No.
No. Marriage constitutes the emancipation of a minor and child support obligations cease.
Yes. You are not paying for the mother, you are paying for the child. If that were the case, children living on college campuses whose custodial parent has an extended modification to child support granted or are attending boarding school would not be able to collect support. If the child is living elsewhere without permission of the court and/or if that move would constitute legal emancipation as outlined by your state's laws, you do have the right to file for modification of child support based on the same.
Yes, until/unless the child is adopted.
In the US, it's highly unlikely that you will be emancipated. Emancipation is rarely granted to begin with, and when the minor has a child it reduces the chances of it being granted even further (for many reasons).
The law that applies is the law of the governing state of Maryland even if child lives in another state. If Maryland law permits support for post secondary education, then it would be granted. Even if you change the venue to PA and record the child support order in PA, the law must still be enforced based on the original governing state. However, I would certainly not move your child support order to PA since PA law does not allow for any post secondary support unless it is in the orginial child support order or some other written agreement.
In the state of Pennsylvania the conditions for emancipation are completing a Petition for Emancipation form. The minor must show that they can support themselves because if the emancipation is granted the parents are no longer responsible for the support of the child.
No. This is a very common misconception. Child emancipation is rarely granted, and the cases in which it is granted typically involve child abandonment, marriage, or complete financial independence.
Emancipation is the age of adulthood. In Nevada that is 18. If the child gets married, that is considered emancipation.
Emancipation can result from a mutual agreement between the parents and the child or it can be ordered by the court, in spite of the parents' objections if the child can show that they are no longer reliant on the parents for support. Emancipation also occurs when the child reaches the age of majority (usually 18) unless the parents can show that the child is mentally unfit to care for himself / herself. Should emancipation be granted, the parents are no longer responsible for the child's care and well-being and have no authority over the child's decisions, finances or property.
You have to be 16, read more in the link below.
Generally, with the majority or emancipation of the younger/youngest child.
You put this in Emancipation but having a child does not emancipate you or make you eligable for early emancipation. If you are age of consent in your state you can have sex and yes, you can get pregnant. However, if the parents choose not to help you out, and you will need their help, the CPS can take the child from you since if you can not provide you are a unfit parent.
In Texas, children can petition for emancipation at age 16. However, the court will consider various factors before granting emancipation, such as the child's ability to support themselves financially and make independent decisions.
As of 2014, there is no law that allows for the emancipation of a minor child from parents. Parents are required to care for the child until he or she reaches 18 years of age.
This largely depends on the language of the order for support and the rules in the child's state about age of majority and emancipation. Emancipation generally means that the child is self-sufficient; having her own apartment does not, in itself, constitute emancipation.
No, in Georgia, having a child does not automatically emancipate a minor. Emancipation is a legal process that must be granted by a court. The minor would need to petition the court for emancipation and meet specific requirements to be granted emancipated status.
{| |- | No, it isn't likely. Being a parent, or being pregnant, has no bearing on your ability to support yourself and your child. Only about half the states allow you to get emancipated. Of those most require you to be at least 16 to get emancipated. |}