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<blockquote data-quote="Mattsmom277" data-source="post: 410610" data-attributes="member: 4264"><p>One can surrender their rights, but if the law there is anything rational like here, one can give up their rights but it doesn't pertain to support. difficult child's dad had his rights severed by the family court "except for the purposes of support". There is no way in hades he could hand over rights to someone else, for support purposes or practical purposes, being a non custodial parent. As a custodial parent, one could grant rights to a third party IF the non custodial parent consented and chose to not pursue being the new custodial parent. I don't even need to read the family laws in your area to pretty much gaurantee that no court is going to take a teenagers non custodial and uninvolved fathers rights and hand them to another man that the father presents as an option. It's laughable. Wouldn't happen. Honestly, don't sweat it. Hope they can track him down to make him pay support, he SHOULD be paying support. Don't give your brother more power in your mind than he could possibly have. As for bio dad, what a jerfus to not manning up for his son, sounds like he didn't for his daughter either. He joins rank with my difficult child's dad. Coincidentally he has high privacy settings on his facebook but with recent changes to privacy settings, he must be unaware that right now you can view his current employer listed on his profile without being on his friends list. So just today I learned the company he is working for. difficult child turns 18 in March and support technically ends when he turns 18 or leaves high school (whichever comes first). I know he'll be no longer attending after his birthday so no new ongoing support will go into arrears. But he owes me tens of thousands in back support. So tomorrow morning I'm alerting the enforcement agency to his employer. Here they garnish 60% of someones salary for unpaid support. Sounds like he's going to be having a rough time of it financially for a while. Looks good on him! Hope your ex is forced to take care of his responsabilities.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Mattsmom277, post: 410610, member: 4264"] One can surrender their rights, but if the law there is anything rational like here, one can give up their rights but it doesn't pertain to support. difficult child's dad had his rights severed by the family court "except for the purposes of support". There is no way in hades he could hand over rights to someone else, for support purposes or practical purposes, being a non custodial parent. As a custodial parent, one could grant rights to a third party IF the non custodial parent consented and chose to not pursue being the new custodial parent. I don't even need to read the family laws in your area to pretty much gaurantee that no court is going to take a teenagers non custodial and uninvolved fathers rights and hand them to another man that the father presents as an option. It's laughable. Wouldn't happen. Honestly, don't sweat it. Hope they can track him down to make him pay support, he SHOULD be paying support. Don't give your brother more power in your mind than he could possibly have. As for bio dad, what a jerfus to not manning up for his son, sounds like he didn't for his daughter either. He joins rank with my difficult child's dad. Coincidentally he has high privacy settings on his facebook but with recent changes to privacy settings, he must be unaware that right now you can view his current employer listed on his profile without being on his friends list. So just today I learned the company he is working for. difficult child turns 18 in March and support technically ends when he turns 18 or leaves high school (whichever comes first). I know he'll be no longer attending after his birthday so no new ongoing support will go into arrears. But he owes me tens of thousands in back support. So tomorrow morning I'm alerting the enforcement agency to his employer. Here they garnish 60% of someones salary for unpaid support. Sounds like he's going to be having a rough time of it financially for a while. Looks good on him! Hope your ex is forced to take care of his responsabilities. [/QUOTE]
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