Once the court establishes visitation rights as part of the divorce decree, both parents are expected to
abide by that decree.
Not exact matches
The Anglo - American idea... means that the party who does not
abide by certain specific
decrees emanating from a judicial body is a contumacious person and may, as a rule, be held in contempt of court, fined and jailed... Now, this very concept of contempt simply does not belong to the world of ideas of a Latin lawyer.
215, 795 S.E. 2d 485 (2017), where the Virginia Court of Appeals upheld the Circuit Court ruling the attorney ex-husband was in contempt of court for failing to
abide by the terms of the final
decree.
I'm not an expert, but here's my understanding: so long as you have a valid divorce
decree, and both parties
abide by the terms of the divorce, no problem should arise.
Part of every auto insurance
decree is to
abide by coverage contain as follows; property damage coverage, bodily injury coverage, liability coverage, medical payment coverage, personal injury protection, uninsured motorist coverage, and collision coverage.
In other words, you've agreed to
abide by the court or the panel's assessment and
decree, so — unless you want to go through the courts again — you're stuck with it.