Yes, the birth of another child may affect child support. A filing should be made to recalculate the support amount based on this change of circumstance.
Added: In Delaware, for example, parents are given a 'credit' for other minor children they are supporting that are not part of the filing. So, while the right to support may not be affected, the amount of support may be.
Generally, the older child's right to support is not diminished by the birth of subsequent children.
Yes , the biological father will be held legally responsible for the support of his child .
The man who signed the birth certificate is the child's legal father until/unless a court rules otherwise, and can be made to pay support.
Yes but he would still be responsible for child support unless the child is adopted by another adult willing to take legal responsibility for the child.Yes but he would still be responsible for child support unless the child is adopted by another adult willing to take legal responsibility for the child.Yes but he would still be responsible for child support unless the child is adopted by another adult willing to take legal responsibility for the child.Yes but he would still be responsible for child support unless the child is adopted by another adult willing to take legal responsibility for the child.
P.S. OR DOES CHILD SUPPORT START FROM THE DAY PATERNITY IS PROVEN????
You will have to pay child support only after paternity has been established either by presumption (i.e., you two were married at the time), your acknowledgment or genetic testing.
No you do not. The mother-to-be can not sue for child support until after birth.
If you have custody of a child from another relationship then you can request a child support order from the court for that child. Your situation displays some irony.
No, child support can only be taken from the birth parents.
Child support accrues from the moment the support order is issued, not from the birth of the child.
Because that child still needs support and the birth parent is the one who should pay it.
no, of course not
In theory, the court can order retroactive support to the birth of the child. However, many judges will not order support for a period prior to the obligor's awareness of the child.
yes it does! In general, the birth of a subsequent child[ren] will not affect the parent's obligation to the older child[ren]. When calculating support for younger children, support actually ordered and paid for older children is subtracted from net income.
No, He has a moral obligation to support his child financially and emotionally. Unless his income has decreased support should remain the same.
Yes. Only of the child is adopted can you get out of paying child support.
Go get a child support order and get rid of him. He'll do it again to you.
No.