If the father of your child has another child by someone will the courts or child support enforcement reduce my support of my child. ? Are there any special circumstances if the father of my child never married me or this other person.? Can I still persue increases of child support even though the man has another child?
Sincerely.
Which child comes first
Remarriage should not affect the child support order.
Yes, if, e.g., the court determines that the father has reduced his income for the purpose of avoiding support or the reduction is not "substantial" or "significant."
That is not generally a reason to reduce child support payments. The child support guidelines where the case is filed will still be used. You should visit the court with jurisdiction and inquire there.That is not generally a reason to reduce child support payments. The child support guidelines where the case is filed will still be used. You should visit the court with jurisdiction and inquire there.That is not generally a reason to reduce child support payments. The child support guidelines where the case is filed will still be used. You should visit the court with jurisdiction and inquire there.That is not generally a reason to reduce child support payments. The child support guidelines where the case is filed will still be used. You should visit the court with jurisdiction and inquire there.
Child support orders can be amended for certain reasons, but the remarriage of the non obligated ex-spouse is not grounds for the action. Individuals are not responsible for the support of the biological children of their new spouse. Only the biological parents are legally responsible for supporting their minor children unless a parent agrees to terminate his or her parental rights to allow a child to be a adopted by a new spouse or other qualified party.
Yes, but a reduced amountAdditional AnswerThe father would need to return to court to petition for a reduction in the child support order. He cannot reduce the payments on his own. In Massachusetts, for example, the arrears will continue to accumulate until the order is modified.
No, and no can he, so there must be a greater issue related here as to the safety of the children. As for being in arrears, in this economy that comes as no shock as men do not know there is free legal help to avoid or reduce arrears from the government. That is what I teach them.
If they are on state assistance, than they have no income. This is commonplace in this economy. however the obligor often does not know they can get free legal help to reduce the obligation due to unemployment.
By law, child support belongs to the child. Therefore, parents cannot agree between themselves to waive or reduce child support, either past-due or current. The venue that issued the order must approve any such agreement.
yes
Generally, no.
Nutrition, social support, and healthy sleep patterns also reduce stress.
they had the runs and were out of toilet paper