If the child is emancipated, which generally means self-sufficient, the obligor should be able to get the order for support terminated. Certainly, if the child is still under the obligations of the parents, you can file for custody, if if no emancipation takes place. If the child refuses parental control, than file to have them emancipated, but state laws vary from state to state on this. In New York, child support continues to age 21, regardless of where the child lives. see links below
Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.Yes. The parent is still responsible for providing support until the child support order is modified by the court.
i live in cailf.my child is 18 and she just had ababy do i still have to pay child support do i pay child support for my child who has a baby
Social security
No.
When the child reaches majority/is emancipated, the obligor still owes any support that was ordered and not paid.
This change would not, in itself, relieve the obligor of her/his support obligations.
If the obligor still lives in the US, they retain jurisdiction. see links below
The obligor parent can request the support go directly to the child. see links below
No you do not.
No, they are an adult.
It's likely that the State child support agency has notified the controller to intercept any payments due the delinquent obligor (other than paychecks or pubic assistance).
Not if the obligor parent still lives in the state or origin.
No, jurisdiction has to be transferred, than a modification done. But, if the obligor parent still lives in New York, they retain jurisdiction.see link
Typically the biological parents' responsibility for the child ends with adoption. To be safe, however, the obligor should ask the court to enterer an order terminating child support.
yes the fact that he has a does not make back support go away
The courts will mostly likely consider a child who enters the military as "emancipated," and, therefore, terminate child support. But don't stop paying on your own!