Receipts of from the business, or the tax registration number for an individual, plus receipts.
no
Yes
The child's custodial parent could be held in contempt of court for failing to abide by court ordered visitation and incur a fine, jail time or both. If the problem becomes chronic, the courts may order a modification in custody, giving the non-custodial parent primary physical custody.
Event should not been scheduled for that day. have you offered, with a notarized letter, to trade time for another period?
That comes under child support enforcement, they will file a motion to enforce.
File a show cause motion with the court. If they do not show, the judge can find them in contempt of court.
Get a lawyer and have the matter taken before a judge. Even if the custodial parent refuses to respond to your attempts, she (or he) will have no choice in responding to a subpoena.
Contact an attorney regarding a court order.
yes. you can sue an at fault driver if his insurance company refuses to pay your claim. it would not be proper to sue the insurance company.
Nobody goes to jail for failing to pay money that is owed, however, wages can be garnished by court order.
In the US, child support and visitation are two separate things. You are legally responsible for financially supporting your child rather you have visitation or not. If your ex refuses to allow visitation then you need to petition for court-ordered visitation. If you obtain that and the ex still refuses, then s/he is in violation of a court order and there are consequences for that. If, on the other hand, you don't have visitation because the court refuses to allow it (for whatever reason)...well, that's a different issue.
Volumnius refuses to hold his sword