She doesn't have the "right" to move in. If you decide to do this in lieu of child support, get a court order that recognizes this arrangement.
1) right to pay support; 2) right to visitation
No. You will still have to pay child support for your children.
Maybe. If the man was married to the mother at the time the child was born, it is his child. In addition, consider the effects of withdrawing your affection to the child--is it really right? Sometimes the legal "right" is not truly right.
Child support is the right of the child. Whether two parents were married or not does not make a difference in both parents being financially responsible for any children that were the result of a relationship.
Not if you file the right forms. See links below
Yes. see linksAns 2.The father has the option to waive his rights if he wants to, and if he can convince the judge that he is sane, sober and not under coercion as he does so.This has nothing at all to do with child support, which is not his right, but his responsibility. In general the mother can't waive child support either, because support is her child's right, not hers.THAT IS CORRECT.....unless the child's mother has re-married and her husband wants to adopt this child, that would release the biological father from paying child support.
In the US, at least, child support is regarded as a right of the child, not the parent. So yes... a child, even an illegitimate one, has a right to the financial support of the parents, and the mother can bring a suit on the behalf of the child.
No, if you were evicted you no longer have a lawful right to enter.
Yes, you will have to file for a change in the order but you can get it end if your child gets married. If they are in college and get married, that eliminates your duties of paying child support in most states.
Unless you are paying back payments, I am not aware of anyplace that requires child support after the age of 21 or college graduation. I'd consult an attorney right away.
If the mother isn't receiving any kind of assistance from the government, she can waive the right to child support from the father, but it wouldn't be in the child's best interest. Child support is the child's right, not the mother's. If the mother were really well off financially, or if she didn't want the father anywhere around the child, she could waive the child's right to support. The father has a responsibility to help take care of the child he helped bring into this world.ClarificationGenerally, in the US, a mother cannot legally waive a child's right to support from their father. A child is legally entitled to be supported by both parents. However, the mother can choose to not involve the court if the parents were never married or if there will be no divorce action filed. However, if the mother doesn't want the money she should put in a college fund for the child.
Child support and visitation are separate issues and visitation rights are not dependent on paying child support. He has the right to petition the court for visitation and custody as well as the responsibility to pay child support. The courts encourage the involvement of both parents in the child's life. If the parents are not married the father may need to establish his paternity before petitioning for visitations or custody.