No. Not legally responsible for the 20 year olds actions. However, if they have signed some kind of legal or loan document with them they are responsible for that. .
The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.
Legally, no.
parents are in every way responsible for their child and they should always be there if the child is in need of their parent.
age 21
In Virginia, parents are legally responsible for their child until the age of 18, unless the child is emancipated or the parents' rights are terminated by a court.
In Louisiana, a parent is legally responsible for a child until the age of majority, which is 18 years old. However, parental responsibility can extend beyond this age if the child has special needs or disabilities that warrant continued support.
No. 18 means you are legally responsible for yourself. Public schools have no impact.
In New York, parents are legally responsible for their children until they reach the age of 21.
In Connecticut, parents are legally responsible for their child until the age of 18, unless the child has been legally emancipated. This means parents are responsible for providing financial support, housing, education, and medical care until the child turns 18.
If the child is over age 18, then the parent is not responsible for the child's medical bills. The child is legally responsible for anything that the insurance policy did not pay.
The parents are no longer responsible once the child reaches the age of 18 in Maryland, regardless of where they live.
In New York, a parent's legal responsibility for a child typically ends when the child turns 21 or when the child becomes legally emancipated before that age. It can also end if the child gets married, joins the military, or is declared legally emancipated by a court.