Depends on where you live. In most places, no, not without permission from the other parent, the court and/or a custody modification order has been filed and accepted. Some states will allow you to move as long as you don't take the child, but support may be modified due to the increased parenting time of the custodial parent.
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. see link
If you have joint custody, there is one parent that is the custodial parent. A child can move in with you if you are the custodial parent or you can file in court to change your status to the custodial parent. The child should want to live with you as well.
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.
Talk to a lawyer to avoid making an error that could jeopardize your custody.
yes
Read your support order. You can't usually be joint custody and non-custodial at the same time.
Not if the other parent has joint custody and/or visitation rights.
She can move with his and the courts permission.
The other parent could get sole custody.
no
Only with permission from the other parent and the court.