No, as long as the money paid is going to the house where the child lives then you can not get into trouble at all.
However, if the child and her mother are receiving any form of state assistance you and the mother could get into trouble for committing fraud.
There is a punishment for not paying child support in Georgia. Typically, the authorities will take away the drivers license of the person who is not paying their child support payments. If the person continues not to pay, they will be arrested.
No.
If a person is already in jail, there is no child support owed.
The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.
You stop paying for child support when your child turns 18.
Yes, by paying his child support arrears in full.Yes, by paying his child support arrears in full.Yes, by paying his child support arrears in full.Yes, by paying his child support arrears in full.
Superficially yes. But if someone is still paying child support then they also have custody by rights. Though you would have full and the person paying it would have some time with the child typically
Paying child support will not cause the father to lose his parental rights - neither will not paying child support.
yes
Who is paying for the school? Is it a scholarship or a relative? As long as it is not the person required to pay child support it really doesn't matter. The child still needs clothes, uniforms, health insurance, all sorts of things. Sorry, you don't get out of paying child support based on where the kid goes to school.
You really can't, usually the person paying support can work out a deal with the agency. A judge can't force a person to pay a lump sum.
If a person helps to create a child, they should help to support the child. In Nebraska a person can stop paying child support at the age of 19. This is unless the child is emancipated by the court, marries or dies.