A free education.
Child support from their parents.
Adult supervision.
Neither has more right then the other, they are equal in the minds of the law.
It's not right of the adult to do so either but there is a difference. When adult you can do whatever you want because you know what is right and wrong, as a child you are still learning. If you don't learn right from the start you wont know when it's time to stop as an adult. If the adult is also trying to teach the child something and get a bad attitude back it's clear the child is not learning anything and has to be corrected.
Depends what the case is about but if your child is adult you don't really have any parental rights anymore since it's up to the adult "child". If the court case is about him and they have required a closed trial, there is nothing you can do unless you play a role in the case and has to testify or something. If this is what he wants i think you should respect it.
if your saying that someone eles is pressing charges on another grownup cause the grown up just told the child that he or she is ugly or something like that then of course not duuu
Only in the right particular situation of need
He is an adult now so unless he is mentally ill or something you can not get custody over an adult.
A child is, by definition, not a adult An adult is not, by definition, a child Thus there is no such thing as an 'adult child' - your question is therefore impossible to answer.
of course not unless you have a child with him and the child is not an adult and the court allows him the visits
Yes, a juvenile can be locked up in a airport without an adult. The child must have done something wrong and therefore airport security had the right to detain him or her. They are still officers of the law.
It depends on your height and the horse. If your looking for something for a child get a pony. If it's for an adult get a horse and if it's sound make sure to go on a little ride so you make sure it's the right size.
Whether a grown child is estranged from his or her parent does not affect that child's right to inherit from the parent. The grown adult child's right to inherit ("get anything") depends on three things. First, does the adult have a will and is the adult child named in the parent's will? If so, the adult child will inherit, even if he or she is estranged from the parent. Second, if there is no will, then the laws of intestacy determine who gets the property of the dead parent. These laws vary from state to state and are determined by the state of residency of the dead parent. Often, assets of a dead parent are split between a surviving spouce and children under such laws. Lastly, the adult child could inherit ("get something") if he or she is named as a beneficiary on a life insurance policy, brokerage account, bank account or if he or she is a joint tenant or tenant in common on a piece of property or other asset. These assets pass outside of the dead person's estate and that person's will.
on a child age 1-8 or weighing less than 55lbs