You can move a child support case from Arizona to Nevada ONLY IF ALL Parents agree - the custodial parent and the non-custodial parent - with the move. See the related like.
Section 611 also provides that the final, nonmodifiable aspects of a child support order may not be modified. For example, if the issuing state issued an order that child support terminates at age 21, the responding state cannot change that aspect of the order, even if support in the responding state ends at age 18. To make this Section work, Section 612 provides the deference to the support order of a sister state that was missing in URESA.
For purposes of illustration, let us take a number of examples where the parties are in different states. (Unless otherwise stated, assume that the custodial parent and child have been living in STATE 1 for the last six consecutive months.)
Example 1: Custodial parent and child are in STATE 1; noncustodial parent is in STATE 2. STATE 1 has issued an order; STATE 2 has not. The controlling order is in STATE 1.
Example 2: Custodial parent and child are in STATE 1; noncustodial parent is in STATE 2. STATE 1 has not issued an order; STATE 2 has issued an order. The controlling order is in STATE 2.
Example 3: Custodial parent and child are in STATE 1; noncustodial parent is in STATE 2. STATE 1 has issued an order; STATE 2 has issued an order. Assuming that the child has been in STATE 1 for the prior consecutive six months, the controlling order is in STATE 1.
Example 4: Custodial parent and child are in STATE 1; noncustodial parent is in STATE 2. STATE 1 has issued an order; STATE 3 has issued an order. The controlling order is in STATE 1.
Example 5: Custodial parent and child are in STATE 1; noncustodial parent is in STATE 2. STATE 1 has issued an order; STATE 2 has issued an order. This time, however, the child had been in STATE 1 for one month before STATE 1's order was issued; prior to that, the child had lived in STATE 2 for at least the prior consecutive six months. The controlling order is in STATE 2.
Example 6: Custodial parent and child are in STATE 1; noncustodial parent is in STATE 2. STATE 1 issued an order in 1990; STATE 2 issued an order in 1994. This time, the child has been in STATE 1 for one month and, prior to that, had been in STATE 2 for two months. The controlling order is in STATE 2.
Example 7: Custodial parent and child are in STATE 1; noncustodial parent is in STATE 2. STATE 3 has issued an order; STATE 4 has issued an order. There is no controlling order, and STATE 1 or STATE 2 may issue an order. The first order issued will have priority.
child support enforcement
If this is a case for child support, you can go to the child support authorities and request one. You can also pay for one yourself and have it done by a private lab.
no
Yes. You are obligated to pay child support in AZ even if your parental rights are severed.
only child support. Spousal support is taxable income.
If the child is being adopted, not otherwise.
No.If this case is currently being paid through the Az court system,they will track payments till it is paid off,child support is a true debt and even if the mother passes it is paid to her heirs of her estate.
You can try to contact them if you need it before your first check comes in. But is should also be listed on paper work from the courts. On one site below it states this: "Your ATLAS case number (12 digit) that you may find on your court order and/or all correspondence that DCSE sends to you." It is numbers and not letters.
not without court approval. see link
Yes of course. Pregnancy does not emancipate her and you are obligated to care for her until she is 18. She and the father will have a hard enough time to support the child, they do not need to support themselves.
Child support is based on the "Income Shares" model. The court will approximate the amount that would have been spent on the kids if the parents and the children were living together. Then each parent will be ordered to contribute a proportionate share of the total child support. see links below
If the order specifically says that support runs through age 21, contact your State's child support agency. Be patient but persistent. Good luck!