yes he can.
No, you still need his permission. The court order says joint custody and if you take the child out of the country you make that impossible to work and therefor break the court order. That last part just means that wherever you go, you still have custody. Otherwise you could go on vacation abroad and lose custody just because you are out of the country even though you have his written permission to take the child with you. Your ex of course also needs your written permission if taking his child out of state or country.
The short answer is no. Not with any North American joint custody agreement in force, unless specific allowances have been written into the court order. If you can't get permission from the other custodian, you will have to petition the court for permission.
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.
NO!!!!!! The only way they can is by written permission or verbal permission..
No
It depends on how your custody agreement is written.
You cannot change any existing custody arrangement by leaving the country, and you may be required to provide written permission from the other parent when crossing the border. Otherwise you should be able to take your children with you out of the country.
Your lawyer has already given you good advice and unless you have joint custody of children then you have every right to travel anywhere you choose. If you just have custody then you can take any children you have with you, but, if it is joint custody then legally you have to have written permission from the ex. If no children; hop on the plane and have a good time.
Only with permission of both parents. Your marriage to the father with joint custody does not automatically confer parental rights including access to medical records without written permission from both parents in cases of joint custody and may not even apply if the father had full legal and physical custody. This is federal law (HIPAA). If you were to legally adopt the child, those rights were be conferred by virtue of the adoption.
Shriek is a copyrighted image. It is illegal to use this image without written permission from the whomever holds the copyright.Shriek is a copyrighted image. It is illegal to use this image without written permission from the whomever holds the copyright.
Not without consent of the other parent. In Michigan the Parent with custody has to live with in 80 miles of the other parent, or get written consent from the other parent and get that consent approved by the courts to live outside of that 80 miles.
Yes. Only with the written permission of the primary custodial parent can the child be released to someone else.