It can depend on what state you live in, and it can depend on the wording of the court order that awarded you custody to the custodial parent.
I meant to say "from the other parent" not "for the other parent"
No if the other parent is still alive, legally the other parent has to take care of you
No, especially if they are the parent of the baby rats. Rats have been known to eat the litter when there is no other food source but at no other time. However, if the adult rat is not the parent of the litter I would still not recommend keeping them together
sue probably
Yes, as part of a legal separation.
No, it is not the child's fault, they still need the bonding effects of both parents. The other parent although not paying support is still subject to pay other bills until you can get them to court, which would also clear up the issue of keeping the child from the other.
Generally, yes. If the parent will not care for the unfortunate child and she must be placed with other responsible adults who are paid by the state, the biological parent still has the responsibility to provide financial support.Generally, yes. If the parent will not care for the unfortunate child and she must be placed with other responsible adults who are paid by the state, the biological parent still has the responsibility to provide financial support.Generally, yes. If the parent will not care for the unfortunate child and she must be placed with other responsible adults who are paid by the state, the biological parent still has the responsibility to provide financial support.Generally, yes. If the parent will not care for the unfortunate child and she must be placed with other responsible adults who are paid by the state, the biological parent still has the responsibility to provide financial support.
The parent can continue to receive food stamps. If the child is still living in the parent's home, the two of them can continue to receive food stamps together as one household.
That parent still owes the back support.That parent still owes the back support.That parent still owes the back support.That parent still owes the back support.
Until the court says otherwise, yes.
yes
Of course. Unless the non-custodial parent takes sole custody, the non-custodial parent is still responsible for paying child support to whomever the child goes to. There is no reason the death of a parent should terminate the other parent's child support obligation.