no no and NO
14 years of age
Age 18 or at the time of emancipation. If the child is mature enough to make an adult decision, the child is mature enough for all adult responsibilities.see links
He can refuse to see the child; he cannot refuse to support the child.
The child may refuse visits if the child is now an adult or emancipated, or if there is no order for visitation.
I would refuse to sacrifice my child.
No you can......
Not enough information is disclosed about the situation to give a knowledgeable answer. By WHOSE authority have they been given guardianship over your child? WHOSE POA expired? WHO gave it to them? WHAT does their expired POA have to do with your child's custody?
Well not usually but it could happen
They can only follow it, they possess no power to enforce.A Different PerspectiveA school can refuse to release a child to the non-custodial parent. It can refuse to discuss the child with that parent and can refuse entry onto school grounds.
18 unless the parents let the child choose.
18 i think
yes