In general, child support is a percentage of the obligor's net income. Whether or not the other parent/child receives public assistance is not relevant to this calculation. If the amount of support received is less than the public assistance grant, the State will retain the child support as reimbursement. If support exceeds the grant, the grant will be discontinued and the support will be forwarded to the other parent.
Yes, but to the government, not the mother. see link
No. If the state is supporting the mother and child the mother has no right to free the father from his responsibility to support his own children. The state will pursue him for child support.
The father is responsible for paying at least the state mandated minimum in support regardless of what type of income or assistance the mother has. That is considered her portion of support, child support is yours.
No, because if they are adopted he has taken on full responsibility however if he is only living with or has only married your x then the children remain within the accepted realm of your responsibility.
Sure, but she will probably forfeit her right to child support and public assistance.
yes i hope he win
Not if the father is still married to the mother. If they are divorced, or separated for over a year, they can be sued for child support.It doesn't matter what situation either spouse is in.
In general, support is paid to the parent or other caretaker who has custody of the child (or to the State as reimbursement for assistance furnished).
This is highly probable. You really need to check into the state laws in which the mother is receiving the AFDC assistance. Be prepared to pay child support, AFDC can garnish your checks for their money, as well as take your income tax returns for any back child support, so your best bet is to call the office of AFDC where the mother is receiving her assistance and ask them for all the particulars.
If the Mother has received ANY State assistance, and the Father was NOT paying Child Support at any time...The State has every right to demand repayment.
Yes, with the approval of the venue that issued the order for support. (Note that the State may still have an interest in the case, as reimbursement for assistance provided.)
Check out the government web site for health insurance. You can also check with the county or parish government to see if your mother qualifies for food stamps, help with heat, or any other assistance.