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Then you report her to the court that issued the order. They can not do anything unless they know she broke it.
This depends on the circumstances. Frequently custodial fathers are ordered to pay child support in order for the mother t afford a place to have her children visit her.
Assuming you don't have legal custody of the child, you have whatever visitation rights the court have given you.
Depends on why you can not afford it, if you are not looking for work etc but child support, visitation and custody are separate issues. You still have rights as their father and can petition for visitation or custody. If the two parents can not afford to provide for their children there is welfare. And your wife can not set just any demands, they have to be reasonable and that is something the judge can decide. The judge will see to what is in the best interest of the children and if one of their parents has lost his job for instance it would not be in their best interest to remove him from their lives.
Only the court can deny rights, the mother can not.
If the father has visitation rights and the mother refuses to allow the father those rights, then the father can sue the mother in a civil contempt proceeding. If she doesn't have a good reason for disallowing the visitation then she can be held in contempt of court. There are various remedies including giving the father more visitation to make up for the visitation that was disallowed by the mother or even giving the father custody, but usually, the judge will just order the mother to allow the visits. His paying or not paying child support has nothing to do with whether or not he gets visitation (i.e. he gets visitation regardless of whether or not he is current with child support).
It's not for the mother to decide. He has to petition for visitation in court. She can not go against a court order.
The legal guardian has all rights over the child unless the mother has visitation rights. If so, they must be followed.The legal guardian has all rights over the child unless the mother has visitation rights. If so, they must be followed.The legal guardian has all rights over the child unless the mother has visitation rights. If so, they must be followed.The legal guardian has all rights over the child unless the mother has visitation rights. If so, they must be followed.
yes
No, a stepfather will not have visitation rights to his stepson after a divorce. The mother can always allow the stepfather to visit if she wants.
If there is a relative or someone close to the family supervising it has to be someone both parents agree on. Otherwise the court will choose one.