This is a serious situation and the father should be speaking with the authorities. Start out at the court that has jurisdiction over the case, the court that issued the custody order. The court may assist you in contacting the Mexican Consulate. The Consulate will help enforce the custody order.
This is a serious situation and the father should be speaking with the authorities. Start out at the court that has jurisdiction over the case, the court that issued the custody order. The court may assist you in contacting the Mexican Consulate. The Consulate will help enforce the custody order.
This is a serious situation and the father should be speaking with the authorities. Start out at the court that has jurisdiction over the case, the court that issued the custody order. The court may assist you in contacting the Mexican Consulate. The Consulate will help enforce the custody order.
This is a serious situation and the father should be speaking with the authorities. Start out at the court that has jurisdiction over the case, the court that issued the custody order. The court may assist you in contacting the Mexican Consulate. The Consulate will help enforce the custody order.
This is a serious situation and the father should be speaking with the authorities. Start out at the court that has jurisdiction over the case, the court that issued the custody order. The court may assist you in contacting the Mexican Consulate. The Consulate will help enforce the custody order.
Guardianship, not custody
A father can get custody of the children if it can be demonstrated that that is in the best interest of the child. The father being the primary caregiver would help.
If she has custody of the kids. Legal custody.
yes
The mother assumes automatic custody, unless she is unfit.
You have the visitation rights that were established in the divorce, and you have no custody rights.
Generally, they would go take the father to court and claim for custody (protection/safeguarding) over the children.
The mother, unless proven to be unfit or incpable of caring for the children, and regardless of her marital status, invariably gets custody after a divorce.
The father will find it easier to get the custody of the children , as the wife has left both the husband and as well as the children and is least interested in them.
Yes, if the father is not given custody he will be obligated to keep paying support to whomever the court awards custody or guardianship of the children.
It depends on the custody order already in place. If the mother is violating the custody order, the father can sue her for contempt, and ask that she be appropriately sanctioned. If there is no custody order in place, the father will need to sue the mother for legitimation or divorce, depending on whether they are married, and ask that custody be determined.
If the children live with their mother in Florida and the father never established his paternity legally, a Georgia court would have no jurisdiction over the children. Their mother has sole legal custody. If the father wants to establish his "parental rights" he will need to establish his paternity where the children are domiciled. Once he has established that he is their father he can request joint custody or a visitation order and the mother can request a child support order if the children are to remain in her physical custody.If the parties want to make the change in custody by consent of the parties he should consult with an attorney to determine how that can be accomplished.If the children live with their mother in Florida and the father never established his paternity legally, a Georgia court would have no jurisdiction over the children. Their mother has sole legal custody. If the father wants to establish his "parental rights" he will need to establish his paternity where the children are domiciled. Once he has established that he is their father he can request joint custody or a visitation order and the mother can request a child support order if the children are to remain in her physical custody.If the parties want to make the change in custody by consent of the parties he should consult with an attorney to determine how that can be accomplished.If the children live with their mother in Florida and the father never established his paternity legally, a Georgia court would have no jurisdiction over the children. Their mother has sole legal custody. If the father wants to establish his "parental rights" he will need to establish his paternity where the children are domiciled. Once he has established that he is their father he can request joint custody or a visitation order and the mother can request a child support order if the children are to remain in her physical custody.If the parties want to make the change in custody by consent of the parties he should consult with an attorney to determine how that can be accomplished.If the children live with their mother in Florida and the father never established his paternity legally, a Georgia court would have no jurisdiction over the children. Their mother has sole legal custody. If the father wants to establish his "parental rights" he will need to establish his paternity where the children are domiciled. Once he has established that he is their father he can request joint custody or a visitation order and the mother can request a child support order if the children are to remain in her physical custody.If the parties want to make the change in custody by consent of the parties he should consult with an attorney to determine how that can be accomplished.