yes...there is no law against refusing child support.
If the court has awarded child support, then the good intentions of the father are irrelevant. Legally, child support must be paid.
You pay the support. She didn't have that child by herself.
I don't think they give child support for an adult. If your parents wants to support you great, but at 21 it is not a must.
So what?
Yes. see linksAns 2.The father has the option to waive his rights if he wants to, and if he can convince the judge that he is sane, sober and not under coercion as he does so.This has nothing at all to do with child support, which is not his right, but his responsibility. In general the mother can't waive child support either, because support is her child's right, not hers.THAT IS CORRECT.....unless the child's mother has re-married and her husband wants to adopt this child, that would release the biological father from paying child support.
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 you are their legal guardian, you can collect child support from both parents of the child. If you are not their legal guardian and they just live with you, you do not have rights to child support.
A father is responsible for supporting his child whether or not he is in the child's life.
see links below
A father cannot petition for emancipation, the child has to. And it doesn't relieve him of paying back support payments.
It doesn't matter what the child wants. It only matters what the court decides is in the best interests of the child. If it is found that awarding sole legal and physical custody of a child to one parent is in his or her best interests, child support may be increased accordingly.
Not for continuing support, only for arrears.