No
No, regardless of your age, you are emancipated by being married and therefor does not get child support.
No. In NYC a parent has to support a child until the child is 21 years old or becomes emancipated. Emancipation means a child is living separately and independently from a parent, or is self-supporting.
You still have to support her until she is emancipated or the law or child support agreement says stop.
No, your child will not be emancipated because she is pregnant and her parents still have to support her until she is.
Until she is 18 and emancipated, yes.
When the child reaches majority/is emancipated, the obligor still owes any support that was ordered and not paid.
The child support goes to the one who have custody. If the grandparent still do and the child has just moved out temporarily, they will still get it. If the child is under 18 and has moved they also still get it unless the child is emancipated. If the child is 18 the child support generally end but it depends on the state laws and/or what you have written in the child support agreement.
Yes. Until and unless the child is emancipated, you are still responsible regardless of other income. The support from your daughter's boyfriend is probably for your grandchild.
Yes, you are still entitled to receive child support even if you are receiving unemployment.
The courts will mostly likely consider a child who enters the military as "emancipated," and, therefore, terminate child support. But don't stop paying on your own!
Yes, you and her mother still have to support her until she is emancipated.
Unless the order states otherwise, the amount of support does not change when one child attains majority/becomes emancipated.