I suggest that you contact your State's child support agency. When you get an interview with them, bring all the papers relating to your child support: birth certificates, acknowledgments of paternity, court orders, payment records, etc. Be polite but persistent. Good luck!
If spouse is ordered to pay support by a court, until another court changes that, you cannot "protect" the spouse.
Your spouse has no authority to over-ride a court ordered child support.
No. The child's parent is responsible for paying child support.
if you are paying child support and have a new spouse, their income will not count toward child support unless the two of you have your own children together.
Nothing changes regarding child support orders whether it is the mother or the father who is remarrying. The child/children are the responsibility of the biological parents not a new spouse. For example if the mother marries someone of substantial means it would not affect the child support amount that was ordered to be paid by the biological father, as the mother's new spouse has no legal obligation to support the child/children.
If approved, but a dumb idea. see link
Highly unlikely.
Yes. Your earnings might change the amount of support you are ordered to pay.
Yes if a judge ordered you to pay child support you have to pay . Until you go back to court and have it changed .
No and No.This is ludicrous at the very best. The father is paying child support because of a court ordered decree when he and his ex-spouse ended their marriage. The father continues paying until the daughter attains the age of 18. To expect the 16 year old boy (also a child in a legal sense) to pay child support is ridiculous and beyond belief.
If he is not paying court ordered child support, he is contempt of court. All you need to do is, go to the court which issued the order and address the issue.
You can be ordered to get a full time job. see links