If the arrangement is with the consent of the custodial parent and will be permanent then the custody and child support orders must be modified to reflect the change in legal custody. The parent in Texas needs to have their custody formalized by a court order so they can enroll the child in school, consent to medical treatment, etc. If the child support order is not modified the non-custodial parent may be subject to the accumulation of child support arrears.
You must file to stop child support along with a change of custody.
That should have no effect.
the guardian should file to have the order transferred to them as well as file on the parent currently receiving it to also pay. Or the obligor parent should file for custody.
A parent must obey the child support order. A custodial parent may be serving in the military with the child under temporary guardianship. That is no reason to stop paying child support. If the child isn't living with the custodial parent who is receiving child support the matter must be brought before the court.
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.
As he's on SSD, none at all.
Yes, however they can file their own claim against the mother, and ask that the amount paid by the father come directly to them.
No.
No. Sad but true. The parent receiving the support does not have to provide proof of how it is being spent. Child support is in place to help house, feed, clothe and educate the child. If it pays an electric bill, then that is what it pays.
If you're in the US, any past due child support is due to and paid to the custodial parent unless the custodial parent is receiving benefits. In some cases the arrears are owed to the state.
Yes, but you'd have to file an amendment (order modification) to the existing order with a request for support for yourself.
No. (The answer is the same whether the father is the obligor/non-custodial parent or obligee/custodial parent.)
No. If the state is supporting the mother and child the mother has no right to free the father from his responsibility to support his own children. The state will pursue him for child support.