You haven't provided enough detail. Generally, although children do not generally have property rights, the adults in the situation should make certain the child's property goes with them such as their computer, clothing, electronic devices, bikes, sports equipment, bedroom furniture, etc.
You haven't provided enough detail. Generally, although children do not generally have property rights, the adults in the situation should make certain the child's property goes with them such as their computer, clothing, electronic devices, bikes, sports equipment, bedroom furniture, etc.
You haven't provided enough detail. Generally, although children do not generally have property rights, the adults in the situation should make certain the child's property goes with them such as their computer, clothing, electronic devices, bikes, sports equipment, bedroom furniture, etc.
You haven't provided enough detail. Generally, although children do not generally have property rights, the adults in the situation should make certain the child's property goes with them such as their computer, clothing, electronic devices, bikes, sports equipment, bedroom furniture, etc.
You haven't provided enough detail. Generally, although children do not generally have property rights, the adults in the situation should make certain the child's property goes with them such as their computer, clothing, electronic devices, bikes, sports equipment, bedroom furniture, etc.
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.
Unless visitation rights for the non-custodial parent were allowed in the divorce paperwork, the custodial parent is completely within their rights to deny the non-custodial parent visitation....however, the non-custodial parent may sue for visitation rights.
There is no standard. The policies vary from state to state and from jurisdiction to jurisdiction. There are no universal standards in family law. See the discussion page for some examples from various jurisdictions.
If both of the parents have a joint legal custody arrangement, you have to give the noncustodial parent that information. If you have sole custody of the child, you do not have to share that information with the noncustodial parent.
Absolutely. A minor child cannot be taken legally from the U.S. without a valid passport. The custodial parent or guardian must, under oath, in person agree to allow the child to accompany the non custodial parent before a passport is issued. Likewise, depending upon the custodial order, the custodial parent may need the non custodial parent to present a sworn affidavit that he or she is allowing the minor to obtain a passport and travel outside of the U.S.
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.
SEE LINKS BELOW
Custodial, as he/she has primary control and influence.
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.
Primary residential
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.
Yes.
Perjury
yes..
If the property was inherited by the minor the custodial parent would not be able to sell it without the approval of the ocurt, and then, only if it could be succssfully demonstrated that it was for the SOLE BENEFIT of the minor. Remember this: it was the minor who received the inheritance - NOT the parent.
Not without the permission of the primary residential parent. see links
There is no universal answer to your question. You haven't mentioned the nature of the property. The teen can bring her own property to the non-custodial parent's home. However, there should be an open communication between the teen and her custodial parent. There may be circumstances where an expensive item may be better off staying home if it will be at risk in another environment. The teen should not take any property belonging to the custodial parent without permission. Again, good communication is key.