If neither parent still live in the original jurisdiction, it can be transferred to the jurisdictions of either parent.
Event should not been scheduled for that day. have you offered, with a notarized letter, to trade time for another period?
noI'm in KCMO
You pay the state where the original child support order was in place. Now if the custodial parent takes up legal residence in another state and opens a child support case there, the new state can help enforce and/or modify the original states order.
It depends on whether or not the custodial parent solicited a court order which would prohibit out of state visitation. If there is no legal prohibition, the 17 year old is free to visit the noncustodial parent out of state. It depends on whether or not the custodial parent solicited a court order which would prohibit out of state visitation. If there is no legal prohibition, the 17 year old is free to visit the noncustodial parent out of state.
Of course, there is no law preventing the individual from moving out of state if he or she is not the primary custodial of the minor child or children. However, a child support order is valid even when an obligated parent changes resident states, as all US states honor and uphold existing support orders.
No.
Only the courts can award guardianship.
Another name for custodial interference could be parental alienation. If the parent is not allowing the child(ren) to see the other parent or has interfered in a way that the children are so angry that they now don't want to see that parent, it is alienation.This is a difficult thing to prove in court and deal with, but any type of custodial interference, where one parent is preventing the other from his or her visitation needs to be taken to the courthouse so a judge can put a stop to it. Children need both parents in their lives, unless there is a proven reason that it is not in the children's best interest to be with that other parent.
The most likely scenario is that the children will live with the other parent as long as that parent was not deemed unfit while the custodial parent was alive. If that parent was denied custody for cause the courts may consider another gaurdian should the non custodial parent still be considered unsuitable.
Diabetes can not be transferred from one person to another.
In Minnesota the custodial parent must receive permission from the court to move out of the state with the children. You must show why you want to move (employment for instance). The non-custodial parent can argue his/her side and the judge will then make a final decision as to whether you can move the children out of the state.
The custodial Parent has the right to claim both children, but in your case if the NC parent is behind they will automatically take it from their tax refund anyway. But as with any agreement if it states the NC gets to claim one then you can only claim one. If there is not an agreement in that way, then the custodial has the right. The arrears owed to the C has no affect on the claiming rights of another.