It depends on what the warrant is for. If the crime committed will expose the child to any harm, you need to contact the court and make them aware of it and ask them to modify/change his visitation rights.
Unless visitation rights for the non-custodial parent were allowed in the divorce paperwork, the custodial parent is completely within their rights to deny the non-custodial parent visitation....however, the non-custodial parent may sue for visitation rights.
No. The non-custodial parent needs to have the visitation rights enforced by the court if necessary.
Neither parent; custodial or non custodial decides visitation. Visitation is determined through the courts, and a judge decides when visitation will occur.
The custodial parent is the parent in which the child resides with. My son lives with me and I am the custodial parent, his dad has visitation rights and pays child support.
If the court has awarded you visitation rights, then you have those rights legally and they cannot be denied by the custodial parent.
Yes. The non-custodial parent must return to court and request a visitation schedule.Yes. The non-custodial parent must return to court and request a visitation schedule.Yes. The non-custodial parent must return to court and request a visitation schedule.Yes. The non-custodial parent must return to court and request a visitation schedule.
If the custodial parent is the one to move, than yes.
By applying to a court.
No. The non-custodial parent has the right to a visitation schedule in order to maintain their relationship with their child even though the parents have ended their marriage. If everyone is on good terms the child's needs can be taken into consideration and the non-custodial parent can consent to reduced visitations. However, once the court has issued a visitation order, and the non-custodial parent wants to take advantage of that schedule, it must be followed until the order has been modified by the court for good reason.No. The non-custodial parent has the right to a visitation schedule in order to maintain their relationship with their child even though the parents have ended their marriage. If everyone is on good terms the child's needs can be taken into consideration and the non-custodial parent can consent to reduced visitations. However, once the court has issued a visitation order, and the non-custodial parent wants to take advantage of that schedule, it must be followed until the order has been modified by the court for good reason.No. The non-custodial parent has the right to a visitation schedule in order to maintain their relationship with their child even though the parents have ended their marriage. If everyone is on good terms the child's needs can be taken into consideration and the non-custodial parent can consent to reduced visitations. However, once the court has issued a visitation order, and the non-custodial parent wants to take advantage of that schedule, it must be followed until the order has been modified by the court for good reason.No. The non-custodial parent has the right to a visitation schedule in order to maintain their relationship with their child even though the parents have ended their marriage. If everyone is on good terms the child's needs can be taken into consideration and the non-custodial parent can consent to reduced visitations. However, once the court has issued a visitation order, and the non-custodial parent wants to take advantage of that schedule, it must be followed until the order has been modified by the court for good reason.
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First thing..in Indiana...most courts view support and visitation as two separate issues. If the support is required through the courts the judge will ask what the visitation is at that time. However, if the non-custodial parent wants to get visitation without the custodial parents agreement, the non-custodial parent will have to file a request with the court and have a judge issue visitation. If there is no visitation order in place by a judge/court, the custodial parent has no legal requirement to permit visitation. I have dealt with this issue personally as well as my sibling, me being a custodial parent my sibling being a non-custodial parent. So I have seen what happens from both sides. Basically if it something isn't ordered by a judge/court, there is no legal requirement to do visitation or support.
Change visitation