That is dependent on state law and your specific orders. In most states, no. But there are those that do require it, with some requiring that you also pay for the college education.
Child support is intended for the child's benefit, not the mother's.
You must obey the child support order as long as it is in effect and until it has been modified by a court. A child may be in college. The child support payments must continue to be made to the custodial parent as provided in the child support order.
No but your mother can. The child support goes to her and not you.
It depends on the child support agreement--and it may make a difference if the child is living with you or not!
It depends on the state. In most states the father would still be required to pay child support, even though he is living with the mother and the child. However, if the father was financially supporting the mother and child, it's likely that the courts would suspend the child support order.
It is in the best interest of your child for you to pay child support. If the child is still living in Mexico and the mother has a court order, you need to pay support. If there is no court order, you are not legally obligated to pay support.
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It has to be approved by child support enforcement and/or the court. But, consider this. If you properly remember back when child support was established, both your income were used for setting the amount. The mother is obligated, by court order, to also provide a percentage of her income to the child. Now, if the mother is paying for the college education, this will not be applicable, but if she's not, and the child is living away from home, at school, than she should also be providing the child with support. Consider filing for a Trust Fund, whereby both of you are required to pay into it and the child draws from it for their living expenses. See link
If the grandparents are legal guardians and the child is living with them, the both of you as the biological parents have to pay child support to the grandparents.
If the child support order provides that the non-custodial parent pay then yes, of course. Living on campus implies the child is in college and needs the support of both parents. Living on campus costs money. Costs don't go down when your child enters college.
Yes. You are not paying for the mother, you are paying for the child. If that were the case, children living on college campuses whose custodial parent has an extended modification to child support granted or are attending boarding school would not be able to collect support. If the child is living elsewhere without permission of the court and/or if that move would constitute legal emancipation as outlined by your state's laws, you do have the right to file for modification of child support based on the same.
If the daughter is no longer living with her mother, and is independent, then you could petition to end child support. If she is still in highschool, you might continue to pay with the agreement that the money transfers from mother to daughter.