Once you are pregnant your options are as follows:
The court will only consider what is in the best interest of the child. The father should: work to provide a stable, safe and supportive environment; get financially secure through steady employment; have adequate child care arrangements; etc. Those are the types of factors the court will assess.
The court will only consider what is in the best interest of the child. The father should: work to provide a stable, safe and supportive environment; get financially secure through steady employment; have adequate child care arrangements; etc. Those are the types of factors the court will assess.
The court will only consider what is in the best interest of the child. The father should: work to provide a stable, safe and supportive environment; get financially secure through steady employment; have adequate child care arrangements; etc. Those are the types of factors the court will assess.
The court will only consider what is in the best interest of the child. The father should: work to provide a stable, safe and supportive environment; get financially secure through steady employment; have adequate child care arrangements; etc. Those are the types of factors the court will assess.
The court will only consider what is in the best interest of the child. The father should: work to provide a stable, safe and supportive environment; get financially secure through steady employment; have adequate child care arrangements; etc. Those are the types of factors the court will assess.
The custodial parent is the parent in which the child resides with. My son lives with me and I am the custodial parent, his dad has visitation rights and pays child support.
Not if she is a suitable parent. The child have the right to both parents so shared custody is most likely.
Generally no. A change in custody must be made by a court order.
They recently changed the laws of custody, No one parent has full custody UNLESS they see the other parent as unstable and unfit. If the parent you want to live with has been deemed unfit as a parent then it will have to be taken to court or you can contact certain child organizations to give you more details about how to leave your current home and return to the home of an "unfit parent" However if one parent obtained full custody of the child and the other parent was not deemed unfit as a parent, you may still live with them because of the recent change in custody laws, stating no one parent can have full or primary custody. (in other words, if your mom has full custody and your dad has none ((Also assuming the father hasn't been charged with being a drug addict, alcoholic, or financially unstable etc.)) you may live with the father)
The parent with physical custody receives child support from the other parent. If the parties have shared custody the court will use state guidelines to determine if someone pays child support and how much.
It depends on the exact language in the custody decree, but ordinarily a custodial parent is allowed to place a minor child in the temporary care of any responsible adult.
the judge might sighn for another date or give full custody to the parent that showed up it happened to my mom before when she didnt show up and my dad got full custody of me
If the final divorce decree stipulates joint legal custody, neither parent can take the children out of state without the others permission.
It depends on the state you live in and what the laws are that govern that state. In most cases, the child can not just live with one parent, because the custody belongs to the other parent. That child can wait until the age of 18, to move-in with the other parent or that child can ask the court to move with the other parent.
If you are not the other parent, your actions are limited. If you're the other parent, you will need to file a motion to modify custody. The age of the child and the child's choice will be a consideration, but not a deciding factor. see links
file for sole custody and file for child abuse and you will have possibly sole custody of thew child
No. If the mother has full custody, the father must pay child support to the mother who is supporting the child. Put simply, the non-custodial parent pays child support to the parent who does have custody.If the custodial parent makes significantly more than the non-custodial parent, the court will not order the non-custodial parent to pay the custodial parent. There are formulas for each state and county that the courts follow. There are also circumstances that do not follow typical guidlines.