A child must be eighteen years of age to be free from visitation orders.
Visitation is important in a child's life, when the parents are split. There is no standard visitation schedule, the schedule is made based of the parental needs.
No. Having sole custody means you are the only person with full parental/legal rights regarding the child. You can make decisions for that child without having to check with anyone. No other person has any legal rights regarding decisions made for the child.Having no rights to a child means exactly what it says. You would have no right whatsoever to affect any decisions made regarding the child. You have no right of visitation or information and no right of inheritance.No. Having sole custody means you are the only person with full parental/legal rights regarding the child. You can make decisions for that child without having to check with anyone. No other person has any legal rights regarding decisions made for the child.Having no rights to a child means exactly what it says. You would have no right whatsoever to affect any decisions made regarding the child. You have no right of visitation or information and no right of inheritance.No. Having sole custody means you are the only person with full parental/legal rights regarding the child. You can make decisions for that child without having to check with anyone. No other person has any legal rights regarding decisions made for the child.Having no rights to a child means exactly what it says. You would have no right whatsoever to affect any decisions made regarding the child. You have no right of visitation or information and no right of inheritance.No. Having sole custody means you are the only person with full parental/legal rights regarding the child. You can make decisions for that child without having to check with anyone. No other person has any legal rights regarding decisions made for the child.Having no rights to a child means exactly what it says. You would have no right whatsoever to affect any decisions made regarding the child. You have no right of visitation or information and no right of inheritance.
If there are court orders regarding child support, visitation etc that the father have you can not take the child out of state or country wihtout his and the courts permission. it would be kidnapping. He have parental rights just like you.
yes.
It is rare that a court removes parental rights due to non-contact. A parent may still have some rights to their child regarding contact, and perhaps even some visitation, regardless of that being exercised or not.
If your parental rights are taken away from you, you lose all contact and say over what that child does. You will not have visitation with the child at all and you cannot make decisions about their school, medical, or religion.
see related question
It all depends on what parental rights she has and that depends on physical and legal custody. She may have visitation rights if she has requested a visitation order from the court and she may also have the right to take part in making decisions for the child if she has joint legal custody.It all depends on what parental rights she has and that depends on physical and legal custody. She may have visitation rights if she has requested a visitation order from the court and she may also have the right to take part in making decisions for the child if she has joint legal custody.It all depends on what parental rights she has and that depends on physical and legal custody. She may have visitation rights if she has requested a visitation order from the court and she may also have the right to take part in making decisions for the child if she has joint legal custody.It all depends on what parental rights she has and that depends on physical and legal custody. She may have visitation rights if she has requested a visitation order from the court and she may also have the right to take part in making decisions for the child if she has joint legal custody.
Yes signing over custody is not the same as giving up your parental rights. You still have the right to visitation for example.
No. Child support, visitation, custody etc are all separate issues. The court will see to what is best for the child and one parent can not deny the parental rights of the other.
It's not the parent who decide whether there will be visitation rights or not, that is the court and a parent is not obligated to petition for one. A parent can not be forced to have a relationship with their child. Apart from paying child support.
That depends on the circumstances of the custody modification. Was it permanent, temporary, was the child adopted, did the parent voluntarily relinquish parental rights or were they terminated by the court? No one here can possibly give you an answer without a lot of detailed information including your legal residence. You should really consult an attorney anyway. He or she would be able to provide an informed and detailed opinion on whether or not you have any rights and if so, what they are.