VOLUNTARY TERMINATION OF CHILD SUPPORT OBLIGATIONS IN NEW YORK

One question which arises frequently in my practice is whether a non-custodial parent can terminate his or her child support obligations by ‘signing away’ his or her ‘rights’ to the child.  How and why a parent gets to the point of seriously considering abandoning their own child is an issue for another day, but the answer to the question is (like almost anything else in New York family law) yes….and no.

1.       Child support is a legal obligation each parent owes directly to a child, and cannot normally be bargained away by the parents.

 

2.      Visitation and custody rights are separate from the duty of a parent to support their children, so surrendering custody or waiving visitation will never directly affect the payment of child support.

 

That being said, there are two (2) ways for a non-custodial parent to voluntarily terminate his or child support payments:

 

1.      Under certain limited circumstances, a judge may approve of a waiver of child support payments for ‘good cause’ and the custodial parent consents to the waiver.

What constitutes ‘good cause’ is a question only the judge assigned to the case can answer, and in my experience each judge has his or her own practices and criteria for deciding whether to approve a waiver request.

 

2.      Adoption of the child by a step parent or other appropriate person. If the parent paying child support consents to the adoption of the child by another adult (usually the new step-parent of the child), the completion of the adoption automatically terminates the child support obligation of the former parent.

 

For more information on child support and other New York divorce and family law subjects or to discuss your own questions or case, please visit my website at www.GabayLawFirm.com

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Comments (2) Read through and enter the discussion with the form at the end
NY Divorce Lawyer - January 31, 2010 11:40 PM

I have yet to be asked such a question. It seems extremely heartless. I would react with professionalism but personally I'm disgusted.

Altoona Lawyer - July 21, 2010 11:22 PM

I would have to agree with above. Fortunately I've never had to field that inquiry, but likewise, professionalism is often the best policy towards these matters.

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