Then the other parent can sue him if he wont follow the court order, they can take it from his wages etc. There is no way to escape this. They can take everything you own in the end and you can end up in prison.
In general, child support is based on ability to pay, not other factors such as whether the non-custodial parent is involved in the child's life.
no the child is already 18 then they are legally an adult and the parent doesnt need to pay child support
The non-custodial parent will be required to pay child support.The non-custodial parent will be required to pay child support.The non-custodial parent will be required to pay child support.The non-custodial parent will be required to pay child support.
yes
no
Yes, in most cases, a parent is required to pay child support even if they are not 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
In most cases the parent who has the child doesn't have to pay child support. The parent who does not have the child pays child support if they want visitation rights. In most jurisdictions, the non custodial parent must pay child support even without visitation rights.
Yes, in most cases, a parent is required to pay child support even if they are not 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, a parent can be required to pay child support even if they are not married to the other parent. The obligation to pay child support is based on the legal responsibility to financially support one's children, regardless of marital status.
There are no valid reasons not to get child support. That money is supposed to be used to help raise the child. If the custodial parent tries to refuse child support before a judge, the judge will override the custodial parent's wishes and explain that the child support belongs to the child, not to the custodial parent.
If you are an absent parent of the child, yes.