If the custodial parent or grandparent's income is significantly higher than yours, you may be granted support based on your parenting time percentage with the child, but that would be an unusual situation.
While there is no statue of limitation for collecting court ordered unpaid back child support, there is for unordered support...the age of 21 of the dependent child. The child at the age of 18 may sue the noncustodial parent for unpaid support that was not ordered by the courts. This has been done at least twice.
the custodial parent is the parent the child lives with the non custodial parent is the parent the child does NOT live with the non custodial parent assuming he / she knows he is a parent... is usually the patitioning parent. if he /she chooses not to seek visitation rights the court cannot force him/ her to see the child.... but they can enforce child support. research the laws for your state.
No, child support does not start until the child is born. Once the child is born the mother can seek child support and it can be deducted from the father's pay.
You can seek out legal counsel and have them stopped or you can report them to the police. Not paying child support is breaking the law (the court ordered it) and there, men or women that slack off on child support can be jailed for breaking this law. Marcy
yes
yes
no
In general, the courts will not initiate support for a 23-year-old child (past-due support, owed from when the child was a minor, is another matter), unless the child is severely handicapped.
The mother needs to seek a child support order herself by filing a complaint in the local family court. The child support unit enforces child support orders issued by a family court.The child support unit can help the custodial parent in establishing and/or enforcing an order for support.
Depends on the terms of your support agreement. Seek qualified legal help from a professional in your jusrisdiction.
No. That person would need to establish their own legal connection, and yours, to the child in order to be entitled to seek child support.No. That person would need to establish their own legal connection, and yours, to the child in order to be entitled to seek child support.No. That person would need to establish their own legal connection, and yours, to the child in order to be entitled to seek child support.No. That person would need to establish their own legal connection, and yours, to the child in order to be entitled to seek child support.
Unless the court order ordering him to pay child support specifically says otherwise, then yes. He could go to court to seek either to have visitation enforced or child support eliminated or reduced.