First you need custody of him and the only way to get that is by going to court. If the father then have shared custody or visitation rights both he and the court have to then give you permission to move the child out of state. You also, satisfactory to you both, solve the issue about the child being able to see both parents so the visitation or shared custody order is not broken. So unless his father is willing to give up custody and let you take your son out of state you will have to move without him.
The papers would be legal anywhere. In or out of country.
it depends on your custody papers and what they say... if you have joint custody NO.... if you have residential custody maybe with court allowing it.... if you have sole custody then you would need to inform him but you could leave!!!
my friend lives in new jersey if she has custody of her children can she move out of state and give her children a good life.
The issue of whether the custodial parent can move the children is very tricky. If you are lucky, it was covered in the custody settlement papers. You need to read the agreement to see if it is there. If not, you need to contact your custody lawyer or family court advisor, and see how you can get an amendment to the agreement papers.
That depends on the custody decision of the judge at the court. You might need to review your court papers from when you were granted the divorce. It will also state the custody rules.
Only if the court papers served to both of you indicate this. If the courts have left you with full custody and no visitation rights for the father then you can move anywhere you want. Marcy
Certainly! Now that you live closer there is no reason you can't have the courts revise the custody papers and you have split custody of the child(ren). However, the two of you are adults and it's best (if you trust each other) that you try to settle things between you without having to go to court. If your ex is uncooperative it's time to have those custody papers revised.
no its not unless the custody parent says no until she is 18 they still have the say in where she lives
You should be able to, but every custody agreement is different. It should specifically state in your custody papers from the court if it is allowed. In the absence of an existing agreement that depends on whether the other parent has visitation rights. If so, you cannot remove the child without court approval.
Review your documents that grant sole custody. if you don't have court documents stating sole custody. than more than likely yeah... likely you have joint custody. both parents have joint custody until the court grants sole custody. some people assume because the child lives in there house 95% of the time they have sole custody... un true sole custody is appointed by court. Now assumeing you have sole custody granted by court you may beable to move anywhere you choose. View the laws for your state.
Yes unless your court order stipulates that you cannot move outside a certain mile limit or if you share joint custody. If it is normal custody law permitting the other parent to have visitation it should state who has to pick up and bring back. Unless for certain special circumstances you should be able to move out of state also. LOOk at your papers.
Not with joint physical custody.