well, if your asking what you could do, then you could probably take her to court for custody of the child.
Yes unless he goes to court to have the support order modified. He is responsible for that child regardless of where the mother is. However, he can get a court order to have the child returned. The mother has no right to leave the country without the father's, and court's, consent. Most countries in the Western World have some sort of reciprocal agreements regarding child custody.
No. Support and visitation are separate issues.
The only way would be to do a personal agreement between the mother & father, ideally having it filed with the court. However, at any time, either parent can utilize Child Support without the other parent's consent. If the Mother spends more time with the child than the Father, she is most likely entitled to child support.
A step father has no legal obligation to support a step child.
Only if approved by the judge.
The father has to have the court's consent to cease paying child support.
If the father have visitation, shared custody or paying child support she will need his and the courts consent.
Yes unless he goes to court to have the support order modified. He is responsible for that child regardless of where the mother is. However, he can get a court order to have the child returned. The mother has no right to leave the country without the father's, and court's, consent. Most countries in the Western World have some sort of reciprocal agreements regarding child custody.
No. If your mother has sole legal custody she can consent to your getting married.
Child support may be waived only with the consent of the court/agency that entered the order. The divorce or support order may contain language about moving the child.
No. Support and visitation are separate issues.
No. The father must consent.No. The father must consent.No. The father must consent.No. The father must consent.
yes if the mother wants to
No
yes, he always should pay child support because she is his child.
No. The father must also consent. The mother cannot "sign over" the child without a court order granting guardianship. The court will require the father be given notice and the opportunity to object.No. The father must also consent. The mother cannot "sign over" the child without a court order granting guardianship. The court will require the father be given notice and the opportunity to object.No. The father must also consent. The mother cannot "sign over" the child without a court order granting guardianship. The court will require the father be given notice and the opportunity to object.No. The father must also consent. The mother cannot "sign over" the child without a court order granting guardianship. The court will require the father be given notice and the opportunity to object.
If the father in subject is the legal and FULL guardian of the child in question, yes as there is no consent needed if the father is the full legal guardian of the child. If, however, it is a joint guardianship between the mother and the father, no, the father will need consent from the mother.