If there is a custody order in place, this would depend on state law. If you were not married, and there's no order in place, than you have no rights to the child, whether in prison or not.
If she relinquished her parental rights, than no. If she relinquished custody, than yes.
Of course you can and you should, especially if there is a court order.
The father has another woman or the mother went with another man and
If there is a custody issue or a restraining order yes. If the hospital believes that it would be in the best interest of the patient yes. If it would cause a breach of peace, yes.
FROM ME [THE ONE ASKING QUESTION]- Also i would like to remind you that my mother lives in louisiana, has no custody right(cause she has signed them over), and is wanted to obtain me. Also my grandmother has custody rights, but would i have the choice to move in with her from my father?
You are going to probably have to hire a lawyer that deals with child custody cases. He will help you find a way to make it look as though you are the more stable parent or gaurdian. This is gonna get messy though. My sister fought this forever with her ex.
see links below
When it comes to teens, a claim of mistreatment is interpretive. You must collect evidence and file an emergency motion for change of custody. To simply not return the child is consider custodial interference. see links
Another fine example of irresponsible behavior by people who use their children as pawns in a divorce. Now you are in the uncomfortable position of either insuring your daughter's vehicle or demanding that the mother keep it in HER name. The daughter cannot legally own a vehicle until she is of age and as such, you are responsible since you have full custody. You would be wise to require that the mother put the vehicle in HER name until the daughter turns 18 and can be responsible for her own vehicle.
Bird nest custody is when parents divorce in hope that they will cause little disruption in their child's everyday life.
The length of time the father has custody does not equate as to the petition. The custodial parent may keep custody, unless their is an agreement or cause to change custody. The length of time a custodial parent has maintain custody may favor continuation of custody, as generally the interests of the child not parent(s) serve to factor determination of custody. This issue aside, a mother parent interest. States differ procedurally but follow similar rules in family court. The interests of the child are not the determining fact automatically. A court may not view 12-year-old to have the maturity to outweigh all other factors in deciding custody. Given the information provided, the burden rests on the non-custodial parent to show reason why custodial rights and interruption of custody may warrant revoking some measure of custody from the custodial parent. due to the factors present, the petition is likely determined by showing cause for why the custodial parent might have their custodial rights revoked. Your first petition may be the decisive conclusion. Get an attorney, if you cannot afford one; start researching what recourses are available at a reduced cost or free. Start with your local legal aid; in absence of abuse or neglect your case involves a larger burden. However, do not fail to act find all the resources you may locate and use the direction of your attorney.
No.