Court orders must be followed until they can be modified by returning to court and placing the issue before the judge. A custodial parent who doesn't honor the standing visitation order is in contempt of a court order and the court can order a modification of the custody order if the contempt continues. A child cannot refuse to visit the other parent until they reach eighteen years of age in virtually every state in the United States, including Indiana.
The mother must bring the father's drug use to the attention of the court in order to have him deemed an unfit parent or to curtail his visitation rights so the child is not endangered while in her father's care. The court can stop visits or require supervised visits.
The father does not have his own home for the child on visitation,what to do?Not if he has a court order for visitation.Visitation can be at the mothers house or where the father lives. If he does not have a place to live they can still see each other but not over night visits.
see link
Age 18see links
13
Through the courts; you will have to prove you're not the father.
Yes, nationwide.
Aunts and uncles have no legal right to see a minorchild/nephew if the parents say no.However, you haven't provided any detail such as why the father would need to go to court to stop the visits. Normally, a parent doesn't need a court order to stop their child from visiting relatives. A parent has the right to choose who his child visits with. You can add more details on the discussion page.
Absolutely.
have a father in the home.
The relationship with the child's father should be encouraged. If there are school activities for the child, the father should participate. Unless, the child is in serious endangerment when she is with the father.
No.