Whether or not you can make the mother move with her child back to the state where the father lives depends on the original court order, where you live, and what is best for your child. If you don't have a court order that specifies that the mother must remain in a certain state, you'll need to petition the court to make her move back. If the court believes that it is in the best interest of the child to live in the same state as the father, the mother may be ordered to move.
Maternal refers to your mother and paternal to your father. My maternal grandmother lives in Scotland, but my paternal grandmother lives just down the street.
Tennessee would retain jurisdiction, so it can only be done by court order as the state does not require it.see link
Human + Human = mother and father
It is unlikely the father can make the mother return unless there is an existing visitation order in the South Carolina court. The mother must seek the advice of an attorney as soon as possible.It is unlikely the father can make the mother return unless there is an existing visitation order in the South Carolina court. The mother must seek the advice of an attorney as soon as possible.It is unlikely the father can make the mother return unless there is an existing visitation order in the South Carolina court. The mother must seek the advice of an attorney as soon as possible.It is unlikely the father can make the mother return unless there is an existing visitation order in the South Carolina court. The mother must seek the advice of an attorney as soon as possible.
Can a son make you sell the house after his father dies and the mother is still alive?
That is all spelled out in your will.
At 18, people are usually legally considered to be adults and they can do whatever they like as long as it's legal. If the child wants to see the father, the mother can't do much about it. She can make it difficult (if the child lives at home) by getting a restraining order, but that won't stop the child from meeting him somewhere else away from the mother.
If married? NoIf single? The mother can as the father has no rights, but he could still file an injunction.Even if married, frequently the mother will move anyway than make an allegation against the father in the new state. By the time he clears himself, the new state has jurisdiction under the UCJAA.
No. Only the parents support the child, not the step parents. What you make will have no impact on how much he has to pay in child support. Even if you marry this woman that will not change.
The narrator's father passed away and her mother was blind. She returned back to her mother after her father's death so that she could read books to her blind mother.
There is no law that stops the mother from going away with another man and leaving the children with the father. However, these circumstances would make it difficult for the mother to win custody of the children in court.
No