texas are under no statutory obligation to honor voluntary wage assignments (see Reef v. Mills Novelty Co., 126 Tex. 380, 89 S.W.2d 210 (1936), in which an attempted assignment of a sales employee's commission pay did not bind an employer whose contract with the employee prohibited an assignment of commissions without the employer's consent). An employer may be under a contractual obligation to do so, however. That would be the case if the employer had contracted with a third party, such as a health care insurance provider, to deduct wages for insurance plan contributions and remit them to the insurance carrier in return for coverage for the employees. That is not the case, though, if the employer's company had no prior business relationship with the beneficiary of the assignment, for example, a payday loan company that makes a short-term loan to an employee. In such a case, it would be optional on the employer's part to comply with the wage assignment. If the employer refused to comply with the wage assignment, the alternative for the payday loan company would be to go to court against the employee and seek to enforce its rights in a civil lawsuit.
This type of deduction must be authorized in writing by the employee to be valid under the Texas Payday Law. Below is the State of TX Workforce Commisions Website where this information came from.
http://www.twc.state.tx.us/news/efte...eductions.html