I would take her to Court, as she is not following the Court Order.
The father should file a motion for contempt of a court order as soon as possible and stay on top of it if the mother is interfering with his visitations. If the mother continues to violate the court order for visitations she can lose custody.
If she is not the custodial parent and is not following the visitation order the court cannot force her to visit with the child. However, the father can seek a modification of the visitation order if she continues to fail to show up for her scheduled visits.
The non-compliant parent could be found in contempt of court, fined, jailed or even lose custody. It's not the child who suffers immediate repercussions if the child's refusal is at issue, it is the parent of the child whose responsibility it is to see to it the child complies that suffers. And the child suffers in the long run by not having the involvement of both parents in their life, even though that may not be apparent at the time.
In theory they could be fined or jailed, but such actions tend to backfire in real life, and make the non-compliant parent even less compliant.
Since it is considered a Change of Circumstance, you could lose custody.
Motion to enforce see link below
If there is a court order for child support and he does not follow it the mother have to let the court know and they will make the decision if garnishing his wages or not.
If the judgement is a court order, then the court will order her arrest and have the child removed from her. The court may then impose tougher orders.
You need to return to the court that issued the order and follow its instructions.
She has to follow the court order, and being equipped is interpretive.
She would probably call the police and they will come and take the baby to her. If there is a custody or visitation order it has to be followed. It can only be changed in the court that issued it and parents can not do whatever they want and not follow it without legal consequences.
He/she can lose custody all together. The non-custodial parent needs to file a motion for contempt of a court order. If the custodial parent continues to violate the order they could eventually lose custody.
My husband has stopped me seeing my youngest child aged 6, without giving any reason... We are in court tomorrow re children... He has breeched court order giving me access.. What will happen to him?
No she can not.
"Lying about everything" is a vague term. Refusing to obey court orders can result in loss of custody. If the father can provide the court with enough evidence, the mother's lying can be brought to the court's attention as well. If she is a pathological liar she may have other problems that affect her parenting.
Contempt of court means the party has purposely disobeyed or ignored a court order. If the father disobeyed a court order the mother can file a motion that the court hold him in contempt of the court order.Any existing court orders are in effect until the contempt motion is heard by the court and a new order is issued.Mother is not in contempt of any court order.Contempt of court means the party has purposely disobeyed or ignored a court order. If the father disobeyed a court order the mother can file a motion that the court hold him in contempt of the court order.Any existing court orders are in effect until the contempt motion is heard by the court and a new order is issued.Mother is not in contempt of any court order.Contempt of court means the party has purposely disobeyed or ignored a court order. If the father disobeyed a court order the mother can file a motion that the court hold him in contempt of the court order.Any existing court orders are in effect until the contempt motion is heard by the court and a new order is issued.Mother is not in contempt of any court order.Contempt of court means the party has purposely disobeyed or ignored a court order. If the father disobeyed a court order the mother can file a motion that the court hold him in contempt of the court order.Any existing court orders are in effect until the contempt motion is heard by the court and a new order is issued.Mother is not in contempt of any court order.
If the parents are unmarried and there is no custody order then nothing happens. The father needs to establish his paternity legally and request custody and/or visitations. The court will also issue a child support order. If there is no marriage to establish legal status then the parties must establish legal relationships and custody by court orders.