No. If the child is a minor and there is a standing visitation order it can only be modified by the court.No. If the child is a minor and there is a standing visitation order it can only be modified by the court.No. If the child is a minor and there is a standing visitation order it can only be modified by the court.No. If the child is a minor and there is a standing visitation order it can only be modified by the court.
Yes. If there is a visitation order.Yes. If there is a visitation order.Yes. If there is a visitation order.Yes. If there is a visitation order.
How does he have any visitation rights with a custody and child support order?
Yes, unless the visitation order is modified by the court.Yes, unless the visitation order is modified by the court.Yes, unless the visitation order is modified by the court.Yes, unless the visitation order is modified by the court.
A child must be eighteen years of age to be free from visitation orders.
Yes. Child support and visitation are two separate issues. You need to return to court and request a visitation order or file a motion for contempt if the mother is in violation of a visitation order. If you stop paying your child support that will compound your problems.
Paying child support does not automatically give someone the right to visitation. Assuming the other parent has custody and is not willing to voluntarily allow visitation, you'd have to petition for court-order visitation.
Yes. visitation and child support are two separate issues. If there is a visitation order it has to be followed. The children do not have a choice and it's the parent's obligation to see to that the court order is obeyed. If the court order for visitation is violated you have to report this back to the court by filing a motion for contempt against the custodial parent. You must obey your child support order. If you fail to pay you will be in contempt of court are child support arrears will continue to accumulate. If you have not petitioned for visitation and just left it up to the mother to decide there is nothing you can do but go back to court and request a visitation order.
If there is a court order for visitation privileges it must be obeyed. Visitation and child support are treated as two entirely different issues. Just as an obligated parent is in contempt of a court order when they do not pay the mandated child support a custodial parent could be in contempt for not adhering to the visitation terms.
You have to file a motion for contempt in the court that issued the visitation order to have a judge review the situation and modify the visitation order if appropriate. The court cannot force a parent to visit with their child. However, if the non-custodial parent is trying to pick the child up during non-visitation hours or bringing the child back late, the court will impose further orders and likely modify the visitation order if the problem persists. If the child is prepared for visits and the parent fails to show up that is also extremely stressful for both child and custodial parent. If the parent continues to violate the order they can eventually lose their visitation rights.
Yes you have to continue to pay child support. If you have an established standing court order for custody/visitation you can file a violation of that order with the court in the jurisdiction the order was established. If you do not have a custody/visitation order I would suggest you get one in your jurisdiction ASAP.
Not if there is a visitation order in place and the visit is scheduled. If there is no visitation order in place the father should establish one through the local family court.