You can take her to court. People do not have the option of ignoring a court order. A legal custody agreement once approved by the court becomes a court order. You can file a motion for contempt of court. If she continues to violate the custody order she could lose custody. You need to act ASAP.
You can take her to court. People do not have the option of ignoring a court order. A legal custody agreement once approved by the court becomes a court order. You can file a motion for contempt of court. If she continues to violate the custody order she could lose custody. You need to act ASAP.
You can take her to court. People do not have the option of ignoring a court order. A legal custody agreement once approved by the court becomes a court order. You can file a motion for contempt of court. If she continues to violate the custody order she could lose custody. You need to act ASAP.
You can take her to court. People do not have the option of ignoring a court order. A legal custody agreement once approved by the court becomes a court order. You can file a motion for contempt of court. If she continues to violate the custody order she could lose custody. You need to act ASAP.
You return to court and file a motion for contempt of a court order and let the court take care of it.
You return to court and file a motion for contempt of a court order and let the court take care of it.
You return to court and file a motion for contempt of a court order and let the court take care of it.
You return to court and file a motion for contempt of a court order and let the court take care of it.
It depends on what is happening as a result. Is the ex simply not visiting the child? Has the ex taken the child and refusing to return him/her? Is the ex denying your right to visitation?
How it is handled depends on the circumstances, but generally if one parent isn't abiding by a court order, the other parent has a right to file an action against them in the court of jurisdiction for contempt of court. If the contempt of court continues, the violating parent may be fined, jailed or custody modified to favor the compliant parent.
You can take her to court. People do not have the option of ignoring a court order. A legal custody agreement once approved by the court becomes a court order. You can file a motion for contempt of court. If she continues to violate the custody order she could lose custody. You need to act ASAP.
You should return to the court that has jurisdiction and file a motion for contempt.
You return to court and file a motion for contempt of a court order and let the court take care of it.
If it is a condition of your custody agreement, yes. If not, no.
Yes, depending on the circumstances of the need for the ex parte order.
It depends on how your custody agreement is written.
You still have to pay child support, it's for your son and not his dad, but if he is breaking your agreement you have to go to the police or court.
Yes, but she's still required to honor the custody agreement.
You cannot have sole custody without physical custody. If your ex has physical custody, you are the non-custodial parent.
Only if it states it in a custody agreement. Every agreement has a section for that.
The court orders must be followed. If the parties have come to a mutual agreement they should file it as a modification to the visitation and custody orders.
no
One can go to court and sue for interference of time with child and breaking custody agreement.
That means you are breaking the law by breaking the court order and you can lose custody if you do not change.
The custody agreement between Kidman and ex-husband, Tom Cruise, was never publicly released, their adopted children stayed in L.A. with Cruise when Kidman returned to Australia.