No, the child support order should be extinguished at the same time you regain custody. However, you still have to pay any arrears from the time you were obliged to pay.
No, the child support order should be extinguished at the same time you regain custody. However, you still have to pay any arrears from the time you were obliged to pay.
No, the child support order should be extinguished at the same time you regain custody. However, you still have to pay any arrears from the time you were obliged to pay.
No, the child support order should be extinguished at the same time you regain custody. However, you still have to pay any arrears from the time you were obliged to pay.
Yes. You still must pay any arrears you owe.
It depends on the circumstances. If parental rights are terminated to enable adoption, no. If terminated for reasons such as abuse or abandonment, yes.
No, the child support order should be extinguished at the same time you regain custody. However, you still have to pay any arrears from the time you were obliged to pay.
Yes. You still must pay any arrears you owe.
If the mother has the full custody then she can take the child, and she can get the child support. If she doesn't have the full custody, then she is not allowed to take the child without the father consent, but she still can get the child support.
Yes.
Of course. If she has physical custody and your child is still your child then you must pay child support until your child support order has been modified by the court. A new spouse is not respondible for supporting non-biological children.
yes
Look at your child support agreement. Or contact DHR to regain a copy.
You can't, they are still owed. Are you getting child support now? see link
Usually only the fathers
YES, a woman can file for child support and not address custody in the courts, but a man can not request visitation time without the subject of child support being addressed. All single mother have sole custody by default, in 49 states.
Yes, if the child is still a minor or is no longer a minor but is severely handicapped.
Yes, if he has physical custody of your child.
No, if the mother voluntarily gives cutody to someone else, she can no longer be paid child support because she no longer has custody of the child. What happens now is the father can obtain custody because he does have rights or the person who has custody and have legal guardianship can file for assistance in which child support can be included or filed.
The child support goes to the one who have custody. If the grandparent still do and the child has just moved out temporarily, they will still get it. If the child is under 18 and has moved they also still get it unless the child is emancipated. If the child is 18 the child support generally end but it depends on the state laws and/or what you have written in the child support agreement.