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You don't. Your parents have good reasons for not wanting you to have a ouija board, and for not wanting one in their house. As their child, you need to trust that they know what is best for you, whether they gave you a reason for not wanting you to have a ouija board or not. While I do hope they did give you a reason for it, since ouija boards are nothing but an invitation for problems, your parents don't owe you an explanation for their decision. But you do owe it to them to respect their decision. Also, since it is their house (your home, but THEIR house) you need to respect their feelings about it and do not bring a ouija board into their home, or anything else they don't want in their house.
Unless someone other than the child's parents has legal custody, I see nothing illegal about this.
You are not going to be arrested. But you can be taken into custody and returned to your parents.
You used the word child. And legally they are a child and the parents decide where they are to live.
In the state of Vermont, the legal age for a child to move out of their parents' house is 18. Parents may have legal obligations to support their child until they reach the age of majority.
yeah because the parents of the child trusted the other parents to take care of their son/daughter
18
Delaware Field House was created in 1966.
If the parents don't own the house, they cannot give it away in their will. Since one child owns the house, then it was not for the parents to give away.
Whether the biological parent are allowed to see their child or not is entirely up to the parents and with that I mean the adoptive parents who now are the guardians of the child.
The child can decide to go to whoevers house they want at any age they want.
The parents are responsible for providing shelter for their minor child; however, the shelter does not necessarily have to be with them (the parents). The parents could certainly have the child live with someone else. The parents may also relinquish their rights to the child completely, and the child would then be the subject of the state. So, it depends on what you consider "kick out".