Whether you have sole legal and physical custody or the other parent has any parental rights.
Whether you have sole legal and physical custody or the other parent has any parental rights.
Whether you have sole legal and physical custody or the other parent has any parental rights.
Whether you have sole legal and physical custody or the other parent has any parental rights.
Whether you have sole legal and physical custody or the other parent has any parental rights.
The parents remain responsible for the child. They also determine where the child lives.
Yes, if you have parental permission. They are still responsible for the child. But they can determine where the child lives.
I believe the only way to determine if your child has achondroplasia before birth is by having an ultrasound. They would measure the bones to determine if the child is growing accordingly to age, however it has to be done after the 4th or 5th month of pregnancy, because that's when it would show up on the ultrasound.
Alabama is one of three states that would not allow it. The age of majority is 19 in Alabama. Until then you are the responsibility of your parents. They determine where you live and much of what you can do.
No, the age of majority in Arkansas is 18. Until then the parents determine where a child lives.
No it would not.
No, the age of majority in California is 18. Until then the parents determine where a child lives.
No, the age of majority in Arizona is 18. Until then the parents determine where a child lives.
No, she is not an adult at 16. The court has declared the grandparents are the legal guardians. They determine where she lives and when she can move out.
The child's Nationality would be that of his or her parents, the status of the child's citizenship might be determined by which country held jurisdiction over the waters the ship was in when the child was born.
Yes. They would use his past income information to determine what he should have been paying for child support. That would then be added to his arrears.
That depends on the custody order in place and the circumstances surrounding your case. There is no "carved in stone" distance, only that any proposed move be filed with an approved by the court, ideally with the other parent's permission. If that cannot be secured, it will be up to the judge to determine whether or not the move would be in the best interests of the child.