The simple answer is yes. The child support is owed to the parent and not the child. As cold as it sounds, whether the child is alive is irrelevant. If the debt is owed the parent it is still owed until the statutue of limitations (deadline to collect) expires. In most states that is many, many years after the debt first became due.
The big difference is that the state will not take the case at all if the child is deceased. You will need the help of a private support collection agency if you cannot collect on your own.
Only if the owed parent is deceased
Only if the obligee parent releases the claim or is deceased.
The guardian gets the child support, but the child can receive social security on behalf of the deceased parent until they are 18.
Only if the obligee parent is deceased and with the approval of the court.
Is there any liability to tell a child of a deceased parent?
Unless there was a lien on the assets, you're probably out of luck. However, the child might be eligible for RSDI (Social Security) based on the deceased parent's earnings.
The living parent may still be ordered to pay support. Why doesn't the living parent have custody? see link below
Show the court that: you are not the father; you are living with and supporting the child (either with or without the other parent); or the child is deceased.
Hopefully, there is insurance or other funds in the will designated for the child. Of course, the child will be eligible for social security benefits if the parent worked.
The child support is paid to the parent, not the child, to pay for the expenses of the child. So as long as you have a roof over your head, food in your belly and clothes on your back my guess is that the child support is being used correctly.
No. You are middle aged and in no need of child support. This is something your other parent should have done while you were a minor.
Not applicable. You will receive nothing more than the normal amount for a child of a deceased parent.