Parents are responsible for the care of their children until they reach the age of majority. The only way to legally have your child removed from your care is to petition in family court that they be made a ward of the state, or find another adult who is willing to take legal responsibility for them.
if they are out of contral yes,they can.I mean if the child is above 18 then u are a person of ur own and no parents would want to throw out their child except he or she is doing something not good. yes you can
If a parent has a female child, that would be the parent's daughter.
Yes, unless the living parent has a court order not allowing them to be with the child in that case the child would go to the next relative that is willing to take the child. The surviving parent will still have to go to court to have the custody awarded to him/her. After all, the court felt there was a good reason that the full custody award was rendered in the first place.
what would be a good reason to tell the housing people why u want 2 leave home what would be a good reason to tell the housing people why u want 2 leave home
WHY, were you denied joint custody? There must be some reason that a custodial parent would then be denied joint custody.
If a child does not want to attend Sunday School they should simply speak to their parents and explain the reason why. If the child does not have a valid reason, or even if they do, the parent still makes the final decision about their attendance.
Your parent would file for child support from the other parent and you would be living with them.
If I were a parent I would not let my child have a ceel phone until they where 16.
Very difficult, you would need to explain what "ON the hospital" meant, was the parent on the roof for some reason and if so why.
Evergreen would be a nice name for a child either boy or girl, there is no reason why it cannot be used. It is up to a parent what they decide on for their child's name.
No. Your obligation to support your own child takes priority over any subsequent support you offer for another person's child. The court would not decrease your child support obligation for that reason.
18. Until that age, the court order must be followed (and I'm assuming there is a court order for visitation). The child does not have the option of refusing. If there is a *legitimate* reason that the child does not want to have contact with the parent, then the custodial parents needs to go back to court and request that the court order be modified.