no
I'm in KCMO
I think so, however you will need the courts permission for the child to visit you and leave their home state.
Event should not been scheduled for that day. have you offered, with a notarized letter, to trade time for another period?
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.
They can if they have parental permission. Without parental permission, no, they cannot.
Maybe, but there are conditions. First, he has to have written permission from the cutodial parent and he has to attach that to another permission with the girlfriends name and sign it. This can be given to the school or day care where his children are located for her to pick up. If the custodial parent states no then she can't.
Just on vacation should be fine but he would need your permission if the court order can not be fulfilled or if he moves with the child.
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.
There is no universal answer to your question. You haven't mentioned the nature of the property. The teen can bring her own property to the non-custodial parent's home. However, there should be an open communication between the teen and her custodial parent. There may be circumstances where an expensive item may be better off staying home if it will be at risk in another environment. The teen should not take any property belonging to the custodial parent without permission. Again, good communication is key.
Until you turn 18, your custodial parent has the right to determine where you live. If you move in with the non-custodial parent without permission from the custodial parent, then they can call the police and have you picked up and brought back home. The non-custodial parent could be charged with 'interference with custody' and possible other charges as well. The non-custodial parent can petition the court for a change of custody. At your age, you would be allowed to state where you would like to live. The judge will take your wishes--along with many other things--into consideration when making the final decision.
No.
In some states, if the custodial parent moves more than 65 miles "as the crow flies" from the original address at the time of the custody agreement and does not get written permission to do so from the non-custodial parent, the court can (and sometimes will) remove the child and place him/her with the non-custodial parent. At that time the non-custodial parent will be given full custody of the child and even if the first parent moves back, they probably will not regain custody again.
Only the courts can award guardianship.