Question:
I have three children and one was recently emancipated, but I am still paying the same amount of child support.
Does this mean I can claim overpayment or do I just eat the payments I already made?
Question:
I have three children and one was recently emancipated, but I am still paying the same amount of child support.
Does this mean I can claim overpayment or do I just eat the payments I already made?
Question:
When I divorced my ex-wife my state's child support laws for termination of support was age 22 if the child continued to attend a higher education institution after high school.
Several years ago child support laws changed and reduced the maximum age to 21.
So can I stop paying child support when my child turns 21 under the new law or do I have to follow my order under the old child support law?
Question:
How old does a child have to be before the set visitation rules and child custody schedules are no longer valid?
Once a child turns 18 and is a legal adult can’t she make her own decisions?
Question:
After my oldest child emancipated, my ex-wife requested a child support review that resulted in my support payments doubling.
The review calculated income based in part on my bonuses received over the past few years even though the bonuses vary widely and my base pay has remained consistent.
Is this fair that my child support should increase when I have less children to support after one was emancipated and my bonuses where used to determine income?
Question:
I am paying child support for my child who is a full-time college student, not living on campus, and works part-time.
I believe he is emancipated because he has a permanent residence away from home, but is not residing at a boarding school or college dormitory.
My ex-wife argues that our child is not self-supporting since he is a student and not working full time.
Whose argument for child support emancipation is correct?