No
If by moving the party means a move within the jurisdiction of the court that mandated the custodial order, then yes, you may relocate. If the question refers to relocating outside of said jurisdiction, the primary custodial will need the written notarized permission of the non primary custodial parent and/or permission from the court.
Not without your permission and the permission of the court that assigned custody.
Yes.
Get can't without the permission of the court. File an injunction.
No, not if your mother has sole physical custody. If there is a joint custody arrangement, you'd still need the cooperation of both parents to make it happen.
no,unless the custody agreement states you cant move without notifying the court
You cannot have sole custody without physical custody. If your ex has physical custody, you are the non-custodial parent.
It depends on the law where you live and your custody order. If the father has sole legal custody (as opposed to physical custody) he would be able to make that decision without input from the mother. If legal custody is joint or the mother has sole legal custody, no he could not.
It depends on the custody agreement that is in place. If a minor changes residence without the permission of the parent who has primary custody, then that goes against the court order. If she wants to change residences, a request to the court will usually accomplish this.
No
No
No , not usually.Don't do it without permission or you may get your Dad in trouble.
If the parents don't have Joint Physical Custody, than no, but there is a 50 mile range limit.