yes
You don't. Once the child is an adult, child support is moot and the ex is home free.
Only if your ex husband is PAYING the residency to look after the child.You need to provide more details, such as whether you mean that your husband lives with the children at someone else's home. In that case, he is still entitled to child support. If the children are not in their father's custody then you should take the matter back to the family court that issued the child support order and ask for a ruling.
Are you asking if your previous husband ought to be legally responsible for supporting your children by your new husband?
The courts must approve any waiver or settlement of back child support. This is because, strictly speaking, the money is for the child, not you.
Back support is owed the obligee parent, however any continuing support can go to the child.
Your question is not clear. It seems you may be thinking you can somehow discharge your husband's child support obligation through your own bankruptcy proceeding.If your husband filed a Chapter 13, his child support obligation or arrears are not dischargeable. A Chapter 13 plan will require that child support obligations remain current throughout the life of the plan. The debtor cannot complete the plan and get a discharge unless all his domestic support obligations are up to date and paid in full.
child support is for the child .
Why would that make a difference? It's based on income.
if the child is 18 or over you shouldn't have to pay any child support at all unless you have back child support
straight and simple, yes.
If your husband made one mistake in having an affair and has not cheated before that or after the affair then the child is part of him and also the biological mother. You have two options: #1 You can accept the child when and if he has custody of the child and make that child part of the whole family or #2 let him see his child if he wants too (he at least should pay child support) but see the child away from home. The decision will have to be discussed between you and your husband.
Of course. Child support is for the child, not the custodial parent and even if the child is not living in the home, expenses for that child continue and need to be met. If you feel the support you pay is being diverted for illegal purposes, you are free to petition the court for modification of the support order or request the child support be paid to the people where the child is living.