Unless the order states otherwise, the amount of support does not change when one child attains majority/becomes emancipated.
Then she will not get any child support.
Nothing happens automatically. The mother will need to contact the courts to get the child support amount adjusted. It's not an overly complicated process, but, with a bias in the courts toward the mother, it is rarely a fair 50% split. As the male, your child support might be cut down to less than half of what you receive today. It depends on how the child support number is calculated in your state.
If the daughter is no longer living with her mother, and is independent, then you could petition to end child support. If she is still in highschool, you might continue to pay with the agreement that the money transfers from mother to daughter.
The court may dismiss the case for want of prosecution.
Samething that happens to all fathers they either stick with the mother of their child or pay child support which the mother can go after you or your family for if you are too young to have a job.
Child support does not automatically go to the person with whom the child is living, it goes to whomever the court order says it does. If the court order says you have to pay child support until the child graduates, then you must pay child support until the child graduates, even if the child is actually living with you. You could almost certainly petition the court to change this, but you'd have to take the trouble to actually do so.
They can be prosecuted for perjury/contempt.
Yes, a mother South Africa can get an arrest warrant for a father living in another country if he stops paying for child support.
The mother must petition for child support.The mother must petition for child support.The mother must petition for child support.The mother must petition for child support.
The court and the mother have to agree to that you do this and you continue to pay child support incl the back support if there is any until the child is adopted. You will no longer have any rights to the child.
no it goes to the mother.
his brother from another mother his brother from another mother his brother from another mother