I am sure you would agree that the parents of a child are responsible for bringing up that child. If not who do you think is responsible?
If he deceived you about his responsibilities before you were married, this is unfortunate but it does not mean he can neglect his responsibilities although I can appreciate that this is now causing you some financial hardship.
The matter of access to his son is a separate issue and to get access he may need to speak to an attorney. Also given the circumstances it may be prudent for your husband to get DNA proof that he is the father (and therfore financially responsible), the attorney will advise on this as well.
Yes, law binds husband to support wife financially.
Does your husband have to legally and financially support his wife during a separation
Yes, if you are the father. Her husband isn't responsible for your child. That depends on whether the state she lives in obligates the husband at the time of the birth to be financially responsible. But, with the growth of paternity fraud laws, that could change, resulting in you being iordered to pay retroactive support. see links below
A husband only pays child support if he does not have custody of the child. If he is paying spousal support, it is only supposed to be temporary until the wife can become financially stable.
no
A sponsor or a patron.
No, He has a moral obligation to support his child financially and emotionally. Unless his income has decreased support should remain the same.
the govt. is in deficit budget, and it is not in a position to help financially. the govt. is in deficit budget, and it is not in a position to help financially.
When someone marries, he is legally bound to one spouse and is not supposed to marry another without divorce. Financially, they are supposed to support each other and a spouse gets some rights over the marital property.
Child support.
No. Your income cannot be redirected toward your husband's children he had by another woman. However, a judge may take into consideration your husband's ability to pay in light of his present circumstances. If, for example, you are the primary bread winner and earn substantially more than him, a judge may rule that his lifestyle will not be significantly changed by paying more child support.
no because if you had a baby with another man your ex husband does not pay you with more child support because that is not his child