No, it goes to the state.
no, you give up the claim to the state.
I suggest that she contact her State's child support agency. Be polite but persistent. Good luck!
Each case is treated separately so the first child will no longer receive child support when he/she turns 18 as with the younger child.
No. Only the parents support the child, not the step parents. What you make will have no impact on how much he has to pay in child support. Even if you marry this woman that will not change.
Not sure what context you mean, but simply he makes out two separate checks and sends them to the state colleciton unit for your state and they are applied to their respective cases. Yours and hers. Same is true for wage garnishments. Good luck
In theory the women should now be paying for there percentage of the keep of the child that is no longer living with the women, so yes she should pay child support now.
Ethically, if the child is yours then you pay support. The circumstances are irrelevant.
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!
State Laws determine what county has jurisdiction over a child support case. Generally, the county where the child resides with the mother has jurisdiction. You need to inquire at your local family court. See link.
yes...if the father has custody of the child or children then a woman has to pay child support just like a man.
Yes, the issue of a biological father not wanting the woman to bear the child is irrelevant and will not affect his legal obligation to support that child. Both parents of a minor child are legally obligated to financially support that child until he or she reaches the stated age of majority.
the answer is unclear if she is working then yes it does but if she isn't then no unless the child is desabled then you still get child support