If you are not married and there is no custody or visitation order, she has custody automatically. The father have to prove paternity in court by a DNA test and then petition for custody or visitation. He can then also pay child support.
Would have to get permission from the court that settled the custody and visitation in the first place.
Not if you have court ordered visitation rights or shared custody.
Do you have a court order saying you have visitation? Are you the biological father? If so then YES. Go back to court and file for custody.
This question cannot be answered. There are simply too many facts about the situation that are not known.
Yes, the location unless living in your home doesnt take away your obligation to support the child. In fact, if you have no custody or visitation it actually increases your financial responsibility.
No. Child support, visitation, custody etc are all separate issues. The court will see to what is best for the child and one parent can not deny the parental rights of the other.
No as they have no standing in the courts.
lost the child to whom?
I don't believe the mother can do that in any state. There is an order of how things are supposed to go. The mother must ask the courts permission to go and it must be granted. Fathers do have rights.
It depends on whether the case has ever been adjudicated in family court. If paternity has never been established the mother has sole custody. If paternity was established and the father was granted joint custody or visitation rights then those orders stand until they have been modified by the court.It depends on whether the case has ever been adjudicated in family court. If paternity has never been established the mother has sole custody. If paternity was established and the father was granted joint custody or visitation rights then those orders stand until they have been modified by the court.It depends on whether the case has ever been adjudicated in family court. If paternity has never been established the mother has sole custody. If paternity was established and the father was granted joint custody or visitation rights then those orders stand until they have been modified by the court.It depends on whether the case has ever been adjudicated in family court. If paternity has never been established the mother has sole custody. If paternity was established and the father was granted joint custody or visitation rights then those orders stand until they have been modified by the court.
The mother has presume sole custody and control, regardless of the circumstances in all states.
Sole even if he was still shacking up with you