Yes, unless the child is emancipated.
If your spouse voluntarily leaves the home, they are still obligated to financially support their children. Child support is based on the income and circumstances of both parents, not on who is living in the home. Therefore, your spouse would still be required to pay child support.
If the teens are living with their parents, then their parents provide for them. The level of support is going to depend on the parents' financial decisions and there is not any specific requirement besides what is needed for the child to live and go to school. If the teen moves out, they should expect to meet expenses on their own.
That's dependent on your state law, however if it continues, than it also does for the custodial parent. BOTH parents are obligated to provide support and not just one, so if she's not living with that parent, than a modification needs to be made to the case, including that the money goes directly to the daughter. see links below
18 and living on her own. Her parents may choose to allow her to have one when she's younger, but they're certainly not obligated to.
If the grandparents are legal guardians and the child is living with them, the both of you as the biological parents have to pay child support to the grandparents.
yes Child support is awarded when one or both parents are absent. If the child's parents are living together with the child (in their own home or other living arrangement), no child support is due.
Child support is to provide for children not living with you, it would be assumed if you are living with your child that you are supporting them - take it up with your local child support board.
If New York has jurisdiction. see links
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It is in the best interest of your child for you to pay child support. If the child is still living in Mexico and the mother has a court order, you need to pay support. If there is no court order, you are not legally obligated to pay support.
If by your state laws, you are obligated to pay beyond high school, than you can request that your payments go directly to the children, PLUS file a motion that the amount the residential parent was obligated to spend on the children, also be sent to them. In a Missouri case, when the child took up residence with her boyfriend, while away at college, and was no longer living with the mother, the mother was obligated to pay her part, based on the child support guidelines, to the daughter. The mother lost on appeal. It was her belief that only the father should be obligated. With two child support payments, the daughter was getting $1800 a month for living expenses.See related link below
fossils of once living things provide clues that support contenental drift