If the lease restricts who can live in the apartment, as long as your son is listed as an occupant on the lease, he or she can continue to live in the apartment (unless the lease specifically states otherwise). If the lease does not have a restriction on occupants, your son can continue living in the apartment as well.
A sale and lease back agreement is when one buys something from one party, and then turns around and leases it back to that person. A month to month lease is when one leases property on a monthly basis.
Look at your child support agreement. Or contact DHR to regain a copy.
Yes. As long as that is not prohibited in the lease.
No, infortunately not. Child-support ends when the child turns 18 yrs of age or upon graduation from highschool whichever occurs later, unless stately differently in the divorce agreement.
No, child support ends in Pennsylvania when the child turns 18 and has graduated from high school.
It usually stops at 18 but depends on what state you live in and what the child support order says, the separation agreement and your state laws. If your child is in school it can usually be extended. Changes to the child support as well as termination of it must go through the court that issued the order.
no
In most cases, the non-custodial parent is not required to continue paying for health insurance after the child turns 18. However, this may vary depending on the terms of the divorce agreement or court order. It is important to review the specific details of the custody arrangement to determine the obligations regarding health insurance coverage for the child.
You are obligated to support your child from the day he was born until he turns 18.
Unless your divorce settlement and/or child support agreement, specifically stated that the child was to be supported until their schooling (including college) was completed you're out of luck. The state only requires the child be supported until they become an adult or, graduate from high school.
If the child is still in high school, child support continues until the child graduates or turns 19, whichever occurs first.
In Louisiana you pay child support until the child is 18 or 19 years of age. If the child is still in high school at the time when he or she turns 18, you would pay until the child is 19 and out of school.