Yes, if one or both parents and/or the child experience a significant change in circumstances.
No, it's a matter for the obligor to report the situation to the court, and either request a modification of support, and/or custody order as soon as they discover that the child is not living with the custodial parent. The court can investigate the situation.
In Arizona, you can file to have it raised if the either parent has a increase or decrease of income of 15% or more. And/Or if the child is over 12, then it can be raised 10%.
Yes. The court will set a child support order using state guidelines and the obligor will need to pay over some amount from the unemployment earnings. When the obligor gains new employment the child support order will be in place and the custodial parent can return to court and request a modification to reflect the obligor's increase in earnings.Yes. The court will set a child support order using state guidelines and the obligor will need to pay over some amount from the unemployment earnings. When the obligor gains new employment the child support order will be in place and the custodial parent can return to court and request a modification to reflect the obligor's increase in earnings.Yes. The court will set a child support order using state guidelines and the obligor will need to pay over some amount from the unemployment earnings. When the obligor gains new employment the child support order will be in place and the custodial parent can return to court and request a modification to reflect the obligor's increase in earnings.Yes. The court will set a child support order using state guidelines and the obligor will need to pay over some amount from the unemployment earnings. When the obligor gains new employment the child support order will be in place and the custodial parent can return to court and request a modification to reflect the obligor's increase in earnings.
Don't ever send child support payments directly to anyone! Send them through your State's disbursement unit or the courts, and age 21 is the cutoff age.
Of course not. Child support is for the support of a minor child. Why should the child be deprived of financial support if her mother dies. The order can be modified and it will be paid over to her legal guardian if that person is not the other parent.Of course not. Child support is for the support of a minor child. Why should the child be deprived of financial support if her mother dies. The order can be modified and it will be paid over to her legal guardian if that person is not the other parent.Of course not. Child support is for the support of a minor child. Why should the child be deprived of financial support if her mother dies. The order can be modified and it will be paid over to her legal guardian if that person is not the other parent.Of course not. Child support is for the support of a minor child. Why should the child be deprived of financial support if her mother dies. The order can be modified and it will be paid over to her legal guardian if that person is not the other parent.
yes this is a felony, how ever child support enforcement uses there own discression to prosecute this behavior. most of the time u will need to hire a private attorney to prosecute.
No, not likely. If you are over 18 yrs. of age, you are considered an adult, and child support is exactly what it is...."child-support" for CHILDREN, not adults!
no
The child support must be paid over as ordered in the child support order. The obligor cannot decide to pay it into a trust without a court order.The child support must be paid over as ordered in the child support order. The obligor cannot decide to pay it into a trust without a court order.The child support must be paid over as ordered in the child support order. The obligor cannot decide to pay it into a trust without a court order.The child support must be paid over as ordered in the child support order. The obligor cannot decide to pay it into a trust without a court order.
yes if the grandparents put you on child support.
Child support can be terminated only if/when the child is adopted.
No. You must obey the child support order. The child is not required to take over your child support obligation. If they are ambitious enough to work they should benefit from their efforts not be penalized by losing your financial support.