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he will have to pay back child support if owed unless mother agrees not to or he will have to pay back support if owed to state like if mother was on state aid,but no he will not have to pay for future support
The state with Jurisdiction over the child support order. This can be the state where the child lives, the state where the obligor lives, or the state where the divorce took place if jurisdiction was never moved. see link below
You might be ordered to pay support.
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 They must be paid even after the child reached the age of majority and the child support order is no longer in effect.
depends on state lawssee links
No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.
Not legally. The state takes over the claim.
No but past due child support may still be owed
This depends on factors such as the language of the court order and the laws of the State having jurisdiction over the matter.
No, it's a matter for the obligor to report the situation to the court, and either request a modification of support, and/or custody order as soon as they discover that the child is not living with the custodial parent. The court can investigate the situation.
No, as you are no longer regarded as a parent to the child. However, it may vary state to state, or whomever deals with your child support case, if you will be asked to or required to pay on past support before your rights were terminated.
I do not think so. You do not have to pay child support in any state if anyone is over 18.