A court order of emancipation must consider all persons with a parental interest in order to be valid.
Emancipation is a matter for the courts and for the person (people) who do have legal custody of you. As your cousin does not have custody, you cousin has nothing to say about whether you can be emancipated.
It does not sound like you know what being emancipated means. Being emancipated is where a minor under the age of 18 no longer wants their parents to be responsible for them and wants to be considered an adult by the state. This would mean that you would have all the rights of an 18 year old at the age of 16. If your mother has custody of you and you have no problem with her then i would see no reason to try to get emancipated.
If the mom has custody. If they have to split custody then no she doesn't.
If you mother has full custody, then yes. If both parents have custody, then no. If you are not emancipated, you cannot own property.
Assuming you are an adult, yes you have a chance.
If mom has legal custody, call the police.
It is illegal.
Only if your father agrees to allow it.
If the father has legal custody the child should live with him. What does the custody agreement say?
Mother files motion for custody
You could still live with your mom and your dad, but you need to leave when your 18 by yourself. But if you don't want to you could stay with your dad... if your mom lets you. That's what I think. Your mom can give consent and you don't have to go through a process, but yes you can emancipate at 15. Or wait it out until you're 18. if there's something serious going on just tell your father, too, and he can bring it up in court and get custody. What you're talking about is not emancipation. It's a change of custody. Dad would have to petition the court for custody.
No. If your father has custody you cannot make that decision until you reach eighteen unless your father consents to a change in the custody order.No. If your father has custody you cannot make that decision until you reach eighteen unless your father consents to a change in the custody order.No. If your father has custody you cannot make that decision until you reach eighteen unless your father consents to a change in the custody order.No. If your father has custody you cannot make that decision until you reach eighteen unless your father consents to a change in the custody order.