Yes. To do otherwise would put them in contempt of court and they could be fined heavily and/or arrested and put in jail.
But If you feel as if you don't owe the amount of back child support then you need to do a modification you can get all the info you need to do that from this site http://flchildsupportmodification.com/
Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.
Yes. They are still the child's parent and responsible for supporting their child.
Of course. Unless the non-custodial parent takes sole custody, the non-custodial parent is still responsible for paying child support to whomever the child goes to. There is no reason the death of a parent should terminate the other parent's child support obligation.
no
The obligor parent can request the support go directly to the child. see links below
The living parent may still be ordered to pay support. Why doesn't the living parent have custody? see link below
No. The parent is still the parent and responsible for the child abandoned or not. The child support payments will just keep adding up until the person is found.
According to the State of Georgia, unless you have taken this matter up in court to have this amended, not to pursue child support for the child the non-custodial parent is still obligated to pay child support
Yes.
No.
Yes, in most cases, a parent is still required to pay child support even if they were never married to the other parent. The obligation to financially support a child is based on the parent-child relationship, not the marital status of the parents.
yes