No. If the child is a minor and there is a standing visitation order it can only be modified by the court.
No. If the child is a minor and there is a standing visitation order it can only be modified by the court.
No. If the child is a minor and there is a standing visitation order it can only be modified by the court.
No. If the child is a minor and there is a standing visitation order it can only be modified by the court.
No. If the child is a minor and there is a standing visitation order it can only be modified by the court.
No. Visitation rights for divorced or unmarried parents cannot be dictated by the parents in a manner you described. If a parent feels like there have been a change of circumstances or that a parent is acting against the best interests of the child then the parents need to go back to court and modify the child visitation agreement.
Child support and visitation are separate matters. If you do not have court-ordered visitation rights, get them. If you do, go back to court to enforce them - the law is taking an increasingly dim view of custodial parents who deny court-ordered visitation.
When they are 18. if the child do not want to go and the parents agree on this they have to go back to court and modify the visitation order. Until then the parents are responsible for the child going so the court order is followed.
He absolutely cannot. The mother can call the police and they can take the child back. Most likely will he loose visitation rights if he does this or it will be supervised or in the mothers home.
No, not if the child lives where the parents dont agree. However, the friend can file as a foster parent to say that the parents abandoned the child which would either cause the parents to loose custody and/or the minor to become emancipated.. In the longrun if the government ends up supporting the child, then Yes you will end up paying the government back for supporting your child.
Place a lien on his estate
I live in Indiana. In our state. Child support does not pay for visitation. These are 2 separate issues all together. If you have an order or divorce decree with scheduled visitation, and she's not allowing you to see the child, then you need to take her back to court. If no visitation has been ordered, then you need to petition the court for visitation rights.
An unmarried father cannot "choose" to not pay child support. The laws in every state require that a father pay for the support of his child. The mother must bring an action to the appropriate court so that a child support order can be established. Visitation rights are separate and a father can have visitation rights established by the court. Visitation rights are not dependent on paying child support.
It's not in your or your child's best interests to go back to a situation where you have no trust and where history will repeat itself (as far as cheating.) Your child will pick up on the lack of trust and the unhappiness between his/her parents. It's better to make a clean break now rather than having your child grow up as an unwilling third party in his parents' unhealthy relationship. As parents, you and your ex both have an obligation to your child to at least get along amicably as far as contact about your child, visitation, etc. You do have the absolute right to expect your ex to assist in financially supporting your child and to be a responsible, loving parent to his child, if he wants to have visitation rights.
Yes. visitation and child support are two separate issues. If there is a visitation order it has to be followed. The children do not have a choice and it's the parent's obligation to see to that the court order is obeyed. If the court order for visitation is violated you have to report this back to the court by filing a motion for contempt against the custodial parent. You must obey your child support order. If you fail to pay you will be in contempt of court are child support arrears will continue to accumulate. If you have not petitioned for visitation and just left it up to the mother to decide there is nothing you can do but go back to court and request a visitation order.
No as that would be considered child abandonment.
If you are not married and there is no custody or visitation order, she has custody automatically. The father have to prove paternity in court by a DNA test and then petition for custody or visitation. He can then also pay child support.