If there is a legitimate expense that the mother is requesting help paying for and you are willing to help pay for it you can just give it to her, or you can purchase the item yourself. Anything over the required amount is considered a gift and cannot be considered an advance against future child support payments though.
If you are their legal guardian, you can collect child support from both parents of the child. If you are not their legal guardian and they just live with you, you do not have rights to child support.
The mother should be responsible since she had custody. The child was under her roof and she should have to handle the situation. You just can't take the support and not be accountable for the child. If the father wants the child, the court should give him the right to have her at this time and the mother should pay him.
Paternity test. If that proves the child is his, get a lawyer. Good luck!
If you are asking who pays the support for the child the 14 year old just fathered, the state will look into it and whomever the state decides to give custody will receive child support from the other parent.
What do you think it is for, just what is says, CHILD SUPPORT
Any money you give your ex that is not court ordered is considered a gift.
Just file where you are at and give his address. They will handle it from there.
No. You were not ordered to give of your custody rights, just primary residency was transferred to the father. You still have your parental rights, the same as a father, and responsibility to pay child support, whether the father wants it or not.
You sue the person for child support. Just because you pay child support for one child does not mean you can not receive child support for the one you have custody of.
Just ask child support enforcement for it to be done.
No.
Not sure what your question is. To have the baby or not is your decisison and he has the choice to part take in the child's life or not. Either way he still has to pay child support. The courts wont just give him custody of a baby just because he wants to. Most courts give custody to the mother, especially when the child is a baby.