No. You need to establish custody legally through the family court system. There is no such thing as a verbal custody order. You may have a verbal agreement with the other parent but it must be formalized by a court order for you to have any legal rights.
No. You need to establish custody legally through the family court system. There is no such thing as a verbal custody order. You may have a verbal agreement with the other parent but it must be formalized by a court order for you to have any legal rights.
No. You need to establish custody legally through the family court system. There is no such thing as a verbal custody order. You may have a verbal agreement with the other parent but it must be formalized by a court order for you to have any legal rights.
No. You need to establish custody legally through the family court system. There is no such thing as a verbal custody order. You may have a verbal agreement with the other parent but it must be formalized by a court order for you to have any legal rights.
No. You need to establish custody legally through the family court system. There is no such thing as a verbal custody order. You may have a verbal agreement with the other parent but it must be formalized by a court order for you to have any legal rights.
Try to work something out with your ex spouse and see if she will let you have a trial custody of your daughter and see how that goes,if not just take her to court. Then again the ex might just give custody to you without having to go to court. Communticate with her.
It depends on local legislation
if you are not there for the original custody case you can lose custody. The temporary is just until the court decides who gets custody.
yes because your family if she come up with evidence that your home is not safe the child and her house is very safe the yes but it going to be hurt i will pray for you like if it helps
You already have sole custody
If your daughter is married to the son-in-law then no, you should not be insulted. However, if it's your daughter's sister that is invited then yes, you should feel left out.
Take him/her to court. Have someone or a sheriff serve him/her papers
Who was awarded custody of the child? If he wants custody of the child, he will have to take that to court. He legally can't just take the child, unless there is joint custody or some other agreement in place.
You cannot become emancipated from just one parent. And no state will even consider emancipating a 13-year-old. I'm guessing this is not really an emancipation issue, but instead a custody/visitation issue, which is a very different thing.
Well, You could just give her sole custody, wait, and then get her to give you sole custody. I am just guessing
Verbal requests are totally worthless. You need to send a letter certified mail with a return receipt. Until you have a paper trail, you are just spinning your wheels. Since you thought a worthless verbal request was worth something, a lawyer is advisable in your case.
You don't say what court order but if he has been given custody you can just petition the court for it. Speak to your lawyer. If you have a custody and he has taken the child and refuse to return him you can call the police since this would be kidnapping.