If you are one of the parents of the child in question, then possibly not, though it would depend on the specific court documents in play. If you aren't, then almost certainly yes.
You might want to calm down and try your question again, paying more attention to making it comprehensible. At the very least we'd need to know who you are in relation to the child, and what "mother son's father" is supposed to mean.
Alternatively, you might want to seek the advice of a local attorney; in the event that you do have any rights in the matter, you're going to need one anyway.
What can a father do if the mother of. His children took the kids and moved to another state without permission.
Absolutely
With the permission of the court, and/or the father.
Yes. An unmarried mother has sole custody of her child until the father establishes his paternity legally and then petitions for custodial rights. Once the father has established his parental rights legally, the mother cannot move to another state without his consent and/or the court's permission since the move would mean the father's visitation rights would be affected.Yes. An unmarried mother has sole custody of her child until the father establishes his paternity legally and then petitions for custodial rights. Once the father has established his parental rights legally, the mother cannot move to another state without his consent and/or the court's permission since the move would mean the father's visitation rights would be affected.Yes. An unmarried mother has sole custody of her child until the father establishes his paternity legally and then petitions for custodial rights. Once the father has established his parental rights legally, the mother cannot move to another state without his consent and/or the court's permission since the move would mean the father's visitation rights would be affected.Yes. An unmarried mother has sole custody of her child until the father establishes his paternity legally and then petitions for custodial rights. Once the father has established his parental rights legally, the mother cannot move to another state without his consent and/or the court's permission since the move would mean the father's visitation rights would be affected.
Provided that the mother still lives in the state of current jurisdiction, he will need her permission, or the permission of the courts. Plus, access rights will need to be renegotiated. See below for an example of an order I teach father to use when a mother wants to move away with the kids.
Yes, in some states you do need permission from your daughters father who you were never married to, to take your daughter on vacation to another state.
yes, but you need permission from the father. i wouldn't do that though because it's taking your child's father away form them and that's mean.
If the mother has sole custody of the child, then yes -- the father doesn't need notification. With joint custody, the answer may vary, but in most cases the father must be at least notified. The permission would be from a judge, not the father.
First, the father must be sure that the mother did not receive permission from the family court to move. If the mother did not get permission from the family court, the father can immediately go to his local family court, and file for full custody of his children. Upon hearing that the mother absconded with the children, a judge will issue an Amber Alert for the children. The children will be retrieved from the state the mother took them to and be returned to the father. Usually this results in the mother receiving supervised visitation for quite a while, since she cannot be trusted to follow a court order.
If the father has no legal custody, but is paying child support, he should be at least told. It's his child, too. The parents divorced each other - they did not divorce themselves from the child.
It depends on the details of your situation, such as whether you are married, divorced or never married and whether the father has any custody rights or visitation rights.
If there is joint custody of the child then the father should be told by the mother where she is going with the child and for how long. If the mother wants to live in another State the courts will have to decide visitation rights. Example: The father has may have the child one or two weeks during the summer; possibly Christmas or alternative Christmas', etc. If the father does not have joint custody then the mother can leave with the child to another State without his permission, but to be fair to the child the father should be informed unless the father has a criminal record; drugs, etc., and is an unfit father.