No. Godparents are not recognized as having the legal status to petition the court for visitation rights to minor children. That being the case, visitation of minor children would only be possible if the custodial parents voluntarily allowed it.
If married you have equal rights to the child so no visitation needed. If you never been married you have to petition the court for visitation rights.
Siblings dont have any visitation rights. You may be able to petition the court to ask for visitation rights.
Unless there is a court order that limits the father's visitation rights he can take a weekend vacation with his children. He should make certain the mother knows where they are going and where they can be reached and that the children have access to call her if necessary. Generally, divorced parents cannot exert that degree of control over what the other parent does during their visitations.Unless there is a court order that limits the father's visitation rights he can take a weekend vacation with his children. He should make certain the mother knows where they are going and where they can be reached and that the children have access to call her if necessary. Generally, divorced parents cannot exert that degree of control over what the other parent does during their visitations.Unless there is a court order that limits the father's visitation rights he can take a weekend vacation with his children. He should make certain the mother knows where they are going and where they can be reached and that the children have access to call her if necessary. Generally, divorced parents cannot exert that degree of control over what the other parent does during their visitations.Unless there is a court order that limits the father's visitation rights he can take a weekend vacation with his children. He should make certain the mother knows where they are going and where they can be reached and that the children have access to call her if necessary. Generally, divorced parents cannot exert that degree of control over what the other parent does during their visitations.
Visitation rights may also extend beyond parents. Every state has recognized grandparents' visitation rights in some form by amending visitation statutes. Several states limit visitation to cases where the parent is deceased, while others extend the right to cases of divorce, Annulment, or separation. Such laws have come under attack by parents, who argue that giving grandparents visitation rights infringes on their right to raise their children as they see fit. The U.S. Supreme Court, in Troxel v. Granville, 530 U.S. 57, 120 S.Ct. 2054, 147 L.Ed.2d 49 (2000), held that the state of Washington's grandparent visitation statute violated the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, as it interfered with the rights of parents to make decisions concerning the care, custody, and control of their children. The statute permitted "any person" at "any time" to petition a state family court for visitation rights whenever "visitation may serve the best interest of the child." Most states hold that the ongoing fami
Visitation and child support are separate issues. One does not depend on the other. Parents must provide support for their children. There are many variations in visitation rights and those do not generally affect child support obligations.Visitation and child support are separate issues. One does not depend on the other. Parents must provide support for their children. There are many variations in visitation rights and those do not generally affect child support obligations.Visitation and child support are separate issues. One does not depend on the other. Parents must provide support for their children. There are many variations in visitation rights and those do not generally affect child support obligations.Visitation and child support are separate issues. One does not depend on the other. Parents must provide support for their children. There are many variations in visitation rights and those do not generally affect child support obligations.
No. There are no provisions in the laws of Georgia that provide step-parents with visitation rights. A step-parent has no legal standing. They would need to bring suit and take their chances with a judge.
No. Visitation rights for divorced or unmarried parents cannot be dictated by the parents in a manner you described. If a parent feels like there have been a change of circumstances or that a parent is acting against the best interests of the child then the parents need to go back to court and modify the child visitation agreement.
Grandparents can ask for visitation to be granted through the court, but they are not automatically given visitation rights like natural/legal parents are.
None unless the custodial parent agrees to visitation. Stepparents have no rights concerning a non-biological child unless the court grants them guardianship.
You need to add more details such as whether you are married, divorced or never married and whether the father has any custody rights or visitation rights.You need to add more details such as whether you are married, divorced or never married and whether the father has any custody rights or visitation rights.You need to add more details such as whether you are married, divorced or never married and whether the father has any custody rights or visitation rights.You need to add more details such as whether you are married, divorced or never married and whether the father has any custody rights or visitation rights.
In cases where the parents of minor children are unmarried the mother generally retainssole custodial rights until the father files a custodial suit. However, this does not mean the mother of the minor children can arbitrarily deny the father's rights of visitation.