If there is a legal order in place outlining custody and visitation rights for the non-custodial parent, the non-custodial parent may file an action against the custodial parent for contempt of court by failing to abide by that order. If the contempt continues, the judge may order a modification to custody giving it to the non-custodial parent, depending.
If no legal order is in place, now would be a good time to file for one to protect the rights of everyone involved.
can't with the permission of the other parent or the court.
No, the custodial parent must give written a agreement which contains all pertinent information including the date the child/children will leave and the date they will return, how and when the non-custodial parent should stay in contact, and so forth. If a non-custodial parent removes a child/children from ANY place w/o the knowledge and/or permission of the custodial parent they are committing "parental kidnapping" and may be subject to criminal prosecution and other penalties.
That is an issue the court decides at the time other child support issues are addressed.
The most likely scenario is that the children will live with the other parent as long as that parent was not deemed unfit while the custodial parent was alive. If that parent was denied custody for cause the courts may consider another gaurdian should the non custodial parent still be considered unsuitable.
Yes, unless there are other arrangements mentioned in the visitation order. The non-custodial parent shouldn't expect the custodial parent to do the transporting. Taking your own parental responsibilities seriously is character building.
The school system will send out a truancy officer, who will site the child for truancy and the custodial parent for allowing it. Your friend, the noncustodial parent, has recourse in civil court. He/she can take the custodial parent back to court (with the school records) and file to be named managing conservator.
There is physical (residential) custody and legal custody. If you share legal custody with the other parent of if they have visitation rights you cannot move the children without the non-custodial parent's consent and/or court approval.There is physical (residential) custody and legal custody. If you share legal custody with the other parent of if they have visitation rights you cannot move the children without the non-custodial parent's consent and/or court approval.There is physical (residential) custody and legal custody. If you share legal custody with the other parent of if they have visitation rights you cannot move the children without the non-custodial parent's consent and/or court approval.There is physical (residential) custody and legal custody. If you share legal custody with the other parent of if they have visitation rights you cannot move the children without the non-custodial parent's consent and/or court approval.
The custodial parent is the parent in which the child resides with. My son lives with me and I am the custodial parent, his dad has visitation rights and pays child support.
Another name for custodial interference could be parental alienation. If the parent is not allowing the child(ren) to see the other parent or has interfered in a way that the children are so angry that they now don't want to see that parent, it is alienation.This is a difficult thing to prove in court and deal with, but any type of custodial interference, where one parent is preventing the other from his or her visitation needs to be taken to the courthouse so a judge can put a stop to it. Children need both parents in their lives, unless there is a proven reason that it is not in the children's best interest to be with that other parent.
No - the new spouse isn't responsible for other men's children.
In Michigan, the custodial parent can't move the kids more than 100 miles away from the other parent and can't go out of state, even for a vacation, without permission from the court
As long as the NCP - and CP for that matter - abides by the court order, and provides phone access, then the other parent doesn't need the address of every place the child will be visiting. The permanent residence, however, needs to be known.