If the court orders say so, then yes he does. If they don't, then no he doesn't.
If you don't like what the court orders say, you can get a lawyer and go back to court in an effort to have them changed. However, what you are not allowed to do is decide on your own to do something different than what they say.
This applies even if the father is not himself obeying the terms. You can't, for example, say "his last child support payment was late, so I'm not going to allow him to have visitation until he pays". That's something you could take to court as evidence that the orders should be changed, but again, you are responsible for your part of the deal in either case.
no
no, see links below
no
Yes but it should be a written consent and It also depends how old is "older"/
no.
on the corner:P
TC Campbell from Rongotai College .
I'm not even sure that's legal
I have a 14yr old on Concerta and headaches off and on. He takes Advil a few times a week without a problem. He even has a stash with the school nurse.
They don't. The child has an opinion which the court weighs.
Study hard. Learn how to wash the dishes.
SELL crack dont get Robbed