Yes, as long as the legal custody schedule is changed, child support can also be adjusted.
Reference to "seventy four percent" is unclear, but it seems unlikely that the child's mother could collect current child support in such a situation. (She can still collect past-due support, if any.)
I believe your ex would collect it
no, because they have no reason to believe the parent in question is not paying.
No. Custody by transfer to another individual is legal by court order only.
Yes. If you don't have legal custody then you are not entitled to accept child support.Yes. If you don't have legal custody then you are not entitled to accept child support.Yes. If you don't have legal custody then you are not entitled to accept child support.Yes. If you don't have legal custody then you are not entitled to accept child support.
If the mother has the full custody then she can take the child, and she can get the child support. If she doesn't have the full custody, then she is not allowed to take the child without the father consent, but she still can get the child support.
You sue the person for child support. Just because you pay child support for one child does not mean you can not receive child support for the one you have custody of.
Up until the limit of the state, however you should file for custody. see links below
Child support and custody are two different and only distantly related things. If there's a significant earnings disparity between the parents, it's very likely that a court could award child support to the lower income parent in a shared custody situation.
The child support is an order given by a judge in a custody settlement. It has nothing to do with bankruptcy. You are still responsible financially for a child you help to bring into this world.
Yes, if the father has more time with the child than the mother, she will owe him child support.
If the arrangement is with the consent of the custodial parent and will be permanent then the custody and child support orders must be modified to reflect the change in legal custody. The parent in Texas needs to have their custody formalized by a court order so they can enroll the child in school, consent to medical treatment, etc. If the child support order is not modified the non-custodial parent may be subject to the accumulation of child support arrears.