Table of Contents
Can you leave your spouse and take my child with me?
If you leave your husband, you two would have to work out a custody arrangement. If you cannot agree on one, it would have to go to a judge who will decide custody. You cannot just take the child and leave. You don’t have the legal right to do that.
Can I leave my husband and take my daughter?
Sometimes women need to leave, and take their children with them, so they can be safe. You know best if you need to get away to stay safe. If you have never been married to the father and there is no court order about custody, then you can move out and take your child with you. It is legal to do that.
Can your wife take your child away from you?
Your wife can withhold the children from you, but withholding children from a parent is not an action that a court will like. It could work against her. If this happens, you will want to immediately file for a custody and visitation timeshare.
Can a parent get supervised visitation with only one child?
Brette’s Answer: Usually if visitation is supervised, it is because of concerns about that parent’s abilities to parent appropriately, and that would apply to all children. However, there could be a situation where there is a specific issue with one child that would lead to supervised visits with only one child.
When does a custodial parent violate a visitation order?
If a court enters an order granting visitation rights to the other parent during a divorce proceeding or otherwise, the custodial parent is violating the order if he or she denies visitation with the child. Failure to pay child support is a common reason a parent may deny visitation with the other parent.
Can a parent withhold visitation from the other parent?
Failure to pay child support is a common reason a parent may deny visitation with the other parent. However, child support and child visitation are two separate matters. The court could sanction a parent who withholds visitation because the other parent is behind in child support payments.
Can a parent’s visitation rights be denied or suspended?
A parent’s visitation rights may be denied or suspended if a judge determines visitation with the parent is not in the child’s best interest. Examples of circumstances that often result in a temporary or permanent denial of visitation rights include:
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