He would owe $1200 which is not much help in the cost of raising a child. He will continue to be responsible for paying his child support until it is all paid and the child support order is terminated by the court. The mother should file a motion for contempt in the court and then stay on top of it. He will be assessed arrears and there are many ways the Child Enforcement Agency can collect the money.
He would owe $1200 which is not much help in the cost of raising a child. He will continue to be responsible for paying his child support until it is all paid and the child support order is terminated by the court. The mother should file a motion for contempt in the court and then stay on top of it. He will be assessed arrears and there are many ways the Child Enforcement Agency can collect the money.
He would owe $1200 which is not much help in the cost of raising a child. He will continue to be responsible for paying his child support until it is all paid and the child support order is terminated by the court. The mother should file a motion for contempt in the court and then stay on top of it. He will be assessed arrears and there are many ways the Child Enforcement Agency can collect the money.
He would owe $1200 which is not much help in the cost of raising a child. He will continue to be responsible for paying his child support until it is all paid and the child support order is terminated by the court. The mother should file a motion for contempt in the court and then stay on top of it. He will be assessed arrears and there are many ways the Child Enforcement Agency can collect the money.
Beginning on the first day of the month after the court papers were signed, the court will take child support out of your paycheck every month and give it to the mother of your child.
Yes, unless the support order states otherwise.
No she can not. If you have a custody agreement you can only change it by going to court. You pay support for the child so they have food on the table etc, not so the child will have access to his father. He has the right to see his parents anyway.
It is not possible for anyone on this forum to calculate child support obligations for you as there are many more factors other than income that are taken into consideration.
Look at your child support agreement. Or contact DHR to regain a copy.
You could receive up to 1100 dollars per month with this income from the other parent. Most states will allow up to 50 percent of the payers income to be garnished for child support.
You can call your local Department of Human Services office and they will take it out of his paycheck every month unless he quits working.
If the child's RSDI (not SSI) benefit is based on the father's SSA account, the amount of the benefit counts as child support. In many cases, this means that the father owes no additional payment.
The father of the child (whether he was ever legally married to the child's mother or not) is obligated to pay the child support. His new spouse cannot be LEGALLY obligated to pay it since she has no part in the action at all, but there is no bar to her helping her husband pay it if she wishes to do so.
In California child support cannot start until the month AFTER it is requested. In other words you can't go back and ask for support if you left in December but didn't file asking for child support until May. The soonest it would start would be June 1 in that case. This may NOT be the law in your state.
Depends on your state. see links
nope. if the father is indeed the biological father then he has rights that can not be taken away unless he willingly gives it up by sighning off his rights or it is cort ordered. but in no way can the mother of a child regardless of the age of the child keep the father from seeing his son/and of daughter.