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.
my friend lives in new jersey if she has custody of her children can she move out of state and give her children a good life.
Only with permission from the other parent and the court.
The other parent could get sole custody.
There is physical (residential) custody and legal custody. If you share legal custody with the other parent of if they have visitation rights you cannot move the children without the non-custodial parent's consent and/or court approval.There is physical (residential) custody and legal custody. If you share legal custody with the other parent of if they have visitation rights you cannot move the children without the non-custodial parent's consent and/or court approval.There is physical (residential) custody and legal custody. If you share legal custody with the other parent of if they have visitation rights you cannot move the children without the non-custodial parent's consent and/or court approval.There is physical (residential) custody and legal custody. If you share legal custody with the other parent of if they have visitation rights you cannot move the children without the non-custodial parent's consent and/or court approval.
No. You cannot move out of state without notifying the court. The other parent can file an injunction preventing your removing the children from the jurisdiction of the court and if youare not the parent with temporary custody then you could be arrested.
As long as they have the other parents permission i think.
Call the phone number on your court papers. Or call your court representitive. It is very important to be up-front in all of your dealings with the court. In some states you can not leave the county with your child. * If custodial petitions have been filed then the child or children cannot be removed from the jurisdiction of the home state without the permission of the court.
Not without permission of the judge/court where the custodial order was issued.
Assuming the parent has custody, yes.
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.
In the absense of a court order, either parent can move anywhere they want. The other parent can then try to obtain a court order giving them sole custody if they don't like it.
That depends on whether the other parent has visitation rights. If so, you cannot remove the child without the other parent's consent or/and court approval.