Probably not.
This is in most states.
I went through this as well.
I started my divorce a year later and well lost a year of child support thinking i had to start the divorce before I started the child support.
So no if you refused the child support in the first place there is no back owed, they judge will take the date that you filed for child support to current and that is it.
so if you filed June 2008 and you just got to court June 2009 and it was finalized, they will take if from the June 2008 date that you filed.
Not the date you got divorced.
This is with most states.
Contact an attorney to make sure, but it is like this in Maine and Utah and California and other states, so probably in New York as well.
That comes under child support enforcement, they will file a motion to enforce.
Too complicated to answer simply. See an attorney that does child custody and family law.
Yes, under the Hague Treaty.
Child Support Enforcement will an interstate action under the UIFSA.
if a child is not working can a parent charge them rent
Unless there are unusually circumstances, once a minor becomes an adult under the laws of the state in which he or she lives (or as stated in the support order) child support ends. If he or she has established residence outside the custodial parent's home with the approval of the custodial parent, the obligated parent should petition the court to have the support order amended or rescinded. Child support money is for the support of minor children and not "owed" to the custodial parent. The custodial parent does have the legal right to sue the obligated parent for any arrearages or "extra" expenses incurred while the minor child was in his or her care.
A parent must obey the child support order. A custodial parent may be serving in the military with the child under temporary guardianship. That is no reason to stop paying child support. If the child isn't living with the custodial parent who is receiving child support the matter must be brought before the court.
"reimbursed" ... Not clear whether you mean collects welfare or collects child support, but in either case the answer is, the State will not reimburse the NCP.
Child support is awarded by the court for the custodial parent. The amount is determined by the court under state guidelines even if there is joint custody and even if the non-custodial parent doesn't show up for the hearing. The non-custodial parent can request a modification if circumstances change or if the court used an incorrect amount for the obligor's income.
Your custodial parent can collect unpaid support that accrued under an order. Support sometimes continues after the child becomes an adult if the child is disabled.
In this economy, the courts are being left with not ordering support, but requires evidence of job search.
Since this would come under the law as regards parental abduction, blackmail is not even an issue. Besides, you don't have that power, the court does.