No. Your parents must come to an agreement and change the custody order filed in the family court.
Only with their permission. The custody order have to be changed in the court it was issued.
No, not if your mother has sole physical custody. If there is a joint custody arrangement, you'd still need the cooperation of both parents to make it happen.
They can be held in contempt which is grounds for a change of custody.
single mothers have sole custody even without a court order.
Yes she can. Unwed mothers assume an automatic temporary custody, until the case is decided by the court. The only way to stop her from moving is to file for custody ASAP. Once filed, the state has jurisdiction and she can't move.
YES. Fathers have equal rights to their child just as the mothers do. Mothers should not automatically get sole primary physical custody just because they are women. The family court system in the states is starting to lean towards this. Hopefully it will not take 50 years and umpteen kidnapped children.
No, and it would require a court order.
Yes. Fathers winning is happening more now than before. Now, so it seems, the courts do not lean toward one parent (mothers) over the other parent (fathers). They are finally looking at what is really best for the children.
when or why? Mothers will lose custody if they are found unfit by a family court
Single mothers have sole custody, however I teach fathers how to stop such moves.
It depends on the law where you live and your custody order. If the father has sole legal custody (as opposed to physical custody) he would be able to make that decision without input from the mother. If legal custody is joint or the mother has sole legal custody, no he could not.
yes...if the father has custody of the child or children then a woman has to pay child support just like a man.