Question:
I would like to file a parenting time contempt motion because my ex-wife denies my visitation every few months.
Is that enough frequency to file a contempt charge? How can I improve my chances to win a contempt motion?
Question:
I would like to file a parenting time contempt motion because my ex-wife denies my visitation every few months.
Is that enough frequency to file a contempt charge? How can I improve my chances to win a contempt motion?
Question:
During our separation period, my wife and I have been sharing child custody.
However, she is now denying me my visitation and has indicated she wants to move out of state with her new boyfriend.
We are awaiting mediation but it has been over a week since I've seen my child. There is no actual court order for visitation at this point so I am unsure what to do and where to go from here.
Do I wait for our mediation appointment and hope she allows me to see my daughter or is there another route I can go?
Question:
My question is about child support laws and dismissing child support arrears if my ex-wife did not accept the payments.
When we divorced, we agreed to modify the court order on our own regarding visitation and paying child support, but there were no court orders entered updating our arrangement.
She eventually denied me access to my son and wouldn't even accept the child support checks I was mailing her for years.
Suddenly, she is suing me for back child support saying I never paid. How can I fight this and regain parenting time with my son since she was the one who took him away and wouldn't accept my payments?
Question:
I am a divorced dad with full child custody of my son, and my ex-wife has a limited visitation schedule over the summers.
Every time my son comes back from parenting time with his mother he is a complete mess, i.e. dirty clothes, not properly fed, verbal skills are diminished, etc.
I don't want my young son's growth impeded by his mother's horrid parenting style.
Do we have reasonable cause to deny her visitation the next time she attempts to exercise her parenting time?
Question:
My wife and I are separated and headed toward divorce, though a divorce has not been filed.
She has moved out and has cut off all contact between me and my children. She returns the letters I send them, refuses to let them talk to me on the phone, and monitors their cell phones so I can't even text them.
Is there anything I can do to communicate with my kids during this transition period?