Yes. You are an adult and decides who can live with you. As long as that person is not unfit to be around children the choice is all yours and no one can tell you otherwise.
Other than the mother, no one.
If the father is not living with the child and has some income other than public assistance, yes.
If he has income other than SSI/public assistance.
If you live in the US... Parents are required to financially support ALL their children. So if you have more than one child, you will pay child support for more than one child. Did that answer your question? I'm not entirely sure what you're asking.
First off: if you're a minor, you don't get to decide where you live, so the "I live with my boyfriend" part is most likely not going to happen. You will have to live with whomever the court grants custody of you.Normally, if your custodial parent dies, your other parent will become your custodial parent. In that case, yes, the child support payments will stop, because it's pointless for your father to pay child support to himself.If the court grants custody to someone other than your father (most likely a blood relative, and almost certainly not your boyfriend), then they may order your father to make child support payments to them instead.If you marry your boyfriend (depending on your age and whether or not your father is okay with it, in some states this might be possible), then you could live with him, but the child support payments would stop.Your father may optionally elect to keep giving you money even if he's not legally obliged to.
If the courts have ordered child support then no. The current custodial parent is responsible for the financials of the child. If the father is meeting the current court orders then he is exempt for paying any other than child support. If the court has ordered the child to live with both parents then an exception could be made by the courts. However, should the child start college after they turn 18 the father is no longer responsible for anything to do with the child.
Depends on the amount of the difference and any arguments of rebuttable presumption he may have.
First, the child does not have the right to make that decision, so the mother is not obligate to send the money. Only a court can approve the child can live there, than reverse the order. see links below
When they are no longer minors.
The only way would be to do a personal agreement between the mother & father, ideally having it filed with the court. However, at any time, either parent can utilize Child Support without the other parent's consent. If the Mother spends more time with the child than the Father, she is most likely entitled to child support.
If court ordered? Yes until the order is overturned, but a growing number of states are still requiring it even than. If the mother is on Welfare, than yes.Of note, this grants the father zero rights to the child unless court ordered.
[if you're the obligor] Show the court that: you have custody of the child; the child is deceased; the child has been adopted; the child is emancipated; the child has attained majority; and/or you have no income other than public assistance; AND, you do not owe any past-due support.