That would be a person whose parental rights have been terminated.
If the other parent is unfit, other relatives have equal chance in court to get custody of the child. Being a god parent does not give you a bigger chance since godparent is not a legal term. It's a religious one.
It is a term used in some states to indicate who retains custody of a minor child. If parents share equal custody they are joint managing conservators. If one parent retains primary custody he or she is the sole conservator and the non-custodial parent is the possessory conservator.
Possessory conservator refers to the person in a custody order who does not have the child/children living with them the majority of the time.
Primary parent may informally refer to the parent with whom the child lives for the majority of the time. Primary physical custody is the legal term for the parent with physical care and supervision of their child for the majority of the time.Child support and custody is an extremely complicated area of law in Nevada which is somewhat behind the times in defining and clarifying these issues. If you need legal advice in that area you need to consult with an attorney who specializes in family law and who has a good reputation.A parent may have sole legal custody or joint legal custody.A parent with sole legal custody can make all the decisions regarding the child such as education, medical treatment and religious training.Joint legal custody means that both parents have a equal right to make decisions regarding the child. Parents with joint legal custody may have different arrangements regarding physical custody. They may share physical custody equally or the child may spend more time with one parent. If a parent has physical custody of the child for the majority of the time they are considered to be the primary parent.Physical custody is a different issue. Nevada recognizes three forms of physical custody:sole physical custody- sole physical care and supervisionprimary physical custody- physical care and supervision for the majority of the timejoint physical custody- parents share physical care and supervision
ANSWER:Physical custody refers to who the child lives with, the child's main care giver. Legal custody determines who can make decisions concerning the child. There are many variations.Examples:One parent can have sole physical custody with both parents sharing legal custody.One parent can have sole physical and legal custody while the other parent has visitation rights.
Custody and its related issues are often the most difficult part of a divorce. When determining custody arrangements, courts always look to the best interest of the child. Determining what the best interests of a child are depends upon many factors, including the: * Child's age, gender, mental and physical health * Health of parents * Lifestyle and other social factors of parents * Love and emotional ties between parent and child * Parents ability to provide food, shelter, clothing and medical care * Quality of schools in a given locale * Child's preference if the child is over 12 * Ability and willingness of the parent to foster a healthy relationship between child and other parent * Stability of the environment
You haven't provided enough detail regarding the reason or the existence of living biological parents and other biological relatives. The following is general information regarding step-parents and legal guardianship.State laws vary widely in the United States but in almost every state the biological parent has sole rights to custody of the child. If a custodial parent dies the surviving natural parent will normally be granted custody of the child. In most states they are under no legal obligation to make any custody arrangements or visitation arrangements with the step-parent. Step-parents are never automatically favored over biological parents. A step-parent is never the "default" parent when the custodial parent dies and there is a living biological parent. Step-parents have no legal claim to step-children. The only time the step-parent will be favored for legal custody is if the step-parent legally adopted the child and the biological parent thereby relinquished their parental rights.Biological parents with sole or joint custody have the legal right to make decisions for their child. Those rights do not extend to the step-parent except on a short term basis when the custodial parent is away or the child is in the sole company of the step-parent. A custodial parent cannot affect legal custody or state law by any provisions in their will.In many states the step-parent has the right to petition for custody but that doesn't mean it will be granted. Most states still follow the 'unfit parent' and 'best interest of the child' rules. The living parent must be deemed unfit or granting custody to the step-parent must be shown to be in the best interest of the child. In this the step-parent is on the same legal ground as a grandparent or any other relative. Best interest of the child (regarding a step-parent) requires some special circumstances such as not separating the child from their half-siblings, or a child who has developed a special bond with a step-parent in the long absence of the biological parent.One way to insure a step-parent will have continued involvement in the child's life after the death of the biological custodial parent is to create a trust with the step-parent as trustee. A parent can express their desires for guardianship or custody in their will, however, their will is not binding on the court as to where the minor child will live or with whom. The bottom line is that any person involved in this type of situation must consult with an attorney who specializes in family law in their particular jurisdiction. Advice from someone about a case in one state may not apply in another state. In fact, it usually doesn't.You can read about the status of a step-parent in every state at the link provided below. Many states give no consideration to step-parents. In contrast, Colorado, Hawaii, Kansas, Illinois and Louisiana give special consideration to a step-parent.You haven't provided enough detail regarding the reason or the existence of living biological parents and other biological relatives. The following is general information regarding step-parents and legal guardianship.State laws vary widely in the United States but in almost every state the biological parent has sole rights to custody of the child. If a custodial parent dies the surviving natural parent will normally be granted custody of the child. In most states they are under no legal obligation to make any custody arrangements or visitation arrangements with the step-parent. Step-parents are never automatically favored over biological parents. A step-parent is never the "default" parent when the custodial parent dies and there is a living biological parent. Step-parents have no legal claim to step-children. The only time the step-parent will be favored for legal custody is if the step-parent legally adopted the child and the biological parent thereby relinquished their parental rights.Biological parents with sole or joint custody have the legal right to make decisions for their child. Those rights do not extend to the step-parent except on a short term basis when the custodial parent is away or the child is in the sole company of the step-parent. A custodial parent cannot affect legal custody or state law by any provisions in their will.In many states the step-parent has the right to petition for custody but that doesn't mean it will be granted. Most states still follow the 'unfit parent' and 'best interest of the child' rules. The living parent must be deemed unfit or granting custody to the step-parent