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Can the court consider medical expenses for a "new" special needs child while determining child support increases for a child from a previous marriage?
In other words, is there any way to have the courts factor in medical expenses for a new child in the second marriage that has huge medical expenses when determining a child support increase for the older child of a first marriage?

2007-06-24 07:08:56 · 5 answers · asked by H Brooks 2 in Politics & Government Law & Ethics

5 answers

Generally speaking, the answer is NO. The court will not pay attention to anything but gross income. The court will not even consider other fines, etc.

2007-06-24 07:15:19 · answer #1 · answered by cyanne2ak 7 · 0 0

well each child is a case of there own so generally one child support case has nothing to do with the other. The only thing you can do is get the special needs child on ssd (disability) which i know for a fact will lower the amount of child support you have to pay for that child because they take the income from the disability as a determining factor.

2007-06-24 08:28:47 · answer #2 · answered by gamafoo 4 · 0 0

infant help is often in accordance with a sequence share of the paying moms and dads wages. the only time a analysis of particular desires might replace the help order is that if the youngster clinically determined is from the companion paying the court ordered help. on the grounds that help is meant purely to help pay the fees of elevating the youngsters from that companion's courting with you, the undeniable fact that a infant from a 2nd marriage has scientific subjects won't have any bearing on the help money for the youngsters from the 1st.

2016-09-28 09:39:17 · answer #3 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Wait. Let's see if i understand. Are you saying you want your ex to pay the expenses of a child you had with another man? Your ex only has to pay for his own kid. Make the father of the second kid pay.

2007-06-24 07:32:07 · answer #4 · answered by Catnip 4 · 0 0

Generally NO. Most important consideration is his income level, length of time your were married and in some cases state laws.

2007-06-24 07:17:37 · answer #5 · answered by Jan Luv 7 · 0 0

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