Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
Yes.
A lien can be placed on an inheritance for child support arrears. If the custodial parent knows of your pending inheritance a claim can be filed in the estate and the executor must pay it out of your inheritance.
You have to pay the amount of child support ordered by the courts. The only way your inheritance might come into play is if your ex decides to take you back to court to get more child support.
yes
Yes. The debts of the decedent must be paid before any assets can be distributed. Child support remains an obligation even if the parent dies and as long as there are assets to pay it.
If you are supposed to pay child support, the fact that the child is earning money from two jobs, has nothing to do with child support. Child support is paid to the person looking after the child to help support your child!
You will have to go at least once to court to pay your yearly to pay the child's support money.
It won't change your child support obligation.
No and you pay the support to the parent not the kid. If the child is 18 there is no longer a need for child support. If someone has been paying for you and believed they were the father they can sue you for the money though.
If a child is receiving money from the government because one parent has a disability, chances are that the parent will not be expected to pay child support in addition to that money. The court order that is in place controls what happens regarding support.
Keeping the money is theft. You will have to pay it back. The money should go to the person who have the kids and if that is none of the parents, both parent have to pay child support to that person.
It is not your son's money, it is yours to help pay for his support. Unless you are restricted by court order from spending the child support money on only specified items, you may use the support money to do whatever you want with it. NOTE: It would be a better lesson, if you made HIM pay his own ticket!
to pay for the kids that are in the other parents custody