Yes, but if he lacks income, the parents could be ordered to pay it based on an assumption of minimum wage. Further, he has no rights to the child until a court approves it. Since the father didn't give birth and he was not legally married at the time of the birth he must seek other means of establishing his paternity and that is done through paternity test. A paternity test can be arranged through the court and once established the father can request visitations, custody and set up child support for the child.
Yes, retroactive up to 18 years.
depends on how resposible you are, where you live, how much your parents trust you, and how long your parents will be gone
yes
I think itz ok as long as you are resposible and chose correct decision and you also have to know him, trust him and respect each other
Technically You are of legal age so yes you could be held responsible for child support....so my suggestion pay your child support it speaks words...your suppporting your child :) Hello!!! A 15 year old boy can be held responsible for child support. If you you do the deed than you can pay the price or go to jail!
Answer: 18 years of child support payments for the boy, and $100,000 in lifetime welfare payments for the girl, courtesy of NY taxpayers.
Yes.
Legally the girl can be sent to jail for Sexual Interference with a Minor" and nothing will happen to the boy. If nothing is done after the child is born, then it will be forgotten about and child support will be paid when the boy is able to live on his own and provide.
No. She had a baby boy named Pompeii by her French trapper husband. Clark helped support the boy most of his life.
Yes, if that is ordered by the courts. In an Ohio case where a 14 year old boy got a 19 year old girl pregnant, his parents were ordered to pay support to the girlfriend.
He is not a boy, he is a man. He fathered a child; it is his responsibility. The sooner he picks up and gets things caught up, the better. It is tough but he can do it.Another PerspectiveIf the nineteen year old boy was the child for whom child support was paid, he cannot cancel any arrears owed to his mother. Many parents who owe arrears have been thinking (magically) that the child can be influenced to cancel the debt once they reach adulthood. Child support arrears do not go away and since they are owed to the child's parent, the child cannot cancel the debt once they reach the age of majority.
The biological parents pay for their child, not the grandparents. Both of you needs to get jobs and should have done so before the child arrived. When you petition the court for child support the father have establish paternity so they know he is the biological father. He can also petition for visitation and custody since being the biological father, that is his right. Just as it is the child's right to both parents. You can not choose that the father will have no contact with his child. That is up to the court. He has rights just like you. And so does your child.