It depends. If he has abused you in the past, you can report him and request a restraining order. If not, you have you visit him.
Yes, he does. If brought to the court's attention he may lose his visitation rights altogether.
No his father has that right when he exercises his visitation rights. You have no legal right to that kind of control.No his father has that right when he exercises his visitation rights. You have no legal right to that kind of control.No his father has that right when he exercises his visitation rights. You have no legal right to that kind of control.No his father has that right when he exercises his visitation rights. You have no legal right to that kind of control.
Child support and visitation are two separate issues. The father has the right to request a visitation schedule with his child. Visitation is not dependent on paying child support.
Not automatically, but the father certainly has a right to move for visitation and, ordinarily, it should be granted.
Not sure what state you are in and that may affect the answer but in NJ, you would have the right to refuse to visit or live with your father and to request to be heard by the judge in the case.
Need to file a petition for visitation. If the father is the biological father he has a right to visitation. There is no court that will not grant visitation to a father. Unless it is proved in court that the father is unfit. There has to be proof of that.
No. Unless she has court written visitation papers or a restraining order. The Father needs to take her to court and get the visitation schedule worked out right away.
If a custody order is in place outlining visitation, no, not without being in contempt of court. If no such order is in place, either parent has the right to file for one or modification to an existing order at any time.
You should be able to ask the judge who presided over the divorce, or if there is a caseworker assigned to the family, that would be a better place to start. * A sixteen-year-old does not have that right automatically. Legally, the father still has the right to his visitation time. If a father is emotionally or physically abusive, the mother or an attorney acting on behalf of the child may petition the court for a change in the custoday order. * No, minors are not allowed to make such decisions when there is a visitation order in place. Generally the law does not address issues of alledged emotional or verbal abuse as there is such a wide definition of such behavior. The custodial parent can petition for a change in the visitation rights of the non custodial parent, but rarely will visitation be suspended under the cited circumstances, however, supervised visitation might be an option.
The mother. The father have to petition the court for visitation right and custody.
Absolutley not.
Your child does have the right not to be punished by you for something the father is not doing.