must be shown to be in the best interest of the child. In this the step-parent is on the same legal ground as a grandparent or any other relative. Best interest of the child (regarding a step-parent) requires some special circumstances such as not separating the child from their half-siblings, or a child who has developed a special bond with a step-parent in the long absence of the biological parent.One way to insure a step-parent will have continued involvement in the child's life after the death of the biological custodial parent is to create a trust with the step-parent as trustee. A parent can express their desires for guardianship or custody in their will, however, their will is not binding on the court as to where the minor child will live or with whom. The bottom line is that any person involved in this type of situation must consult with an attorney who specializes in family law in their particular jurisdiction. Advice from someone about a case in one state may not apply in another state. In fact, it usually doesn't.You can read about the status of a step-parent in every state at the link provided below. Many states give no consideration to step-parents. In contrast, Colorado, Hawaii, Kansas, Illinois and Louisiana give special consideration to a step-parent.You haven't provided enough detail regarding the reason or the existence of living biological parents and other biological relatives. The following is general information regarding step-parents and legal guardianship.State laws vary widely in the United States but in almost every state the biological parent has sole rights to custody of the child. If a custodial parent dies the surviving natural parent will normally be granted custody of the child. In most states they are under no legal obligation to make any custody arrangements or visitation arrangements with the step-parent. Step-parents are never automatically favored over biological parents. A step-parent is never the "default" parent when the custodial parent dies and there is a living biological parent. Step-parents have no legal claim to step-children. The only time the step-parent will be favored for legal custody is if the step-parent legally adopted the child and the biological parent thereby relinquished their parental rights.Biological parents with sole or joint custody have the legal right to make decisions for their child. Those rights do not extend to the step-parent except on a short term basis when the custodial parent is away or the child is in the sole company of the step-parent. A custodial parent cannot affect legal custody or state law by any provisions in their will.In many states the step-parent has the right to petition for custody but that doesn't mean it will be granted. Most states still follow the 'unfit parent' and 'best interest of the child' rules. The living parent must be deemed unfit or granting custody to the step-parent must be shown to be in the best interest of the child. In this the step-parent is on the same legal ground as a grandparent or any other relative. Best interest of the child (regarding a step-parent) requires some special circumstances such as not separating the child from their half-siblings, or a child who has developed a special bond with a step-parent in the long absence of the biological parent.One way to insure a step-parent will have continued involvement in the child's life after the death of the biological custodial parent is to create a trust with the step-parent as trustee. A parent can express their desires for guardianship or custody in their will, however, their will is not binding on the court as to where the minor child will live or with whom. The bottom line is that any person involved in this type of situation must consult with an attorney who specializes in family law in their particular jurisdiction. Advice from someone about a case in one state may not apply in another state. In fact, it usually doesn't.You can read about the status of a step-parent in every state at the link provided below. Many states give no consideration to step-parents. In contrast, Colorado, Hawaii, Kansas, Illinois and Louisiana give special consideration to a step-parent.You haven't provided enough detail regarding the reason or the existence of living biological parents and other biological relatives. The following is general information regarding step-parents and legal guardianship.State laws vary widely in the United States but in almost every state the biological parent has sole rights to custody of the child. If a custodial parent dies the surviving natural parent will normally be granted custody of the child. In most states they are under no legal obligation to make any custody arrangements or visitation arrangements with the step-parent. Step-parents are never automatically favored over biological parents. A step-parent is never the "default" parent when the custodial parent dies and there is a living biological parent. Step-parents have no legal claim to step-children. The only time the step-parent will be favored for legal custody is if the step-parent legally adopted the child and the biological parent thereby relinquished their parental rights.Biological parents with sole or joint custody have the legal right to make decisions for their child. Those rights do not extend to the step-parent except on a short term basis when the custodial parent is away or the child is in the sole company of the step-parent. A custodial parent cannot affect legal custody or state law by any provisions in their will.In many states the step-parent has the right to petition for custody but that doesn't mean it will be granted. Most states still follow the 'unfit parent' and 'best interest of the child' rules. The living parent must be deemed unfit or granting custody to the step-parent must be shown to be in the best interest of the child. In this the step-parent is on the same legal ground as a grandparent or any other relative. Best interest of the child (regarding a step-parent) requires some special circumstances such as not separating the child from their half-siblings, or a child who has developed a special bond with a step-parent in the long absence of the biological parent.One way to insure a step-parent will have continued involvement in the child's life after the death of the biological custodial parent is to create a trust with the step-parent as trustee. A parent can express their desires for guardianship or custody in their will, however, their will is not binding on the court as to where the minor child will live or with whom. The bottom line is that any person involved in this type of situation must consult with an attorney who specializes in family law in their particular jurisdiction. Advice from someone about a case in one state may not apply in another state. In fact, it usually doesn't.You can read about the status of a step-parent in every state at the link provided below. Many states give no consideration to step-parents. In contrast, Colorado, Hawaii, Kansas, Illinois and Louisiana give special consideration to a step-parent.
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That is up to a judge.
Pretty much exactly what it says. The most common use of the term refers to a legal request that a court change the visitation or custody terms in a divorce decree.
If you're looking to protect a child's quality of life should a parent die, look into term life insurance with the term expiring when the child grows up.
Unless specifically expressed in a court order, while in the custody/possession of the NCP, they can make the choice for child care, provided appropriate precautions are met for care and safety. This generally applies during long term or extended visitations.