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In all states they have sole custody, but in Arkansas, it has the clearest expression of this. see link below
Review your documents that grant sole custody. if you don't have court documents stating sole custody. than more than likely yeah... likely you have joint custody. both parents have joint custody until the court grants sole custody. some people assume because the child lives in there house 95% of the time they have sole custody... un true sole custody is appointed by court. Now assumeing you have sole custody granted by court you may beable to move anywhere you choose. View the laws for your state.
A parent with sole custody should be able to move out of the state of New Jersey. This is unless there are explicit rules against it.
Depends on if you have sole custody if not you are breaking the law greatly, don't do it unless you have sole custody or get sole guardians permission or a court grant to have custody for a period of time.
Yes she does.
My husband had this happen to him..... The mother had sole custody, she died in a car accident. Father picked her up and now had sole custody of her. We called around to different attourneys to see if we had to do anything through the courts to get sole custody, and we were told that due to bio mother dying biodad instantly got sole custody. Now if he didn't want sole custody then a near relative could petition the court for sole custody. Hope that helps some.
If you have joint custody, you cannot move out of the state with the child without the other parent's consent. Even if you have sole legal custody you cannot interfere with the other parent's visitation rights by moving. The visitation order must be modified. Absent the consent of the other parent, you need the permission of the court.
Generally, as an unmarried mother you already have sole custody of your child under the law in every state. The father must establish his paternity in court in order to obtain shared custody and visitation rights. Until he does, you have sole legal custody.
Not without the permission of the court.
That would probably require the permission of the court. Sole custody does not always mean freedom to leave the state.
no
Most states lean toward Joint Legal Custody with primary residential custody