take her court and get visitation rights.
if there is already an order for visitaion make sure you mark it on a calander time and .then take her for contempt and she can loose custody for withholding...otherwise w/ no visitation schedule not alot at this time...unless you were awarded vistiation w/ no specfic times ect then you can still hold her in contempt
You should visit the court immediately and file a motion for contempt. If the custodial parent is violating the visitation order then they are in contempt of a court order. If the violation continues they could lose custody. The court will schedule a hearing on the motion for contempt and the custodial parent will be required to appear and explain their actions.
If you don't already have a visitation order in place then request one from the court as soon as possible.
You can try, but the mother's new spouse isn't responsible for your child.
The parent is supposed to get the child support, not the minor child.
If the mother is receiving any kind of assisstanse, yes, they will open child support case and pursue it.
This depends on a couple of things, the state you are in and what your court order says. If the child is living full time with one parent it is the other parent who pays child support. However, if the child is living with the father for the summer (summer possession) the father will still continue to pay the mother child support even though the child temporarily is living with the father. The reason for this is the mother still has bills that are keeping the house and such for the child to come back too. The only way a father will not have to pay is if the court order says that during summer possession the father does not have to pay child support, but normally in this case the mother would not be obligated to pay child support to the father. However in the end, people should do what is best for the children and not worry about the dollars they receive or don't receive.
he will have to pay back child support if owed unless mother agrees not to or he will have to pay back support if owed to state like if mother was on state aid,but no he will not have to pay for future support
Yes, however he should not as he is setting himself up to be defrauded later of substantial amounts of money by an unscrupulous mother. She could later nail him for tens and even hundreds of thousands of dollars.
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Generally, if the child is still under the age of 18 you will still have to pay child support. However, there are generally provisions allowing you to re-evaluate child support amount and payments. Talk to the mother, and see if you can settle something out of court. However, if you have a legal binding document saying you have to pay, then you still have to pay.
Yes, as it's a separate issue and there are various reasons for being in arrears, such as having paid child support directly to the mother, only for it to be declared a gift and ordered to pay retroactive support.
If the divorce is not pursued the parties should return to the court and terminate the support order. However, if the parties are not married the mother should obtain legal advice before allowing a child support order to be terminated since unmarried relationships are unstable at best and the situation could change at any time.If the divorce is not pursued the parties should return to the court and terminate the support order. However, if the parties are not married the mother should obtain legal advice before allowing a child support order to be terminated since unmarried relationships are unstable at best and the situation could change at any time.If the divorce is not pursued the parties should return to the court and terminate the support order. However, if the parties are not married the mother should obtain legal advice before allowing a child support order to be terminated since unmarried relationships are unstable at best and the situation could change at any time.If the divorce is not pursued the parties should return to the court and terminate the support order. However, if the parties are not married the mother should obtain legal advice before allowing a child support order to be terminated since unmarried relationships are unstable at best and the situation could change at any time.
The mother must petition for child support.The mother must petition for child support.The mother must petition for child support.The mother must petition for child support.
no it goes to the mother.
A husband has no legal obligation to support his mother-in-law.
yes
A mother is supposed to support her child through high school, as long as the child remains in school. Children are not required to support their parents.
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You cannot make your mother-in-law pay you child support. The only person who you can demand child support from is the father of the child.