No. Only a court can "revoke" visitation rights.
No. Only a court can "revoke" visitation rights.
No. Only a court can "revoke" visitation rights.
No. Only a court can "revoke" visitation rights.
You have the visitation rights that were established in the divorce, and you have no custody rights.
yes biological fathers may seek visitation and custody rights
An unmarried mother has full custody of her child unlessthe father has established his paternity through the court. He can then request custody and visitation rights. A divorced mother must review her divorce decree and all related court orders if she is unsure about the status of the custody of her child.
none except standardized visitation.
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.
Not if there is a visitation order in place and the visit is scheduled. If there is no visitation order in place the father should establish one through the local family court.
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).
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.
The father must file a motion for contempt in the court that has jurisdiction over the case. If there is no court ordered visitation then the father must request a visitation order. This situation must be addressed and resolved through the court system
It depends on what you want to do. If you don't mind about the father rarely visiting, then there are no steps to be taken. It really is a matter on what you want to do about the father rarely visiting his child.
Need to file a petition for visitation. If the father is the biological father he has a right to visitation. There is no court that will not grant visitation to a father. Unless it is proved in court that the father is unfit. There has to be proof of that.
Okay, cool.