Parents have an obligation to support their minor children. If your spouse is not doing so, he (I'm assuming it's a he) can be compelled to by a court. So, yes.
the relative strength of each candidates support etc.
No, the father has to pay child support for both children. Of course the child that decides to live with him will be treated as he/she were when you were both married, but the child you have will still continue to receive child support by law!
now that you are married to the father of your child he doesn't pay child support but pays no gives more money to support yours and his child and running the household. good luck
Absolutely.Paternity makes you responsible for supporting your own child whether you were married to the mother or not.If paternity is established, child support is due regardless of marital status.
First, there is no such thing as an illegal mother. Any parent, male or female, single, married, divorced or separated, may receive child support.
Yes, provided the separated parent is the father.
A married couple would not be able to sue each other for child support if not separated or divorced. A judge would have no reason to sign an order for child support on these grounds.
No the child support starts after you have divorced him. As long as you are married you share everything so what ever he makes is yours. If you mean while you are married to someone else, yes it can. If you are married to but separated from the child's father, with or without a court order, you can receive child support from him.
yes
If you are married to the mother, no. Then you share everything naturally. But if you have a child and you are separated or not married to the mother, and you do not have custody of the children, you have to pay child support
yes, , if you and he are separated
No, child support will be assessed from the time the order goes into effect. you can file for a support order prior to the divorce though.
No, regardless of your age, you are emancipated by being married and therefor does not get child support.
Child support is court-ordered financial support paid by one parent to the other who has custody of the children, after the parties are separated or divorced, or when the parties were not married.
In most states it will not be included in the calculation
Probably not. Unless they were legally separated, the husband is presumed to be the father of the child in question.