Contact or visit the court for an explanation.
Contact or visit the court for an explanation.
Contact or visit the court for an explanation.
Contact or visit the court for an explanation.
If the court determines that you were served, it will likely enter a default order - you will not like the terms of that order.
After being served child custody papers, the mother typically has a certain amount of time to respond and either agree to the proposed custody arrangement or contest it in court. If the mother contests the custody arrangement, a court hearing will be scheduled where both parties can present their arguments and evidence before a judge makes a final decision on the custody arrangement.
Yes, however is not necessary or advisable unless there is a concern that someone else will claim to be the person and accept the papers.
Is he needing custody of his child, or is this on himself?
You will need to get your attorney who filed your custody papers to give you the access to them online or to print them for you. These papers cannot be accessed without authorization.
No. The prosecution must convince the court that you received actual notice of the initial proceeding.
If he has custody of the children he may be petitioning the court for a child support order against the mother.If he has custody of the children he may be petitioning the court for a child support order against the mother.If he has custody of the children he may be petitioning the court for a child support order against the mother.If he has custody of the children he may be petitioning the court for a child support order against the mother.
The papers would be legal anywhere. In or out of country.
It's not necessarily automatic. You should show the custody order to the venue that issued the child support order.
Yes
That provision can be incorporated into the original custody order or you can file for modification to include it.
it depends on your custody papers and what they say... if you have joint custody NO.... if you have residential custody maybe with court allowing it.... if you have sole custody then you would need to inform him but you could leave!!!