No. Child support arrears are money owed to the custodial parent. They must be paid.
Think of it this way: Suppose you have a three year loan but you stop paying it after two years. The debt doesn't just disappear after three years. You still owe for the third year plus interest.
No. Child support arrears are money owed to the custodial parent. They must be paid.
Think of it this way: Suppose you have a three year loan but you stop paying it after two years. The debt doesn't just disappear after three years. You still owe for the third year plus interest.
No. Child support arrears are money owed to the custodial parent. They must be paid.
Think of it this way: Suppose you have a three year loan but you stop paying it after two years. The debt doesn't just disappear after three years. You still owe for the third year plus interest.
No. Child support arrears are money owed to the custodial parent. They must be paid.
Think of it this way: Suppose you have a three year loan but you stop paying it after two years. The debt doesn't just disappear after three years. You still owe for the third year plus interest.
No. Child support arrears are money owed to the custodial parent. They must be paid.
Think of it this way: Suppose you have a three year loan but you stop paying it after two years. The debt doesn't just disappear after three years. You still owe for the third year plus interest.
The obligation ends when the child reaches 18 years of age or the child graduates from high school, whichever occurs later. A child will also automatically be ineligible for child support if that child is removed from disability status by a court order. There is no upper age limit for graduating from high school, but in most states it's age 19. see link
no
Child support is paid until the child is at least 18 even if the child quit school or graduate early.
Back child support is owed until it is paid off regardless of the age of the child since it is a debt owed from when the child was still a minor.
You need to review your divorce agreement and your child support orders. Your obligations should be explained in the orders rendered in your case. You are also bound by the laws in your state. Most states require you to pay until the child reaches the age of 18 or graduates from high school, whichever is later, meaning if he's still in school, you still pay.
Only the mother has standing to learn that
As long as there is no back-support owed (Child support that is owed from previous months not paid) then 18 is the cut off limit for child support and you would no longer be obligated to pay. HOWEVER, in the state of Texas, if the child continues into college, the legal guardian of the child can bring you to court to continue the support until the child graduates from college.
I doubt there were many child support laws back then. Normally, only the custodial parent of the child can file for child support, not the actual child.
Child support does not belong to the child but rather to the custodial parent to help compensate for the cost of raising the child until he or she is 18 or no longer attends school as a fulltime student. The custodial parent can however seek payment for back past child support from the non custodial parent.
yes
Yes, they can. n
Yes.