Minors can not decide who to live with. That is up to the parents or the judge. In some states the judge can hear what the child wants but is in no way obligated to follow that wish. The children can decide where to live when they are 18.
yes
You can for short vacations but you cannot remove the children permanently without the consent of the other parent and a modification of court orders.
If the children live with their mother in Florida and the father never established his paternity legally, a Georgia court would have no jurisdiction over the children. Their mother has sole legal custody. If the father wants to establish his "parental rights" he will need to establish his paternity where the children are domiciled. Once he has established that he is their father he can request joint custody or a visitation order and the mother can request a child support order if the children are to remain in her physical custody.If the parties want to make the change in custody by consent of the parties he should consult with an attorney to determine how that can be accomplished.If the children live with their mother in Florida and the father never established his paternity legally, a Georgia court would have no jurisdiction over the children. Their mother has sole legal custody. If the father wants to establish his "parental rights" he will need to establish his paternity where the children are domiciled. Once he has established that he is their father he can request joint custody or a visitation order and the mother can request a child support order if the children are to remain in her physical custody.If the parties want to make the change in custody by consent of the parties he should consult with an attorney to determine how that can be accomplished.If the children live with their mother in Florida and the father never established his paternity legally, a Georgia court would have no jurisdiction over the children. Their mother has sole legal custody. If the father wants to establish his "parental rights" he will need to establish his paternity where the children are domiciled. Once he has established that he is their father he can request joint custody or a visitation order and the mother can request a child support order if the children are to remain in her physical custody.If the parties want to make the change in custody by consent of the parties he should consult with an attorney to determine how that can be accomplished.If the children live with their mother in Florida and the father never established his paternity legally, a Georgia court would have no jurisdiction over the children. Their mother has sole legal custody. If the father wants to establish his "parental rights" he will need to establish his paternity where the children are domiciled. Once he has established that he is their father he can request joint custody or a visitation order and the mother can request a child support order if the children are to remain in her physical custody.If the parties want to make the change in custody by consent of the parties he should consult with an attorney to determine how that can be accomplished.
yes you can when you divorce you can do anything you want with your children as long as you have custody of them.
It should be stated in your divorce decree. It depends on the custody arrangements and if you are interfering with any vistitation time of the other parent.
If both parents have custody, then they have an equal say, and you would need permission from both. If only Mom has custody, then you certainly could not move out without her consent. If only Dad has custody, then I suppose you could move in with someone else with just his consent. And Mom could then petition the court and request that she be awarded custody, and her request would very likely be granted.
you will go to jail
Only if that parent has sole custody of you or if your other parent is dead. Otherwise both have to sign.
Technically the mother has the first rights, but there isn't really custody until it is taken to court. To aviod any future misunderstandings I would file full custody of the child.
You need to file a child in need of care motion with family court.
it is indeed fact that, that would be wrong and against the law very much
You should expect your wife to have her own lawyer.