If your mother has parental or custodial rights and responsibilities for you, it is legal to live with anyone your mother says. If someone else is your custodian, then that is the person who has to say where you can live.
If your grandson is under 18, then his mother is his legal guardian and has custody over him. Therefore, if she says no, then the answer is no. If your grandson is over 18, he gets to decide where to live.
Yes, but your mother could file a custody challenge
I thought he lived in Mexico, but my cousin says that it's too dangerous.
A:Probably because he was not really the cousin of Jesus. It is only in Luke's Gospel that we are told they were related, because John's mother Elizabeth was the cousin of Mary, the mother of Jesus. However, Uta Ranke-Heinemann (Putting Away Childish Things) says that Elizabeth was a literary creation by the author of Luke's Gospel. So, on the scholarly view, John and Jesus were not cousins.
Freds mother says in the state pen.
I don't think so. In an interview that he had he says that he is "African-American and Chinese." the Chinese coming from his grandfather on his mother's side.
Vampire Weekend: Cousins I believe.
Probarbly joking
It depends ENTIRELY on what the emancipation law of the state you live in says.
Since Bilbo didn't have any siblings, he didn't have any nephews. Frodo is definitely a relative ... Frodo's mother is Bilbo's first cousin (on his mother's side), and Frodo's father is Bilbo's second cousin (on his father's side), so Frodo is, as the book says, "[Bilbo's] first AND second cousin, once removed either way".
You can live with your grand parents if your alive mom says it is OK or you can live with your grandma and grandpa if your mother is in a very serious injury to the point where she can not take care of you any more
yes, unless court order says otherwise.