Yes. Regardless of whether she had a baby or not you need to keep paying child support until she is a legal adult.
No. The SSI is extra to help her with her problem, not to replace child support.
Yes. Arrears associated with court ordered child support can be pursued.Yes. Arrears associated with court ordered child support can be pursued.Yes. Arrears associated with court ordered child support can be pursued.Yes. Arrears associated with court ordered child support can be pursued.
No. The father of the pregnant daughter has no legal obligation to support her child. That responsibility belongs to the biological father of the unborn child assuming that the pregnancy is not terminated nor the child placed for adoption or parental rights terminated by the court.
I suggest that you contact your State's child support agency for any problems collecting court-ordered child support.
Because your child support is court ordered. To change it, you have to go back to court and present reasons for the change.
No. Unless specifically ordered otherwise, child support payments go to the custodial parent as ordered.No. Unless specifically ordered otherwise, child support payments go to the custodial parent as ordered.No. Unless specifically ordered otherwise, child support payments go to the custodial parent as ordered.No. Unless specifically ordered otherwise, child support payments go to the custodial parent as ordered.
If by withholding the information she is preventing him from seeing the child she is in contempt of the court order.
Who has the power to over turn a court ordered child support payment?
no
Child support is court ordered. The judge decides who pays child support and how much.
No, a person will not be ordered to pay child support on any children that are not his. The only way a person would be ordered to pay child support a child who is not theirs is if they had legally adopted that child.
Not exactly. In Illinois, child support cannot be ordered past the age of majority but "education support" can be. One or even both parents may be ordered to pay education support, based on the child's academic expenses. Education support must also be ordered by a judge, separately from a child support order.