No, if the father of your child has given you extra money, it is considered a gift and does not have to be repaid. This is why it is recommended that no cash be exchanged between parents and only through a child support recovery unit.
If he doesn't have physical custody then generally he must pay child support.
No. The SSI is extra to help her with her problem, not to replace child support.
Overpaid child support is often consider a gift by the courts, which is why one need to regularly monitor their payments. see links below
Rule One: You must make all your court ordered child support payments or you will be in contempt of a court order. If you "gave extra money" and have proof in the form of a cancelled check, it may or may not be counted against future payments. It may be considered a gift. It would be up to the court to decide.
Any amount in excess of the the court ordered child support.
If the child's RSDI (not SSI) benefit is based on the father's SSA account, the amount of the benefit counts as child support. In many cases, this means that the father owes no additional payment.
Yes, they can. n
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I do not see a provision for that. See link A concern would be them trying to increase the payment to cover the extra expenses. The father of the child could try to file so custody in the state where the child was conceived. see link
SSI are benefits to help to pay with the extra he needs due to his condition. It is not to support the child which is the parents job.
In this case you need to address the court which issued the support order and ask them to off set your future payments to the tune of what is over paid and also, adjust your order to what you're actually supposed to pay.
Pre-school (daycare provided prior to starting Kindergarten) is considered child care and will be included in child support calculations. Most states require that each parent pay 50% of child care costs, and the non-custodial parent will have these costs included in his or her monthly child support payment. For example, child support might be calculated at $200 per month. If daycare/preschool is $600 per month, then the total monthly child support amount would increase to $500 ($200 + $300). Your custody agreement may specify something different however. Also, most states cap the amount of child care costs included in child support at only those costs that are deemed reasonable amounts. If the preschool is excessively expensive, the amount may be reduced.
If he wants his parental rights he must establish his paternity legally by a DNA test. He can then petition the court for shared custody, visitation and pay child support. The mother has sole legal custody of her child until then.