The adult with whom the minor resides must petition the court for guardianship of the child. A parent cannot legally "give" their child to a neighbor nor the neighbor legally take the child, an exception might be due an emergency or for a matter of a few days with the parent's consent. The person seeking guardianship can also request child support, medical coverage and so forth. It will be up to the judge to decide if guardianship should be granted, if the child must remain in the home, or if the child is to be remanded into state custody.
You can re-file in Family Court to amend the Full Custody and Support Order.
For 1) are you in custody of your daughter? If you are in full custody you could take her to court for kidnapping is your EX mother in law in custody of your daughter? Do you have joint custody? If your ex mother in law has no custody over your daughter you could take her to court, she is not authorized to take care of your child.
Yes, provided there's no child support order in place.
If she's paid child support and depending on circumstances.
Not if you make arrangements with the court on repayment.
Well, generally, that's the rule of thumb in custody changes.
Assuming Mom has custody, then she would have to agree to let daughter move in with you OR you would have to petition the court for a change of custody.
The parent with physical custody receives child support from the other parent.The parent with physical custody receives child support from the other parent.The parent with physical custody receives child support from the other parent.The parent with physical custody receives child support from the other parent.
Contact child support enforcement, but they may require a court order. File motion to change custody and modify child support. see link for help.
No. Custody means the child lives with you. Support means you are paying the parent who has custody.
Determining child support has only one goal which is to determine medical, financial and daycare support. Custody is NOT determined when child support is established. To establish child support you have to go to court. Otherwise if the mother was unwed and paternity/custody is not established she automatically has sole custody which entitles you to pay her child support but you are not entitled to visitation, school/dr records etc unless she gives them to you... If custody is not established then the mother has custody
Yes, unless the court order explicitly states otherwise.