No; however, the court will likely enter a default order and you will not like its terms.
It's possible. For example, the court may order support to allow the child to attend college. Also, support obligations for disabled children often continue into adulthood.
She will need your notarized authorization to represent you, preferably on a form prescribed by your State's child support agency.SEE LINKS BELOW
no because you need your parents permission even if they cant hear The State can enforce a child support order after notice to the parents. The obligor has the right to an administrative hearing; other than that, no further hearing is required.
At the child support hearing, only the child support will be addressed. You will need to go before a family law judge to seek any custody or visitation.
Jurisdiction and future modifications transfers to the state of residence of the obligor parent, not the child.
If you have to pay support, you will be hearing from the courts and/or the child support agency in your State or the child's State.SEE LINKS BELOW
In the state of Florida, child support can end when the child reaches the age of emancipation, which is 18 years old in Florida, unless the child support order indicates otherwise. You should check your child support order if there is a statement indicating when support payments end. Check with the Clerk of Courts in the county where the child support order was entered to get a copy of your support order. You can have your child support payments terminated by applying with the Florida DOR or by court order through the modification process. Resources: Florida Clerks of Courts http://www.flclerks.com/directory.html Florida Department of Revenue http://dor.myflorida.com/dor/childsupport/ Modifying Child Support in Florida http://www.florida-court-forms.net/florida-child-support.html
This sounds like a hearing held in Ohio to determine whether the child support payments of a non-custodial parent will be changed (adjusted).
Yes
Move to Florida
No. The child's parent is responsible for paying child support.
In the state of Florida, your driver's license can be __________ for failure to pay child support.