In general, child support payments are intended to provide financial support for the child's needs. If the child no longer lives with you, the child support payments may still continue to be directed to you as the custodial parent, unless there is a legal agreement or court order stating otherwise. It is important to consult with a lawyer or a local family court to understand the specific laws and regulations regarding child support in your jurisdiction.
To the child if the child is an adult, otherwise it should be stopped pending a review of the custody orders.
Not if not order previously existed.
Child support arrears do not go away. They must be paid even after the child reached the age of majority and the child support order is no longer in effect.
The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.
See related question below
You have to petition the court that filed the child support orders and prove to them the child no longer requires your support. If they concur, the orders will be ammended.
Yes, until the order is modified. If the child is over the age of majority, than it can go straight to the child. If not, he files for custody.
The mother files in Florida and child support enforcement handles it from there.
When a parent moves to Germany, and has children in the United States, he does have to pay child support. If he is evading child support; Germany will demand he continues to pay support.
yup
Go to the website for the child support agency in the State in which the child lives.
This would be dependent on who has jurisdiction. If the child was moved to Georgia, Texas would retain jurisdiction on child support.
Yes, the father will need to pay child support in order to support his child. You are responsible for supporting your child until they reach the age of 18.