No. There must be a court order. They must take the matter before the court and obtain a temporary order to stop the visits.
No. There must be a court order. They must take the matter before the court and obtain a temporary order to stop the visits.
No. There must be a court order. They must take the matter before the court and obtain a temporary order to stop the visits.
No. There must be a court order. They must take the matter before the court and obtain a temporary order to stop the visits.
No. There must be a court order. They must take the matter before the court and obtain a temporary order to stop the visits.
When a non custodial parent is ordered by the court to pay medical coverage, and the custodial parent applies for Medicaid that does not mean that the dependent child's medical coverage can be terminated by the non custodial parent. The ordered insurance becomes the primary insurance, and Medicaid becomes the secondary.
Custodial, as he/she has primary control and influence.
No, depnding on the state, a primary residential and even sole custodial parent can still be ordered to pay if they earn substantially more than the other parent. In some states, household income would also be a factor. see links below
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Primary custody is generally defined as belonging to the parent with whom the child or children reside with the majority of the time. It does not mean that it cannot be a joint custody arrangement as well.
Yes.
The child's custodial parent could be held in contempt of court for failing to abide by court ordered visitation and incur a fine, jail time or both. If the problem becomes chronic, the courts may order a modification in custody, giving the non-custodial parent primary physical custody.
The custodial parent is the parent in which the child resides with. My son lives with me and I am the custodial parent, his dad has visitation rights and pays child support.
If there is no custody order then the law presumes that the primary custodial parent can allow visitation at his or her descretion as long as it is reasonable. Meaning the primary custodial parent can set a time and date for the vistation or refuse visitation if there is a valid reason. The problem with this arrangement is that the visiting parent is not legally obligated to agree or even return the child to the primary custodial parent as the circumstances are strictly voluntary and not court ordered. When parents cannot reach an equitable agreement in such matters, the best choice is to let the court decide or at the very least obtain legal advice on how to handle the situation according to the laws of the state in which the child resides.
Primary parent typically refers to the parent who is primarily responsible for the day-to-day care and upbringing of a child. This could include tasks such as feeding, clothing, supervising, and making decisions about the child's well-being. It is commonly used in the context of child custody arrangements or co-parenting arrangements.
In some states, if the custodial parent moves more than 65 miles "as the crow flies" from the original address at the time of the custody agreement and does not get written permission to do so from the non-custodial parent, the court can (and sometimes will) remove the child and place him/her with the non-custodial parent. At that time the non-custodial parent will be given full custody of the child and even if the first parent moves back, they probably will not regain custody again.
Primary residential