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It depends on the court order. if there is a court order established then it will usually state the specifics. You can have private child support which means you pay the custodial parent directly or you can have your check garnished and it can be sent from your employer to the court house of the state of the custodial parent where they will distribute it.
If neither parent still live in the original jurisdiction, it can be transferred to the jurisdictions of either parent.
No, it stays in the state of the obligor parent, as it should.
You pay the state where the original child support order was in place. Now if the custodial parent takes up legal residence in another state and opens a child support case there, the new state can help enforce and/or modify the original states order.
of course
You need to review your court orders and the laws in your state. The custodial parent also supports the child. In some states the custodial parent has the legal right to claim the child. Massachusetts is one such state.You need to review your court orders and the laws in your state. The custodial parent also supports the child. In some states the custodial parent has the legal right to claim the child. Massachusetts is one such state.You need to review your court orders and the laws in your state. The custodial parent also supports the child. In some states the custodial parent has the legal right to claim the child. Massachusetts is one such state.You need to review your court orders and the laws in your state. The custodial parent also supports the child. In some states the custodial parent has the legal right to claim the child. Massachusetts is one such state.
A noncustodial parent can prevent the custodial parent from leaving the state with a baby or child. The court will decide if the custodial parent has just cause to leave the state.
Yes. Many states require that the custodial parent petition the court and the judge can determine if it is in the child's best interest to relocate the child out of state.
Yes, it does not matter where the child lives, you still have to pay it. The child does not stop being yours just because he/she lives in another state.
Being a ward of the State in itself means there is no custodial parent, and certainly none that supports the child, which is needed to take the deduction.
the custodial parent is the parent the child lives with the non custodial parent is the parent the child does NOT live with the non custodial parent assuming he / she knows he is a parent... is usually the patitioning parent. if he /she chooses not to seek visitation rights the court cannot force him/ her to see the child.... but they can enforce child support. research the laws for your state.
Not technically. Child support is for a custodial parent to support the child. Check your state laws.