It means that without the permission of the court, the child cannot leave the geographical location of the court. So if the family court is located in City X and has jurisdiction in City X, the child cannot be removed from City X. If the court is a state court or provincial court the child cannot be moved from the state/province, absent consent of the court.
He does not see the child.
Yes you have to continue to pay child support. If you have an established standing court order for custody/visitation you can file a violation of that order with the court in the jurisdiction the order was established. If you do not have a custody/visitation order I would suggest you get one in your jurisdiction ASAP.
You will need court permission to move the child or to exercise your visitation in an alternate location.
Yes, up and until the time visitation is modified based on the same by court order. The non-custodial parent must file a petition for modification in the court with jurisdiction, wait for a hearing, present their evidence and abide by the judge's ruling. If you otherwise ignore or fail to abide by a court order, you may be found in contempt of court and fined/jailed based on the same. However if the child is physically abusing you, you do have the right to call law enforcement and have the child removed from your home and remanded to a juvenile facility or returned home based on the same (the police will decide which would be appropriate). If you have police reports or other acceptable evidence to back up your claims of abuse, that would be favorable in terms of the judge modifying the visitation order.Answer:No. Even when ordered, visitation does not have to be taken. It is the non custodial's choice to exercise the right to visitation but he/she does not have to legally. Child support is what needs to be done legally. You can not be thrown in jail for not visiting your child. Repeating this though can lead to you loosing the visitation right.
Inquire at the court that has jurisdiction over your case. If a visitation order is being violated file a motion for contempt and follow it through. If there is no visitation order then ask the court to set one up. A child has the right to visit with both her parents.Inquire at the court that has jurisdiction over your case. If a visitation order is being violated file a motion for contempt and follow it through. If there is no visitation order then ask the court to set one up. A child has the right to visit with both her parents.Inquire at the court that has jurisdiction over your case. If a visitation order is being violated file a motion for contempt and follow it through. If there is no visitation order then ask the court to set one up. A child has the right to visit with both her parents.Inquire at the court that has jurisdiction over your case. If a visitation order is being violated file a motion for contempt and follow it through. If there is no visitation order then ask the court to set one up. A child has the right to visit with both her parents.
Go to the court of jurisdiction and file an emergency injunction temporarily stopping visitation rights based on the same. It is your right to know exactly where your child will be staying during visitation and if the location is unsuitable, it is also your right to request visitation modification based on the same including termination of visitation or supervised visitation.
It is his choice as to whether or not he exercises his visitation. He does not have to but the mother does have to make the child available should he decide to exercise his visitation.
You go to court in the jurisdiction where the child legally resides and file for an order of visitation. Just because your wife filed for divorce, custody/visitation/child support are separate issues and may be modified at the request of either parent at any time. Consult an attorney with specialization in family law in the state of jurisdiction for assistance (ideally), or go the the court of jurisdiction for the proper forms, fill them out, pay the filing fee and wait for your court hearing.
No. Not if a family court has jurisdiction over the child and the father has visitation rights. If the parents were never married and there has been no court involvement or paternity established the mother can try to move. However, the father could file an action in court to establish his paternity, visitation rights and prevent the removal of the child from the state.
ABSOLUTELY. However if the grandparent has visitation rights ordered by the court, it must be addressed immediately in the custodial court and the visitation may be modified or removed. Primary concern should always be the well being and safety of the child.
The court can make it illegal for one or both parents to remove a child that is currently part of a custody case to be removed from the jurisdiction of that court system.
Unless there is some sort of concern regarding visitation, such as it needs to be supervised, and the visitation is specific to the location, times, dates etc, then no, this is not a violation of a court order. Since the visitation is happening at daycare, and the child is not being removed from the daycare centre during non-court ordered visitation, there is no legal issue.