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A "legitimate" child is one whose parents were married when s/he was born; therefore, a child support order cannot "legitimize" a child.
One way to legitimize a child is to take a paternity test or have the father sign a paternity acknowledgment form. If the mother married the father before the child is born this will also legitimize the child.
You can try, but the mother's new spouse isn't responsible for your child.
The parent is supposed to get the child support, not the minor child.
Yes. However, if the parents are not married the Georgia court will establish paternity legally in order to issue a child support order. If that's where the mother and child live and mother filed there, that court will have jurisdiction. The father should cooperate with the DNA testing to establish paternity.Yes. However, if the parents are not married the Georgia court will establish paternity legally in order to issue a child support order. If that's where the mother and child live and mother filed there, that court will have jurisdiction. The father should cooperate with the DNA testing to establish paternity.Yes. However, if the parents are not married the Georgia court will establish paternity legally in order to issue a child support order. If that's where the mother and child live and mother filed there, that court will have jurisdiction. The father should cooperate with the DNA testing to establish paternity.Yes. However, if the parents are not married the Georgia court will establish paternity legally in order to issue a child support order. If that's where the mother and child live and mother filed there, that court will have jurisdiction. The father should cooperate with the DNA testing to establish paternity.
A "legitimate" child is one whose parents were married when s/he was born; therefore, a child support order cannot "legitimize" a child.
He can refuse to see the child; he cannot refuse to support the child.
One way to legitimize a child is to take a paternity test or have the father sign a paternity acknowledgment form. If the mother married the father before the child is born this will also legitimize the child.
Sure, but she will probably forfeit her right to child support and public assistance.
The mother must petition for child support.The mother must petition for child support.The mother must petition for child support.The mother must petition for child support.
No. If the father is not paying his child support she needs to file a motion for contempt with the court. She cannot withhold visitations on her own. Visitations and child support are two separate issues.
Well not usually but it could happen
No. Child support, visitation, custody etc are all separate issues. The court will see to what is best for the child and one parent can not deny the parental rights of the other.
Child support is intended for the child's benefit, not the mother's.
yes
It depends on the state you live in and the age of the child.
You cannot make your mother-in-law pay you child support. The only person who you can demand child support from is the father of the child.