contact the court
You could pick which ever weekend you want and the opposite day of your parent. For example if your mom has a party on Saturday, then you could have a party on Sunday. Or celebrate your birthday with either parent but pick a different day to celebrate with friends.
That depends on whether the mother will pick her child up ever again. if the mother does not want to pick up her child she may be having a bad day but if the mother never again picks up her child then she has abandoned it. *No, it does not constitute abandonment whether the parents have shared custody or the father only has visitation rights. The legal definition of abandonment is the willful refusal of a parent(s) to support their minor child or children. I If the mother has sole custody she may be at some point jeopardizing that position depending upon the circumstances surrounding her actions. However, leaving a child with the non custodial parent for longer than was agreed on is not abandonment nor an illegal act of any nature.
If the guardian parent gives permission any one can watch the child for a time.
If it is your weekend and the mother will not let you pick up your kids, you should take it back to the court. She is in defiance of a court order. Take it up with the judge. Make it her problem, not yours. When she is in the pokey, she might change her mind.
Yes, custody days are meant to nourish the child/parent bond, not some legal agreement that must be kept. If the parent can not or will not pick up the child then there is nothing legally wrong with it. It becomes an inconvience to pack up the child and everything for nothing, but it is not illegal in any form.
A parent always needs to be at the family fitness center with the child. However, if the child is in a class, the parent can leave and come back to pick up their child afterwards.
If the parent is busy with something else the child can call a friend or relatives to come and pick them up. the child can also call and older sister or brother, older cousin's, uncles or aunt, grandparent's, or friends that are older then then.
Many times, a child can pick which parent they want to live with around the age of 14. It will depend upon both parents and if the judge doesn't think they should move.
Research the Laws for your state. most daycare centers have a pic up list and a do not pick up list this list is for the parent to include names of a person or people who can or cannot pick up a child. that is arecord the daycare should have on record so if the person how is not on the pick up list tried to pick up the child the daycare can tell the person " I am sorry but i cannot release the child to anyone who is not on the pick up list" this can be very helpful if the person decides to call the police. However...... if the other parent who will not be allowed access to pick up the child has joint custody it can be a problem. keep in m ind in the day care center your child is nto the only child there so it shold be established who can and cannot pick up the child as soon as possible. parents can become irate and violent even in a daycare if they are denied a right they believe they have.
Not necessarily. Sometimes a parent's bad behavior is a perfect example of what not to do. Sometimes, a child will inherit the morals instilled in them by one or the other parent. No one can state with any degree of certainty which parent a child will emulate or even if a child will grow up to emulate either parent.
yes?
You can pick your child up from school if you have joint legal custody. However, picking a child up after school is not something that can be left to chance. It should be arranged by agreement between the parents. You should be discussing this issue with the other parent. You should not be thinking of stopping by the school unannounced to pick the child up when there is a usual routine in place. Any time the usual routine will be modified the other parent, the child and the school should be notified in advance.