Serve notice to vacate. Give the notice verbally and in a classified ad in your local paper in order to have it public and in writing that the notice was given. Two weeks is a fair amount of time. When eviction day rolls around, set the kid's stuff on the curb and change your locks. If the kid tries to re-enter, that is trespassing.
If the kid is likely to react violently, you ought to let your local law enforcement know what the situation is and when eviction day is.
This is altogether different if you were in a landlord/tenant relationship. If the kid was paying rent and, especially if you had drawn up a rental agreement or contract, things can go badly for you if you don't follow fair housing laws.
18
this kind of sucks, but there is nothing you can do. you're a legal adult in which case child support is not warranted anymore.
No
yes
No. Once a child is legally emancipated, the parent is no longer obligated to pay child support.
If the parent with visitation rights has joint legal custody they have the right to participate in the decision to seek and schedule therapy for the child. A parent with sole legal custody has the right to arrange therapy for the child without the consent of the non-custodial parent. The custodial parent should inform the NC parent of the therapy and involve them if the NC parent is willing to help especially when the NC parent is taking a positive parental interest and role in the child's life. However, the parent with sole legal custody has the sole right to make decisions that involve the child. Divorce is often an adversarial situation and judges often do not award joint legal custody if the parents do not have a congenial relationship. That is to avoid a situation where one parent interferes with the needs of the child because they disagree with the custodial parent's decisions.
Child support is based on a formula of income and percentage of time spent with each parent.
No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.No. If there is a child support order that means a state court has jurisdiction over the child. If the parent who is paying child support has any parental rights of custody or visitation the custodial parent would need the NC parent's consent and court approval to move out of state. The existing orders would have to be modified.
see related question
Only NC has jurisdiction, nor should the child be taken away from the other parent.
The non-custodial parent must return to court and request a modification of the custody order. If they don't do that they will be subject to sanctions for violating a court order. If the NC parent believes the child is living in an unsafe environment it is their responsibility to do something about it. The NC parent should consult an attorney who can assist them in filing the appropriate documents.The non-custodial parent must return to court and request a modification of the custody order. If they don't do that they will be subject to sanctions for violating a court order. If the NC parent believes the child is living in an unsafe environment it is their responsibility to do something about it. The NC parent should consult an attorney who can assist them in filing the appropriate documents.The non-custodial parent must return to court and request a modification of the custody order. If they don't do that they will be subject to sanctions for violating a court order. If the NC parent believes the child is living in an unsafe environment it is their responsibility to do something about it. The NC parent should consult an attorney who can assist them in filing the appropriate documents.The non-custodial parent must return to court and request a modification of the custody order. If they don't do that they will be subject to sanctions for violating a court order. If the NC parent believes the child is living in an unsafe environment it is their responsibility to do something about it. The NC parent should consult an attorney who can assist them in filing the appropriate documents.
The court should be aware, but I would not think so. The child is no longer at home.