It is just like if the father did not see the child. He would have to pay child support. Visitation and custody are 2 separate things in the court system. Whether a parent sees a child or not, support is usually still issued. If the judge signed a support order and it is not payed, that parent can go to jail for unpayed child support.
No, and a father should never pay without a court order.
Until the judge signs it, it isn't an order.
Giving up parental rights has nothing to do with paying support. As the natural father, you are obligated to support the child the mother will be raising and can be ordered to do so by the court. You made the decisions; the consequences are yours. Think of the child and his or her needs through childhood. Would you want to be left behind because your father didn't want to support you?
If the person whose DNA was tested is determined to be the father then a child support order will be entered.
none as they are separate issues and most child support arrears are on men who learned years later that they were a father, when ordered to pay back to the birth of the child.
no
He can still be ordered to pay. But, if you were the father, than nothing.
It's not in the dictionary.
Yes. Arrears associated with court ordered child support can be pursued.Yes. Arrears associated with court ordered child support can be pursued.Yes. Arrears associated with court ordered child support can be pursued.Yes. Arrears associated with court ordered child support can be pursued.
You can't. Child support is court ordered and family services handles payments. The money is to support children your father has produced. It is his obligation to pay the support.
If you mean, child support that was ordered but not paid - yes.
Yes.
no
Yes. First paternity must be established legally.If paternity is established through the court ordered DNA test the mother can request child support for the time during which no child support was paid by the father prior to the DNA test.
Wait two years and modify. An incorrect amount is interpretive, as sole custody father are still ordered to pay child support.
Generally, if no orders are yet in place and he is determined to be the child's father he will be entitled to a visitation schedule and he will be required to pay child support. They are separate matters but both can be ordered at the same time.
Child support would generally go to the person raising the child. Mother might even be ordered to pay to father.