against both her parents.
I doubt there were many child support laws back then. Normally, only the custodial parent of the child can file for child support, not the actual child.
Your local family (civil) court is where you must file for child support arrears. If there is a child support order you must return to that court to file a contempt of court order.Your local family (civil) court is where you must file for child support arrears. If there is a child support order you must return to that court to file a contempt of court order.Your local family (civil) court is where you must file for child support arrears. If there is a child support order you must return to that court to file a contempt of court order.Your local family (civil) court is where you must file for child support arrears. If there is a child support order you must return to that court to file a contempt of court order.
Up until the child turns age 18 and even if the father was never notified of the existence of the child, as is common.
That is dependent on the state. In most states you have until the child reaches the age of majority, than the child has one year longer to file on their own. However, in Ohio you have until the child turns 23 to file for up to 18 years of retroactive support. see links
Yes.
You always file for child support in the jurisdiction where the child legally resides. The child support enforcement agency will take it from there.
Only for the allocated amount until the child turns 18.
It would depend on the child's age but Yes if your child is still enrolled in highschool. You can stop if your child turns 18 and has graduated from highschool but if your child turns 18 and is still in highschool then you'll have to pay support until the child graduates highschool or turns 19 whatever happens first.
Paying voluntarily is not a presumption of paying legally in most states, so stopping prior to a cutoff date for when a retroactive order can still be filed could result in a large financial lost. Ohio law expressly designates any support paid without a court order as a gift. The mother has until the child turns age 23 to file for retroactive support, and the child can file after the age of majority until age 23. In most states, the mother has until the age of majority of the child to file, and the child has one more year beyond that to file. In Mississippi, the age of majority is 21. The cutoff date for support in New York is 21. Florida no longer has a cutoff date.
No. Child support is not discharged in bankruptcy.
Child support is not discharged in bankruptcy.
Then she will not get any child support.