Only if the child support is past due from before the child was 18. child support is only paid up until the age of 18, there may be exceptions for those with children that have disabilities.
The state. You will be pursued to make child support payments to the state if it has been supporting your child.The state. You will be pursued to make child support payments to the state if it has been supporting your child.The state. You will be pursued to make child support payments to the state if it has been supporting your child.The state. You will be pursued to make child support payments to the state if it has been supporting your child.
Spousal support or alimony, possibly. Child support, no.
YES,THEY SHOULD. A CUSTODIAL MOTHER GET'S CHILD SUPPORT WHY WOULDNT THE FATHER. IT WORK'S BOTH WAY'S.
A child is eligible to receive child support through its mother as soon as it is born.
A nursing pillow is supposed to help a breastfeeding mother. It is designed to provide support for the mother and the baby during the process of breastfeeding, by supporting the upper back of the mother.
I'm not certain what "put you in child support" means. If your mother in law is, in fact, supporting your child, she could obtain a court order requiring you to contribute to the support of that child. If that's what you were trying to ask, then yes.
First, there is no such thing as an illegal mother. Any parent, male or female, single, married, divorced or separated, may receive child support.
Child support law assumes that one or both parents are absent.
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.
No. The money isn't for the mother. The money is for supporting the child. Back child support belongs to the estate of the deceased and will eventually benefit the child. And even if the child should die, the back child support does not go away.
Absolutely.Paternity makes you responsible for supporting your own child whether you were married to the mother or not.If paternity is established, child support is due regardless of marital status.
It depends on the state. In most states the father would still be required to pay child support, even though he is living with the mother and the child. However, if the father was financially supporting the mother and child, it's likely that the courts would suspend the child support order.