No, but your mother can as long as she filed a petition for child support and he did not pay.Child support goes to the parent to use for the child's expenses, and not paid directly to the child.
No, the debt is all his.
If the man signed the birth certificate knowing he was not the father he may be held responsible for providing child support until the child is eighteen in many states. If he did not sign the birth certificate it is unusual that he is paying child support. If he failed to request a DNA test at the appropriate time, again, he may have to keep paying. He needs to consult with an attorney who specializes in child support issues in his jurisdiction, who can review all the details of the situation and explain his options.If the man signed the birth certificate knowing he was not the father he may be held responsible for providing child support until the child is eighteen in many states. If he did not sign the birth certificate it is unusual that he is paying child support. If he failed to request a DNA test at the appropriate time, again, he may have to keep paying. He needs to consult with an attorney who specializes in child support issues in his jurisdiction, who can review all the details of the situation and explain his options.If the man signed the birth certificate knowing he was not the father he may be held responsible for providing child support until the child is eighteen in many states. If he did not sign the birth certificate it is unusual that he is paying child support. If he failed to request a DNA test at the appropriate time, again, he may have to keep paying. He needs to consult with an attorney who specializes in child support issues in his jurisdiction, who can review all the details of the situation and explain his options.If the man signed the birth certificate knowing he was not the father he may be held responsible for providing child support until the child is eighteen in many states. If he did not sign the birth certificate it is unusual that he is paying child support. If he failed to request a DNA test at the appropriate time, again, he may have to keep paying. He needs to consult with an attorney who specializes in child support issues in his jurisdiction, who can review all the details of the situation and explain his options.
The child support is owed to your mother to be used for your expenses, not to you, and to stop paying what he owes he has to go to court. If it's not done in court it is not legal.
The child support is owed to your mother to be used for your expenses, not to you, and to stop paying what he owes he has to go to court. If it's not done in court it is not legal.
The child is in his primary care. Mother should be paying him.
some may sometimes. i am a child of divorced parents and my father makes more than my mom and still tries to fight paying child support. in his case no he has no legitimate reason. i think if a father is trying to fight paying his child support he should be thuroughly investigated as to why he believes he should be exempt from supporting the child he helped to create and is now leaving all responsibility with the mother.
Yes. see linksAns 2.The father has the option to waive his rights if he wants to, and if he can convince the judge that he is sane, sober and not under coercion as he does so.This has nothing at all to do with child support, which is not his right, but his responsibility. In general the mother can't waive child support either, because support is her child's right, not hers.THAT IS CORRECT.....unless the child's mother has re-married and her husband wants to adopt this child, that would release the biological father from paying child support.
No. Back child support is money you should have been paying when you didn't. You owe it until it is all paid up.
Your daughter should contact the court or her case worker and make sure they are aware the Father is ceased paying Child Support. The Judge will most likely suspend his visitation rights and, depending on the circumstances, he might even place him in jail.
Neither ... the " father " has to pay owed child support only when there is an existing case open and ordered to pay said support by a family court judge ... And subsequently has not met all payments if any at all ...
The only time you can take a father off of child support is if the mother agrees with it, but that rarely happens, so I'm going to have to say no, it's very rare, the closest you can get to not paying AT ALL, is reducing the pay .
You haul this deadbeat into court and the judge will order him to do whatever it takes to make good on his debt. He is already in contempt of court for not paying child support ... all the non-payments are added to the total "bill", which means he will be paying child support well beyond the time after the child attains age 18.