No, but you can ask for joint custody of them.
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they send about $1300 a year on there kids
The most important thing you can do for your grandchildren as they deal with their parent' divorce is to offer them your time. Depending on the age of the children, and the "messiness" of the divorce, your reaction and advice could take various paths. You can offer overnights at your home, where you focus on building happy family memories. You should never denigrate either parent, but help your grandchildren see the good parts of each parent. You can help them feel that divorce is not such an abnormal event, and can show them examples of people who "survived" their parents' divorce to go on to have good relationships and happy families.
The conflit is that the twin girls what to re-unit their split family, and they have to set a PARENT TRAP to get their family back together again. The girls dress up and act like each other so they can spend time with the opposite parent, convinsing each parent that they are better off with each other.
If it states in the divorce that you can claim 1 of then children each year then you can get the Child Tax Credit and whatever else extra for that child. There may be certain forms you need to fill out or have the other parent fill out to make it happen.
The amount of money that parents spend on baby toys depends on the parent. Some parents are happy to spend a few dollars on each toy, others may go to the extreme and spend hundreds of dollars on toys.
Unless there is a divorce decree or legal case which states specific rights for each parent, the non-custodial non-supporting parent has no legal rights or obligations.
The fact that a parent is seeing someone else before a divorce takes place should have no impact on custody whatsoever, unless the other parent feels that the third party would have a negative impact on the child, or would endanger the child in any way. As each case is judged individually, you need to get a lawyer.
Not unless there is a court order in place addressing visitation. Each parent has as much right to the child as the other parent. If there are abuse or neglect allegations, the parent denying visitation for those reasons and to protect the child need to report those allegations to law enforcment and DHR/DCS immediately and seek an Ex Parte order for custody pending the divorce.
no, the people who divorce each other are the cause of their own divorce. if a parent or both parents want to blame their children or in some cases child for the divorce than they are not taking responsibility for their own actions. divorce is the result of a failed or disappointing marriage. marriages can sometimes be abusive or lacking in mutual affection or desire. therefore, the result at best is divorce and at worst prolonged hardship endured by both partners and the children.
50% from each parent: one allele in each gene, each parent, for a total of two.
Ask for three months worth of reciepts and then do the math to get an average.
Both parents have a cause of action with respect to the child's wrongful death. Each parent is an heir of the child, in equal shares, absent a Will. hm im not 2 sure whys that Why? Because the divorce of a child's parents is not a divorce of a child from a parent. In other words, it does not terminate the parent-child relationship between the child and either parent.