children still have a problem making there own decisions and thats what parents are for, to help they children make the right decisions and to support them financially and mentally hrough out there life
There is no child at 18, that is an adult who makes his own decisions about who to see.
The more a child feels understood, respected and loved by a parent, the more it will want to spent time with him or her.
it is okay for one parent to work a job and for the other to stay at home and take care of a child as long as it makes the child and the parent happy! and if the child is getting the care that is needed and there is being enough money made to support the family.
That parent would be in violation of a court order, so yes, they would be in trouble. The adult makes the decisions, not the child. The child should be put into a car and driven home.
The parent who will have physical custody is the parent who can request child support.The parent who will have physical custody is the parent who can request child support.The parent who will have physical custody is the parent who can request child support.The parent who will have physical custody is the parent who can request child support.
The parent. It was the parent who incurred the expenses to support the child.
There is no legal relationship between you and your domestic partner's child unless and until you have obtained a second-parent adoption that makes you the legal parent of the child.
If a parent has a female child, that would be the parent's daughter.
the job of your parent isn't what makes it good to be their child, being the child of teacher is no better then being the kid of a doctor
The parent.
Primary custody is generally defined as belonging to the parent with whom the child or children reside with the majority of the time. It does not mean that it cannot be a joint custody arrangement as well.
Depending on the placement of the child(ren), it's all a percentage of each parent's income. The parent who makes more will be required to provide a larger percentage of the child's support. It's calculated by the state. They have a form to calculate the amount based on each parent's income and expenses. It's a standard (not usually negotiable) calculation.