The child should not be placed in the middle of such an adversarial situation. The father should visit the family court as soon as possible and file a motion for contempt of a court order. If the custodial parent continues to deny visitation they could lose custody.
If the father does not have a court order for visitation then he should petition the family court for a visitation schedule.
The child should not be placed in the middle of such an adversarial situation. The father should visit the family court as soon as possible and file a motion for contempt of a court order. If the custodial parent continues to deny visitation they could lose custody.
If the father does not have a court order for visitation then he should petition the family court for a visitation schedule.
The child should not be placed in the middle of such an adversarial situation. The father should visit the family court as soon as possible and file a motion for contempt of a court order. If the custodial parent continues to deny visitation they could lose custody.
If the father does not have a court order for visitation then he should petition the family court for a visitation schedule.
The child should not be placed in the middle of such an adversarial situation. The father should visit the family court as soon as possible and file a motion for contempt of a court order. If the custodial parent continues to deny visitation they could lose custody.
If the father does not have a court order for visitation then he should petition the family court for a visitation schedule.
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 means just that...the father shall have no access to the child or otherwise be allowed in the child's presence until such an order is modified by the court.
No, it requires a minimum of 51% of the days.
If your child doesn't want to see the father then the courts can not force them.
they are completely separate just because you pay child support has nothing to do with visitation, sorry
If there are court orders regarding child support, visitation etc that the father have you can not take the child out of state or country wihtout his and the courts permission. it would be kidnapping. He have parental rights just like you.
You cannot force her to go and don't make her but what you should do is find out why she does not want to see her as sometimes (heaven forbid) they are being abused in some way or another and of course it could just be rebellion if he is just strict.
A child's biological father can have his name added to a child's birth certificate regardless of whether or not the mother agrees to it. If the biological father voluntarily relinquishes his parental rights and the child is legally adopted by another man, his name can be added to the birth certificate in place of the biological father.
That depends on whether or not the father has been a part of the child(ren)'s lives in the past year. If yes, then as long as the father is meeting all of the child support orders, then the visitation ordered by the courts are required to stay in effect. If there are no visitation or child support orders, the father must go to court to get those. If the father is on the birth certificate and there are no orders, the father has just as much right to the children as the mother. Hope this helps.
Once paternity is established, the non-custodial parent has the right to request visitation, just as the custodial parent has the right to request support.
If you're the father, and the mother is attempting to deny you visitation rights, you need to get a lawyer and take it to court. If you're the mother, and you'd like to deny the father visitation rights, you need to get a lawyer and take it to court. Child support is an entirely separate issue. It has NOTHING to do with visitation or custody rights. You are obligated to abide by the court orders in both cases, but you don't get to stop paying support or deny visitation just because the other parent did the other one of those things.
Child custody laws are different in every state, so it depends on that as well. You could just type in "child custody laws in _state_" and you should have no problem finding it. You would have to review your custody agreement or order if there is one. If the father has visitation rights you cannot remove the child from the state unless he consents and the visitation order is modified by the court.