No, the tax reduction benefits of the Jarvis-Gann initiative are not transferable from father to son. Each individual taxpayer is responsible for their own taxes and can only benefit from the tax reduction based on their own circumstances.
Not unless the children have agreed to pay them. Companies may try to get you to pay them but as long as you have not signed anything you are not legally bound to pay them.
The father can petition the court for a reduction if there has been a change in his circumstances beyond his control.
No you cannot receive benefits for yourself because your father was a WW2 veteran. Only he can received benefits through the Veterans Administration.
It is ancient common law that a child born to a married couple gets the father's last name because that father would care for and support the child until maturity in a family household. It is also ancient common law that an unmarried mother gets to give the child her own name.
Yes a child can receive medical benefits if the mother has sole custody and the father dies. The state will provide the mother with assistance which will include medical benefits for the child. This can happen with or without the father passing on.
The father of deduction is often attributed to Aristotle, who introduced deductive reasoning in his work on logic. Reduction is a method used in mathematics and philosophy, and there isn't necessarily a single individual credited with being its "father."
yes, yes he can!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Death benefits, no - the child isn't dead yet. Survivor's benefits, yes - once the father established legal custody.
The insurance beneits will go to the person(s) your father named as beneficiary(ies) when he purchased the policy, if any benefits are distributed at all. Some insurance will not pay benefits on suicide.
They end. The child may be entitled to Social Security benefits from the father.
Yes, if, e.g., the court determines that the father has reduced his income for the purpose of avoiding support or the reduction is not "substantial" or "significant."
Yes.