Of course! The health situation does not change the fact that there is a child that needs to be taken care of.
You should review the child support order and if it doesn't state the child support should continue then notify the court. You may no longer be required to pay.You should review the child support order and if it doesn't state the child support should continue then notify the court. You may no longer be required to pay.You should review the child support order and if it doesn't state the child support should continue then notify the court. You may no longer be required to pay.You should review the child support order and if it doesn't state the child support should continue then notify the court. You may no longer be required to pay.
Depends on the state.
Yes - the child's needs continue.
If the child is providing more than 50% of his or her own financial support, then no, child support would not continue. However, if 50% or more of his or her financial support is still coming from the custodial parent, then child support would continue like normal.
no
yup
The child's needs continue.
Child support is paid as long as the child is a minor, get emancipated or when the child support agreement says so.
Most times the agreement is that the child will be supported through college. If they turn 18 and do not continue with school, then child support ends.
The child doesn't receive child support. The custodial parent does. The state of MS normally orders child support through the age of 21, if the child is still in school. However, there are situations that would be cause for termination of support. For exampe, if the child "cohabits with another person without the approval of the parent obligated to pay support". You can find the laws regarding this under MS Code 93-11-65(8a).
not unless it is back support...you have to motion the court to have it stopped
Truancy and child support are two separate issues. You must continue to pay child support, however you can file for custody modification either by seeking custody or increasing custody, thus reducing your child support obligation, if you can prove the mother is not acting in the best interests of the child by enabling his or he truancy.