You may want to try calling the child support office and asking. I know that they have to serve the non custodial parent with papers and then set a court date. Once the court day comes they will set the child support obligation of that parent and give them a certain amount of time to have it paid. It may take up to a month or so IF the non custodial parent even decides to pay. Hope this helps.
In Missouri, after 30 days the support can stop, but in most states, a modification motion needs to be filed with the courts.
If in College, support continues to age 23. Simply notify child support enforcement 30 days in advance. see my profile
That depends on which state.
As the judge has given you a fixed amount to pay as a child support, then the decree will tell , when it should be paid usually it is in the first ten days of the month.
Generally, you have 30 days from service to respond.
45 days
Now would not be too soon. But, if it does not include a hearing, it takes 30-60 days to process, so doing it in advance id advisable.
Indiana has 10 days to extradite. If it is for child support they will pick him or her up and extradite also.
I have a current order in place to pay child support. I am current with my payments each week. (since I am waged attached). My ex had filed for an increase in child support. At that time, he asked for the reminbursement of the braces/orthodontist bill. The master only gave me 90 days to pay for the braces. I will need more time to pay. They will not allow an extension of time. My question is.....if the orthodontist bill isn't paid in full within 10 days....and then they file a motion for contempt. Can I go to jail for the unpaid portion??
Child Support is the key word.Usually paid monthly. So if you take custody for 30 plus days in a row, Pay Yourself
She can't. She might be able to persuade a court to do so. The child support would, of course, cease (and in fact the father might be able to then claim child support from the mother).
To claim a child as a dependent on your taxes, the child must have lived with you and you must have provided support for over 50% of the year. So the mother in this case can claim her grandson on her taxes if she supported the child for at least 183 days out of the year, regardless of whether or not the mother of the child owes back child support.