Yes. To do otherwise would put them in contempt of court and they could be fined heavily and/or arrested and put in jail.
But If you feel as if you don't owe the amount of back child support then you need to do a modification you can get all the info you need to do that from this site http://flchildsupportmodification.com/
You would have to check with your state laws. I have an child support order in the state of IL. My son is now 20 and my ex owes me 34,000.00. Under the support order he must pay. The state has sent him a letter in which he has forwarded it to me hoping that I would help him by calling to stop the payment owed. The letter said that they are going to start taking his income tax return, refusal of a passport, and revoke his recreational and driver's license if he didn't pay up.
If there was an order for child support arrears accumulated while the child was a minor, then this must be paid in accordance with the order.
If the support had been paid on time while the child was still at home or in school full time, then there would be no arrears to be paid.
Whether the child will continue to get current support depends on the laws of that State and the language of the court order. However, the back child support must be paid in any case.
The "back" support must be paid - there is no statute of limitations on collecting that.
In some states the courts can prolong it to age 21-24 if the child is in college but not otherwise.
Yes
Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.
Yes. They are still the child's parent and responsible for supporting their child.
Of course. Unless the non-custodial parent takes sole custody, the non-custodial parent is still responsible for paying child support to whomever the child goes to. There is no reason the death of a parent should terminate the other parent's child support obligation.
The obligor parent can request the support go directly to the child. see links below
no
The living parent may still be ordered to pay support. Why doesn't the living parent have custody? see link below
According to the State of Georgia, unless you have taken this matter up in court to have this amended, not to pursue child support for the child the non-custodial parent is still obligated to pay child support
No. The parent is still the parent and responsible for the child abandoned or not. The child support payments will just keep adding up until the person is found.
No.
Yes.
Currently, nothing specific. After all, the parent paying child support is still the child's parent and obligated to support her. Only five states specifically take it into consideration.
yes