It's not a good idea.
That means you are breaking the law by breaking the court order and you can lose custody if you do not change.
Custody rulings have nothing to do with who files for the divorce first.
priest should not be allowed to marry
Halachic rulings regarding new concepts and questions that arise are made by Rabbis who have learned through the entire Torah and Talmud and all known previous rulings. Once a ruling has been delivered and made public then any ordained Rabbi is entitled to inform the public, i.e. Pasken a Halacha. Even a layman may open a book about Halacha (like the Kitzur Shulchan Aruch) and find out what the relevant Halacha is.
Plessy v. Ferguson
Yes, before marriage all parties must be aware of what they are going into, no lies.On Islamqa.com you can find many answers to questions about Islamic rulings, from actual Fatawas.
the supreme court makes rulings that have been surpassed by the smaller courts. This being decisions such as gay marriage rights and other major decisions.
The Queen was proud of her lifelong virginity, and didn't want to disrupt her ruling by marrying because of how she noticed previous rulings were ruined by marriage.
There are no logical reasons. The United States Supreme Court has ruled that attempting to ban same-sex marriage violates the constitutional rights of same-sex couples. The equivalent authorities in Canada and Mexico have issued similar rulings.
I'm assuming from your question that the stepfather received custody of the children. I would be curious in what state this is in to add to my resource references. I know it can be done in Pennsylvania. As for the child support, a sole custodial father, or stepfather in his case, can still be ordered to pay child support. Though never done in mother custody cases, a father who makes more money than her can be ordered to still pay her. If this is the case, he might consider examining the judge's history in rulings in these cases. If he can gather sufficient evidence of bias ruling, that is grounds for appeal, and possible dismissal of the judge. Family court rulings is public information.
As of July 10, 2014, the Arapahoe County Clerk is refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples despite rulings by 3 judges striking down Colorado's ban on same-sex marriage as unconstitutional.
None so far. As of July 10, 2014, the El Paso County Clerk's office has announced that it will not be issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples despite court rulings that marriage cannot be limited by gender.