Want this question answered?
It depends on who has legal custody.If he has sole legal custody he can make that decision alone. If he has joint legal custody he must include the child's mother in the decision. If the mother has legal custody then he does not have the right to make the decision have the child treated except in an emergency. If you have questions about your parental rights you should speak with an advocate at the court or a private attorney.It depends on who has legal custody.If he has sole legal custody he can make that decision alone. If he has joint legal custody he must include the child's mother in the decision. If the mother has legal custody then he does not have the right to make the decision have the child treated except in an emergency. If you have questions about your parental rights you should speak with an advocate at the court or a private attorney.It depends on who has legal custody.If he has sole legal custody he can make that decision alone. If he has joint legal custody he must include the child's mother in the decision. If the mother has legal custody then he does not have the right to make the decision have the child treated except in an emergency. If you have questions about your parental rights you should speak with an advocate at the court or a private attorney.It depends on who has legal custody.If he has sole legal custody he can make that decision alone. If he has joint legal custody he must include the child's mother in the decision. If the mother has legal custody then he does not have the right to make the decision have the child treated except in an emergency. If you have questions about your parental rights you should speak with an advocate at the court or a private attorney.
You have to be 18 years old.
In every state except Arizona the mother has sole custody of the child and the father has no assumed rights until granted them by the courts.
The mother. The father have to prove paternity by a DNA test and can then get his parental rights and petition for custody, visitation and pay child support.
Though not specifically applicable to the UK, the arguments in this regard are important. See link
The minor can not decide until he is 18.
The child can suggest perhaps, but the final decision rests with the couple and the judge. What usually happens is that couples will have Joint Legal Custody, but one parent or the other will have Primary Custody, leaving the other with Visitation Rights.
How does he have any visitation rights with a custody and child support order?
When married you have equal rights to the child.
Only Arizona has a law granting single fathers any presumed rights to a child born outside wedlock. I teach single fathers how to get their rights. See link below
No. Custody and visitation rights are completely separate from the problems you two have about the lease. That is something you two have to figure out without getting the child involved.
Yes, however the other parent has up to six months to file an injunction to order the return of the child to the jurisdiction of the court pending a custody and access rights decision.