This would depend on the circumstances under which guardianship was transferred to her.
Guardianship, not custody
You have to go to court and seek custody as well as guardianship.
It depends on why you have custody and who arranged it. You should visit the court that issued the custody order or guardianship and inquire there.It depends on why you have custody and who arranged it. You should visit the court that issued the custody order or guardianship and inquire there.It depends on why you have custody and who arranged it. You should visit the court that issued the custody order or guardianship and inquire there.It depends on why you have custody and who arranged it. You should visit the court that issued the custody order or guardianship and inquire there.
Go to the court where guardianship was granted and file a petition to terminate guardianship
Yes, the guardianship can be switvhed back to the mother during the divorse proceedings.
Not without the approval of the courts.
Her mother
that depends on if the mother has custody over her daughter or not. It also depends on how old the daughter is. If she is under the legal age limit, then the mother is still responsible and makes all decisions for her. If the mother does not have full custody over the daughter, then the mother and the father of that child must come to an agreement on the living whereabouts of the daughter. If the mother has legal custody over the daughter and the daughter is not of legal age yet, then yes, the mother can bring the daughter over too.
For 1) are you in custody of your daughter? If you are in full custody you could take her to court for kidnapping is your EX mother in law in custody of your daughter? Do you have joint custody? If your ex mother in law has no custody over your daughter you could take her to court, she is not authorized to take care of your child.
Assuming he did not clarify guardianship of the child, the child goes into the care of his parents, or other close relative, pending action on the part of the mother to get custody. You will need to present your evidence to the court of any abuse. He should clarify his intent in a Will.
AnswerNo. Only a court can grant custody rights or guardianship rights. The inmate cannot assign his parental rights to his own mother.
Yes, if there is not a court order granting custody or guardianship to the relative, the mother has the legal right to have her daughter returned to the family home, by whatever means necessary.