No. If you are under 18 and not graduated from high school, you should live with either of your parents. If you attempt to file child support for yourself, the court can make you live with the parent that you request child support from, if you are not already living with your custodial parent.
GET A FAMILY ATTORNEY
The child can file prior to age 19.
Get an attorney who's licensed in Texas and specializes in family law.
Termination of parental rights does not terminate one's child support obligation.
It gets filed in the state of residence of the obligor.
Nope, 11 years too late.
Yes, you can file a civil suit for back child support in Texas if the support was court-ordered and has not been paid. You would typically need to go through the Texas Child Support Division or file a motion with the court that issued the original support order. It's advisable to gather all relevant documents, such as the divorce decree and any records of unpaid support, to support your case. Consulting with a family law attorney can help clarify your options and guide you through the process.
no, 11 years to late.
Yes, but you'd have to file an amendment (order modification) to the existing order with a request for support for yourself.
No, 11 years too late, and dangerous. I growing number of relationships with mother are destroyed by these actions when the adult child learns their mother had been lying about getting child support.
Yes, as part of a legal separation.
No, it's two years too late for the mother to file and a year too late for the daughter to file.