In order to petition for custody or visitation right by the court you have to establish paternity by a DNA test. Then you can obtain a visitation schedule and also start paying child support.
If the father has joint-custody of the child, not many. You are also at risk of an accusation of child alienation if you refuse.
No he does not because he is not the child's parent anymore.
The right to petition the courts for the right to see and support his child.
No, as the other child, even if a fraternal twin, can have a different father.
The two concepts are not related. Payment of child support is a financial responsibility. It does not depend on whether you see your children or not.
Divorce is something that happens between spouses, not between parents and children. A child's refusal to see the father does not affect the father's child support obligation.
The father is not involved with the child's upbringing at all, and, in fact, leaves the female as soon as he mates with her and does not even see his child.
Well the mother has to allow the father to see the child a little bit and the judge will decide how though!
Only in cases of illegitimate births. Well, the mother can take the child but she can't stop the child from seeing the father. the child deserves to see the father in their life. The father can also take the child back and the parents can share time with the child. Or the child can make his/her own decision to live with the mother or father.
Yes.
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There is no law specifically compelling a father to see his child with any set frequency, and the only laws regarding how often a father who wants to "see his child" can do so are the ones enforcing compliance with whatever the court custody order and/or any applicable restraining order says.