Signing rights away will not stop any child support from being taken from the father. If the child is the fathers then he is financially responsible for the child weather he has rights or not.
No. The court only allow this if the child is being adopted.
Child support can be terminated only if/when the child is adopted.
When you relinquish your parental rights so the child can be adopted you are no longer responsible for paying child support. You are liable for support until/unless child is adopted.
No, voluntarily relinquishing your parental rights does not excuse you from paying child support.
If you mean, what are the Dad's rights, he has the right to continue paying child support and the right to visitation, both as established by the courts.
That is the case in most states, once you sign over the rights to a child, you are no longer considered the guardian and have no legal or financial obligations to that child.
If you live in the US, you can't just sign over your rights to get out of paying child support. Termination of parental rights has to be approved by a judge, and generally speaking they will not approve it unless it's for the purpose of adoption.
No - only an adoption would terminate your obligation.
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!
No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.
Signing over one's parental rights does not does not terminate child support.
Yes. Parental rights are yours and you can sign them away. You cannot, however, sign away the child's rights, and one of those rights is the right to support. If you're signing away your rights so that someone else may adopt the child, once they do so you should be absolved from the responsibility to keep paying child support.
no