Parties in child support cases must notify the appropriate venue of address changes.
If spouse is ordered to pay support by a court, until another court changes that, you cannot "protect" the spouse.
You can stop paying child support when/if the court enters an order terminating your obligation. A motion for which, plus change of custody, should be entered within 30 days, but in the State of Missouri, a simple notification to child support enforcement is all that's needed after 30 days. They have the authority to confirm and discontinue the order, but this will not address custody. Without the change, the mother could return at any time and demand the child back. see links
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.
No there is an act that protects them!
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.
You stop paying for child support when your child turns 18.
yes
Its about half-way acceptable, and certainly better than not paying any at all. If there have been changes to your income or other relevant changes, you should petition the court to reconsider the amount of payments. Otherwise you will be building arrearages and will be in contempt of a court order.
If he is not paying court ordered child support, he is contempt of court. All you need to do is, go to the court which issued the order and address the issue.
The father has to have the court's consent to cease paying child support.
Paying child support will not cause the father to lose his parental rights - neither will not paying child support.
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.