Get state support, they will require him to give financial assistance.
Yes. Child support orders are not seasonal since a child's right to be supported by their father is not limited according to the season. A child's needs and rights do not end in the summer. The child support order must be followed.
No. It's always the biological parents who first has the obligation to support their child, not the state.
Yes, unless the child has been adopted.
yes see link below
Uh, no, you cannot.
Convince him to give up parental rights and you give up any financial claim for child support.
You cannot terminate parental rights automatically because of visitation and child support. It is advised to seek advice from an attorney for the next steps.
Maintenance is a payment made by one ex-spouse to the other, usually for a limited time. If you are referring to child support, your son's father marriage does not exempt him from supporting his child.
If there ore no other legal ramifications like child abuse, drug and alcohol abuse, I would would say the mother has no legal grounds to disallow the father to see his son.
You cannot "make him" sign over, however, take him to court for child support, he is a dead beat, does not deserve a child, but he needs to pay up. the court will find him for you to make sure he pays. He may want to shirk his responsibility by signing over his parental rights if that is what you want. Signing over one's parental rights does not excuse one from paying child support. I suggest that you contact your State's child support agency. When you get an interview with them, bring all the papers relating to your child support: birth certificates, acknowledgments of paternity, court orders, payment records, etc. Be polite but persistent. Good luck!
absolutly, he has more rights than a step father because he is the child's biological father, he has a right to see the child if he so chooses unless the court forbids it. everyone has rights nowadays, siblings have rights, counsins, aunts and uncles even grandparents.
My Sons no longer live with me and when the checks come I just sign the back and return to their father who they live with. We both agree to just contribute when needed. Do we have to go to court?