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Ex-Wife Won't Allow Father To See His Daughter
Posting this question on behalf of a friend ...
He has a young daughter by his ex-wife. Since they divorced, she's been funny with him on and off about letting him see his daughter which obviously upsets him. She says things such as he doesn't care for her and he puts work first. What's actually happened is that he's been called into work on a Saturday but given ex enough notice that he has to cancel - and she's not happy with that (as it messes up her plans!). Lately she said she can't trust him and he has to prove himself before she'll allow him to see her. She relented and said he could have her this weekend. But now she's decided against that. She says things such as she's the one who has to comfort daughter - but then ex is the one who's causing upset by not allowing him to see her!!
She said the only way he'll get access is by going to Court and "she's spoken to a solicitor and social services and he'll lose". My question is, if he goes to Court, won't he just be granted access rights? He's not a threat or anything like that so I cannot see why it would go any other way!
By the way, he pays maintenance for her but not through the CSA - think they agreed that between themselves.
He has a young daughter by his ex-wife. Since they divorced, she's been funny with him on and off about letting him see his daughter which obviously upsets him. She says things such as he doesn't care for her and he puts work first. What's actually happened is that he's been called into work on a Saturday but given ex enough notice that he has to cancel - and she's not happy with that (as it messes up her plans!). Lately she said she can't trust him and he has to prove himself before she'll allow him to see her. She relented and said he could have her this weekend. But now she's decided against that. She says things such as she's the one who has to comfort daughter - but then ex is the one who's causing upset by not allowing him to see her!!
She said the only way he'll get access is by going to Court and "she's spoken to a solicitor and social services and he'll lose". My question is, if he goes to Court, won't he just be granted access rights? He's not a threat or anything like that so I cannot see why it would go any other way!
By the way, he pays maintenance for her but not through the CSA - think they agreed that between themselves.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.If he is of no threat to the child he would got contact and to be honest he could fight for exactly half-it will most probably be a long, stressful streched out period but in my experience the courts do want the child to have contact with both parents. At 3 they wouldnt really take her wishes as they wud say she is too young and can be influenced. Also i agree he needs to keep a note of all payments he has given her for maintenance- and should really get receipts. If the CSA did get involved she could say she has received nothing and then he would need to prove he has.
99.9% of the time he does honour the arrangements. Just literally on 1 or 2 occasions, he's had to go to work. The payments - it was the ex who specified she didnt want payments going directly into her bank or anything like that. Just cash on the doorstep! At least he knew to get her sign a receipt each time. He's speaking to a solicitor shortly so fingers crossed. Thanks for all your comments.
I'd be very, very suspicious of the request for 'cash on the doorstep' - is the ex wife maybe collecting benefits of any kind based on her income? The ex husband will have a very difficult job proving he has paid anything if he is just handing over cash. Very dodgy and unsatisfactory in my opinion. Things need to get legally ratified - unofficial arrangements are fine until something goes wrong.
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