The law says 18. The old one said 12.
They have to be 18,
When the child is 18.
Where parents have spilt-up/divorced, and children are in the custody of either parent (generally).
you can either be happy about it (i highly doubt it), or you can choose which parent to live with, or live with a different relative
If the funeral is that of the children's other parent or a grandparent, it would be the right thing to do.
Linda Foust has written: 'Crackers!' -- subject(s): Crackers 'The single parent's almanac' -- subject(s): Single parents, Children of single parents, Divorced parents, Parent and child
A parent could be a divorced mom or dad that is single and parents are a mom and a dad. so pretty much parents is plural for parent.
David Royko has written: 'Voices of children of divorce' -- subject(s): Case studies, Children of divorced parents, Divorce, Parent and child
Yes. He is a violent man so her parent's divorced when Christina was veary young
It might depend on your parents decision. I'm not sure.
Sure, just as soon as they turn 18 they never have to see either parent again if they don't want to. Children under 18 are legally treated as a kind of extension of their parents, not necessarily as people in their own right. They could petition the court to modify the custody decree, but this is not likely to be granted unless the non-custodial parent poses an actual threat to them.
Yes, her parents are divorced....