If asking does not work a PI should.
No. The child's parent is responsible for paying child support.
If spouse is ordered to pay support by a court, until another court changes that, you cannot "protect" the spouse.
if you are paying child support and have a new spouse, their income will not count toward child support unless the two of you have your own children together.
If approved, but a dumb idea. see link
No. Only the biological parents are responsible for the support of their minor children. I have a different answer: If the parent is being supported by his/her spouse then yes, the new spouse has to pay for child support. Some parents tried to get out of paying child support by not working and letting their new spouse support them but that is illegal. The house hold income is counted.
Nothing changes regarding child support orders whether it is the mother or the father who is remarrying. The child/children are the responsibility of the biological parents not a new spouse. For example if the mother marries someone of substantial means it would not affect the child support amount that was ordered to be paid by the biological father, as the mother's new spouse has no legal obligation to support the child/children.
If your spouse voluntarily leaves the home, they are still obligated to financially support their children. Child support is based on the income and circumstances of both parents, not on who is living in the home. Therefore, your spouse would still be required to pay child support.
No, only the biological parents income counts and they are the only ones paying for their child.
The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.The biological parent is legally responsible for paying child support. A step parent is not legally responsible for paying child support.
Child support continues until child attains age 18 regardless of where they have moved to or from. The court figures out the total months of payments, and establishes a total dollar amount owed. In that manner, if the paying spouse defaults on, for example, two years worth of payments, that spouse will continue paying support until every dime is paid, even if the child is over the age of 18.
I had a baby by a married man he's already in child support court he's in the arrears and he has no job but his wife works in the state of PA I would like to know would she be held liable for payment of his child
You stop paying for child support when your child turns 18.