Yes. It does not relieve the parents of their responsibilities. And it does not give her the right to contract.
A child can legally live alone by themselves at age 18 in Georgia. At age 14, a child can choose which parent they would rather live with.
No. A single parent can live with whoever they want as long as that person is not harmful to the child.
YES, IF SHE HAS SOLE CUSTODY OF THE CHILD AND THERE WAS NO AGREEMENT TO STAY IN THAT STATE. OR IF NEITHER PARENT HAS LEGAL CUSTODY EITHER PARENT COULD DO THAT
If the parents are divorced then it is between the parents if the child can go live with the other parent. At age 14 the child can choose witch parent he/she wont's to live with. If that other parent is not willing to let the child go live with that parent then it can be taken to court or just wait till the child is 18 and can go live on it's own.
Depends on your state, but odds are that you cannot. Child support is normally for a custodial parent. If you no longer live with that custodial parent, and are 18, you are an adult, not a child. Thus, you are not technically entitled to child support.
A parent must obey the child support order. A custodial parent may be serving in the military with the child under temporary guardianship. That is no reason to stop paying child support. If the child isn't living with the custodial parent who is receiving child support the matter must be brought before the court.
During raising their child, females have to live alone.
no the child doesn't live w/ custodial parent....it goes to who child lives w/
No, but see the related question.
all tigers live alone except for a mother and hre cubs.
Not on taxes no. The parent the child lives with has the main right to claim the child. But if that parent can't or doesn't want to then the other parent can
No, not as long as the minor child notifies the custodial parent (in this instance the mother) of his or her whereabouts. However, the custodial parent (mother) can petition the court to have the juvenile returned to her custody is the minor child refuses to do so voluntarily.