Decisions regarding when and where a father can see his child are typically made during custody arrangements, which can be established through mutual agreement between parents or through court orders. If parents cannot agree, a family court may intervene to determine custody and visitation rights, often considering the child's best interests. Factors such as the father's relationship with the child, living situation, and any potential risks are taken into account. Ultimately, the legal framework and any existing custody agreements dictate the specifics of visitation.
Yes, because the father has no legal rights to the child. see links
The Father's.
Whoever happens to be completing the form(s) at the time; after the child reaches adulthood, the child decides.
The court decides and no.
First, the child does not have the right to make that decision, so the mother is not obligate to send the money. Only a court can approve the child can live there, than reverse the order. see links below
yes, he always should pay child support because she is his child.
50%, the Father's contribution decides the sex of a child.
yes the aunt could if the little girl had been taken away from her mother from child services and the father has no intrest. but she can not if the father decides to take custidy then no
If the father has joint-custody of the child, not many. You are also at risk of an accusation of child alienation if you refuse.
No, the father has to pay child support for both children. Of course the child that decides to live with him will be treated as he/she were when you were both married, but the child you have will still continue to receive child support by law!
No he does not because he is not the child's parent anymore.
If he is married to the child's mother the decision is theirs to make, but if he is not married to her the mother decides the child's last name.