That will depend on the existing court orders. Often the court will allow it without a problem as long as all the parties are in agreement.
not if you have consent from the legal parent.
No. 13 year olds must live with a parent or a court appointed guardian.
yes she can, however, it is always better (when she leaves one parent) to keep a happy and healthy relationship with the parent whom she was living with.
First, the child has no specific right to choose which parent to live with without a court order. As to this issue, the other parent could file an emergency motion for custody on the grounds of abandonment.
my boys want to move in with me and I was told that at the age of 13 that they have the right to choose who they want to live with, now if the parent that you live wants to fight it you can go to court over it, but they can stop it unless it was already ordered by the court that you reside with the parent you live with now, or the parent you live with now shows the court that that the other parent you want to move in with is unfit....like on drugs, no stable home, no steady job, those type of things.......other than that they might as well let you go,because its going to be a waste of time and money going to court if the otherparent you want to live with is outstanding
No. One parent cannot remove a child from the state where they live if the other parent has joint custody or visitation rights. You need court approval. If the non-custodial parent objects the court will hear their objections, evaluate the reasons for the move and render a decision.No. One parent cannot remove a child from the state where they live if the other parent has joint custody or visitation rights. You need court approval. If the non-custodial parent objects the court will hear their objections, evaluate the reasons for the move and render a decision.No. One parent cannot remove a child from the state where they live if the other parent has joint custody or visitation rights. You need court approval. If the non-custodial parent objects the court will hear their objections, evaluate the reasons for the move and render a decision.No. One parent cannot remove a child from the state where they live if the other parent has joint custody or visitation rights. You need court approval. If the non-custodial parent objects the court will hear their objections, evaluate the reasons for the move and render a decision.
The only reason to go to court would be if the parent is transferring legal guardianship or custody to the uncle. Parents send their children to live with relatives for the summer and for other various reasons and there is not an issue. However, if the child is to live with a relative indefinitely, the parent will still make all medical and schooling decisions until custody is transferred by the courts.
Yes.
depends on the other parent and the one your going to live with
What it requires is a court order. Without one, it doesn't matter how "unhappy" the child is, they have to live with their parents.
not without court approval see link
If you don't want to wait for the court it's only possible if the parents allow you to. There are no shortcuts.