no
Yes, depending on the divorce decree, a parent in New York State will still need to pay child support even when parent rights are terminated. This varies depending on exactly what the judge ordered at the child support hearing.
Yes, unless/until the child is adopted.
If an order already exist, and provided the owed parent is not maintaining a claim.
That depends on factors such as the language of the court order, the State, whether the child has a severe disability, the child's school status, etc.
The child is no longer a minor. As an adult, they are responsible for themselves.
In New York State the maximum age for child support is 21 years old. However that is considered "emancipated" if the child gets married, becomes self-supporting, or joins the military.
Only if the child is adopted or the mother decides to drop it. if she does decide to drop it she can still ask for it whenever if she needs financial support. The state is not going to pay if she needs help and you are not paying child support. It's first and foremost the biological parents obligation to pay for their child.
Yes. see link
The state of residence of the obligor, which than transfers it to the other state, who can than claim not to have received it.
If the child is emancipated, which generally means self-sufficient, the obligor should be able to get the order for support terminated. Certainly, if the child is still under the obligations of the parents, you can file for custody, if if no emancipation takes place. If the child refuses parental control, than file to have them emancipated, but state laws vary from state to state on this. In New York, child support continues to age 21, regardless of where the child lives. see links below
The answer to this child support question and many others for the state of New York can be found here. https://newyorkchildsupport.com/
Yes, the obligation of child support remains valid until the terms of the support order is met or until the order is rescinded or amended by the court. State compulsory education laws determine at what age a minor can drop out of school with parental permission.