It is impossible to provide a number for this as laws vary depending on the country, state or province in which the case is being handled. Taken into consideration will also be the income of the father, the mother and the number of children requiring support.
This depends on a number of factors, such as the income of both parents, the state's scale on child support amount per child, etc.
462.00 a month and 450.00 a month for alimony.
The biological father is the legal father. The husband is not the father unless he decides he wants to claim that title and wants to raise this child. Slim to none on that one. More likely you are going to be a single parent, so go after the bio dad for child support. He owes his child that.
no, you give up the claim to the state.
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, but he needs to get it modified see links below
Yes, unless the child is being adopted by someone else like her husband.
No. If the parents are living together the law assumes they taking care of the needs of their minor child/children (at least one would hope that is the case).
Yes, they are his kids.
If you're the noncustodial parent, you might be liable. The fact that your husband has a child by someone else is irrelevant to this.
iN vIRGINIA, THE BABY BORN TO A MARRIAGE IS CONSIDERED THE HUSBAND'S CHILD, SO IF THE REAL FATHER WANTS THE BABY , IT IS UP TO THE HUSBAND AND THE COURT. aS FOR COLLECTING CHILD SUPPORT FROM THE HUSBAND, i ASSUME HE IS NOT LIVING WITH THE MOTHER, THERE IS SOMETHING KNOWN AS DNA TESTING THAT THE JUDGE WILL USE.
No. If a woman is legally married she cannot begin a claim for child support from another man. If she remains married she has two options: 1. The husbands name will be listed on the birth certificate, or 2. The birth certificate will remain blank and there cannot even be an affidavit of parentage filed. You can still have a paternity test, but there is still no obligation there legally. Now, if one wants to pursue the child support she must leave the section blank and pursue it after the divorce is final. Just know that this does not mean that the obligor would be help responsible from birth. Most likely from the time the claim was filed.
No, she has no way to collect. Child support is determined both by the husbands ability to pay and the woman's need. For example- if your husband makes $40k a year and the woman doesn't work, the court would order the woman to work 40 hrs/week to support her own child and she'd have to furnish proof to the court that she was doing that. An illegal alien doesn't have the ability to do that- they have no social security number and pay no taxes. They can't have a legal job- therefore, she wouldn't have any ground to stand on in a family court.
To claim maintenance from a cheating husband, consult with a lawyer who specializes in family law. They will guide you through the legal process of filing for maintenance, also known as alimony or spousal support. Provide evidence of the cheating, such as text messages, photographs, or witness statements, to strengthen your case and support your claim for ongoing financial support.