Not if not order previously existed.
Child support arrears do not go away. They must be paid even after the child reached the age of majority and the child support order is no longer in effect.
If there is a child support order in place, and your child is now an adult and has completed their education, then yes. You can have the order modified to stop child support as the child no longer meets the requirements of child support
It happens. However your child support obligation may be offset by the back child support you are due unless that amount has been forgiven by the courts.
No and you pay the support to the parent not the kid. If the child is 18 there is no longer a need for child support. If someone has been paying for you and believed they were the father they can sue you for the money though.
This will be successful only if the child is severely handicapped.
Child support does not belong to the child but rather to the custodial parent to help compensate for the cost of raising the child until he or she is 18 or no longer attends school as a fulltime student. The custodial parent can however seek payment for back past child support from the non custodial parent.
The court and the mother have to agree to that you do this and you continue to pay child support incl the back support if there is any until the child is adopted. You will no longer have any rights to the child.
Yes. There is no statute of limitations on collecting past-due child support, regardless of where the parties currently live.
The states are required under the Uniform Interstate Family Support Act to cooperate with each other in locating an obligor parent to arrange any type of child support collections.
Yes, but you have to file for it in court.
I doubt there were many child support laws back then. Normally, only the custodial parent of the child can file for child support, not the actual child.
yes