Joint legal or joint physical?
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Not if the other parent has joint custody and/or visitation rights.
Not if the other parent has joint custody and/or visitation rights.
As regards what?
No. One parent cannot remove a child from the state where they live if the other parent has joint custody or visitation rights. You need court approval. If the non-custodial parent objects the court will hear their objections, evaluate the reasons for the move and render a decision.No. One parent cannot remove a child from the state where they live if the other parent has joint custody or visitation rights. You need court approval. If the non-custodial parent objects the court will hear their objections, evaluate the reasons for the move and render a decision.No. One parent cannot remove a child from the state where they live if the other parent has joint custody or visitation rights. You need court approval. If the non-custodial parent objects the court will hear their objections, evaluate the reasons for the move and render a decision.No. One parent cannot remove a child from the state where they live if the other parent has joint custody or visitation rights. You need court approval. If the non-custodial parent objects the court will hear their objections, evaluate the reasons for the move and render a decision.
The ownership of the joint accounts passes directly to the surviving spouse. Every person has the right to determine what will happen to his property upon his death. During his life this parent chose to hold those accounts jointly with his wife. They are now her sole property.
Not without permission from the court with agreement from the joint custodial parent.
Joint Legal: Both parents are suppose to have equal decision making rights, but child resides primarily with one parent while the other pays full child support. Joint Physical Custody: Parents have equal decision making rights and the child resides with each parent an equal amount of time.
No, the fathers rights comes first as a custodial parent.
That depends on whether the non custodial parent has any legal custodial rights and whether those rights are sole or joint. If the non-custodial has sole legal custody, probably. If not, then no, not for a minor child, not without the permission of the parent with sole or joint legal custody. There are different types of custody, physical and legal. Check your custody order before you proceed to get an answer, or contact an attorney.
None unless addressed by the court
joint physical or joint legal?
yes they can, but only if they go through family court with their parents, that way the parents and the judge will decide on visiting rights for either parent if one is the custodial parent, if it is joint custody the parents have equal rights in visitation.