Presumably the father will take full custody of the child and he should notify the court of the death so the child support order can be terminated.
Presumably the father will take full custody of the child and he should notify the court of the death so the child support order can be terminated.
Presumably the father will take full custody of the child and he should notify the court of the death so the child support order can be terminated.
Presumably the father will take full custody of the child and he should notify the court of the death so the child support order can be terminated.
Of course not. Child support payments are paid over to the parent with legal physical custody.
They end. The child may be entitled to Social Security benefits from the father.
No, if the mother voluntarily gives cutody to someone else, she can no longer be paid child support because she no longer has custody of the child. What happens now is the father can obtain custody because he does have rights or the person who has custody and have legal guardianship can file for assistance in which child support can be included or filed.
If the father was paying you directly, the payments will, of course, cease. If this is the case you must contact the state for assistance. If you were receiving the support payment from the state, then nothing will change and his payments to reimburse the state will become an obligation/lien against him for which he will eventually have to pay the state back.
30-60 days see my profile
Yes
As a father if you have sole physical custody of your child you can ask the court to have your ex, pay child support to you, and the same would go for her. It is who ever has the most physical custody of the child and also if that person asks the court for child support payments. Answer #2 Yes you do have a say in your child's religion if you have any legal custody of your child. Find out through your court more information about this.
He fights for custody.
In Alabama custody and visitation have nothing to do with child support. Not sure about other states.
yes
Yes, if the father is not given custody he will be obligated to keep paying support to whomever the court awards custody or guardianship of the children.
They will most likely enter a temporary custody and support order that will stand until the final decree is issued.