Only if the obligee parent releases the claim or is deceased.
Being 18 makes you an adult and with that privilege gives you the right to make your own adult decisions you can move in with who you want. And no one not even the custodial parent can keep you from making your own mind up. You are free to make your own decisions. As far as Child support in most states that is discontinued once the child reaches the age of 18 unless there are back child support due by the noncustodial parent. Once you reach a certain age custody is no longer an issue the child can make his or hers choice on which parent they chose to live with.
Yes, as an adult you can sue a noncustodial parent for back child support. However it is a different story if the noncustodial parent has never been ordered to pay child support. You can still sue them for a percentage of their assets. I am currently working on a case in which my client is sueing his father for 15 years of back child support. Any divorce lawyer can handle this case for you.
extremely unlikely
No, child support is not paid to the child but to the parent raising the child.
The child can not stop the child support because the support goes to his parent. The parent paying can get the agreement changed at the courts.
No, the child can not. The other parent could before the child was an adult. The money goes to the parent to use for the child and not directly to the child.
Once she is an adult, there are no financial responsibilities. She is on her own unless the court has said otherwise.
No. The purpose of collecting back child support is to financially reimburse the custodial parent for the support he or she provided in the past. It is not intended to provide present or future support. The debt is owed entirely to the mother in this case, since she was the one who provided financial support to the child. There are cases in which an adult can receive the back child support owed to their parent, but these usually involve the death of that parent.
There is, if you think about it, no such thing as an adult child. If you are 26 you are an adult and if for some reason you were not supported by your biological parent as a child, it is a bit late to do anything about it now.
Probably - the support is owed to the obligee (i.e., other parent and/or State), not to the children.
No, the filing period ended at age 18 for the parent, and age 19 for the adult child.
Only if the obligee parent is deceased and with the approval of the court.