The parent.
No, the custodial parent does not have to work to get their support. The support goes from the child's other biological parent.Ê
The child can not stop the child support because the support goes to his parent. The parent paying can get the agreement changed at the courts.
Of course. Unless the non-custodial parent takes sole custody, the non-custodial parent is still responsible for paying child support to whomever the child goes to. There is no reason the death of a parent should terminate the other parent's child support obligation.
Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.
No, the child can not. The other parent could before the child was an adult. The money goes to the parent to use for the child and not directly to the child.
no the child doesn't live w/ custodial parent....it goes to who child lives w/
Sole custody is when only 1 parent has the right to choose where their child goes to school, which doctor they see, and what religion they partake in. Child support is the money that the non-custodial parent will pay to help support the child.
No, but your mother can as long as she filed a petition for child support and he did not pay.Child support goes to the parent to use for the child's expenses, and not paid directly to the child.
Yes. SSI is for the individual and is not intended to support her children, spouse, etc.
Yes, in most circumstances. However, you need to notify the court of the change in circumstances as soon as possible. The existing child support order and custody order will remain in effect until the court is notified. You should be aware that any child support arrears that accumulated prior to the modification of the existing court orders still need to be paid.
Yes, this does not suspend the order. see links below
Child support stops when the court order mandating it says it does and not until then (unless the parent paying the support dies, in which case he ... I'm assuming it's a he ... is pretty much beyond the reach of the court to enforce it). If the situation changes (e.g. the child is no longer living with the custodial parent) then the non-custodial parent can go back to court to have the order modified. Until it's modified, keep making the payments.