Yes, you will have to file for a change in the order but you can get it end if your child gets married. If they are in college and get married, that eliminates your duties of paying child support in most states.
No. The court makes a child support order to make sure the children are being supported by both parents. The parents' living together doesn't cancel out the child support obligation. It actually adds to the instability of the family and may lead to penalties if the mother and children are receiving state or federal assistance. A remarriage would create a legal obligation to support the children and would be a reason the court would suspend the child support order.
It may depend on the state where you live, but probably not since you do live together. The custodial parent always has the right to ask for child support.
No, only the biological parents are required to pay child support. Depending on the state you live in you may have to pay her alimony.
Research the child support laws for both states and find which state offers WHAT IS IN THE BEST INTEREST FOR THE CHILD. but remember if you go to the other state to sue for child support everytime you have to appear in court you will have to travel to that state.
Because you are not married and filed for child support. You have to pay child support to one parent and that has to be to the one with custody. If you both had 50/50 custody it could look differently but you only have visitation.
To clarify, if you mean a woman has had an affair and become pregnant? If this is the case, and the husband is aware of it, he can order a paternity test to determine if the child is his or not. If it is not, as far as I know, the woman can go after the man who fathered the child for financial support. Support obligations only belong to the actual biological father OR a father who has legally adopted a child. There is a whole moral issue though - if the parents are staying together, does the husband want to alienate this child by not supporting it and how would he live in the same house and not support it? So really it depends on if the couple stays together. If they don't, the husband has NO obligation to support the child.
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!
In Louisiana, if you live together and have a child but are not married, the father still has financial responsibilities. He is legally obligated to provide financial support for the child, which may include child support payments. This means he should contribute towards the child's expenses such as healthcare, education, and basic needs.
As the father has no assumed rights to the child, he can still be ordered to pay by the courts.
If you have an order, you must pay child support.
no
Yes child support is paid even when parents don't live together.
yes
yes Child support is awarded when one or both parents are absent. If the child's parents are living together with the child (in their own home or other living arrangement), no child support is due.
If the parents are unmarried and don't live together the mother should obtain a child support order since relationships of that nature tend to be unstable and it takes time to obtain a child support order.If the parents are unmarried and don't live together the mother should obtain a child support order since relationships of that nature tend to be unstable and it takes time to obtain a child support order.If the parents are unmarried and don't live together the mother should obtain a child support order since relationships of that nature tend to be unstable and it takes time to obtain a child support order.If the parents are unmarried and don't live together the mother should obtain a child support order since relationships of that nature tend to be unstable and it takes time to obtain a child support order.
No, only the biological parents are required to pay child support. Depending on the state you live in you may have to pay her alimony.
You file for custody as the child should be living with one of them. The custodial parent can be charged with abandonment. if the child has married, get the support stopped, or have the child emancipated.
Research the child support laws for both states and find which state offers WHAT IS IN THE BEST INTEREST FOR THE CHILD. but remember if you go to the other state to sue for child support everytime you have to appear in court you will have to travel to that state.
Because you are not married and filed for child support. You have to pay child support to one parent and that has to be to the one with custody. If you both had 50/50 custody it could look differently but you only have visitation.