In general, child support is a percentage of net income. If the obligor has the child for an extended period of time, the court may suspend support for that period.
yes.
The answer to this child support question and many others for the state of New York can be found here. https://newyorkchildsupport.com/
No. The statute of limitations for child support arrears in New York is twenty years from the date of the default. However, in your case it seems that your mother never obtained a court order for child support. You have no cause of action.
If the father becomes unemployed, he should immediately contact the court to seek relief from the child support obligations. He may NOT just stop paying.
Jurisdiction can be transferred
Having a child is an emancipating event therefore you should not have to be responsible for that child.
No, and a father should never pay without a court order.
How much Child Support you pay or receive is based on total gross income. In your search on your computer type in New York Child Support Chart and New York Child Support Calculator. There is no way that a precise figure can be given to this question.
see links below
It would be based on his net profit after acceptable business expenses.
This question is a complicated one in that the laws of paternity do not necessarily establish the biological father as the father for child support purposes but rather look to the circumstances surrounding the case. Your husband is what is known as a presumed father, which is essentially a man that was married to the mother when the child was born, legally agreed to be the father of his wife's child (by signing the birth certificate, and has acted and behaved as the child's father. You cannot receive child support from both the presumed father (if he is still your husband) and the biological father (assuming he admits to being the father) and a court would likely determine your husband to be the father for purposes of child support.
In my case, the amount of child support was determined by the state which filed the divorce/custody/support proceedings. My daughter lives with her father in New York, yet Florida has jurisdiction because that is where the original proceedings were filed. When she lived with me, Florida also dictated how much he was to pay me...even though he lived in NY.