There must be a significant change in circumstances. You can petition the court and request a modification of the custody order. Your arrears will remain and you must pay them.
There must be a significant change in circumstances. You can petition the court and request a modification of the custody order. Your arrears will remain and you must pay them.
There must be a significant change in circumstances. You can petition the court and request a modification of the custody order. Your arrears will remain and you must pay them.
There must be a significant change in circumstances. You can petition the court and request a modification of the custody order. Your arrears will remain and you must pay them.
There must be a significant change in circumstances. You can petition the court and request a modification of the custody order. Your arrears will remain and you must pay them.
If both of the parents have a joint legal custody arrangement, you have to give the noncustodial parent that information. If you have sole custody of the child, you do not have to share that information with the noncustodial parent.
No, the child goes into the care of custodial parents relatives. A motion for emergency change of custody is required. see my profile.
Because you are not married and filed for child support. You have to pay child support to one parent and that has to be to the one with custody. If you both had 50/50 custody it could look differently but you only have visitation.
That is up to the interpretation of the courts and why the arrears exist.
The noncustodial parent would have to call the state's child abuse hotline and report this to them, and then await their instructions on how to gain custody of the child if they should be taken away from the parent.
Yes, they do.
If both of the parents have a joint legal custody arrangement, you have to give the noncustodial parent that information. If you have sole custody of the child, you do not have to share that information with the noncustodial parent.
no
If there's not custody agreement, than there's no custodial parent, so it could be interpreted as interference with Florida Jurisdiction.
Whether or not the noncustodial parent has the right to take custody of the minor children if the custodial parent is incarcerated depends on the specific circumstances and any existing court order or custody agreement. In general, it is recommended for the noncustodial parent to consult with a family law attorney and go through the appropriate legal channels to modify or establish custody arrangements during the custodial parent's incarceration.
Alimony to the non-custodial parent may still be ordered; depends on the circumstances. Child support payments are based on both the needs of the child and the ability of the parent to provide them.
Generally, no.
The custodial parent is the parent with custody/guardianship of the child.
No, the parent whom the child began residing would need to file for custody and also support before the original custodial parent would be obligated. However there would be no guarantee that a court would grant the motion.
Only after demonstrating a pattern of frequent contact
No, the child goes into the care of custodial parents relatives. A motion for emergency change of custody is required. see my profile.
No, that alone is not a reason to terminate custody. The non-custodial parent should be paying child support.