At only 14, you are not legally allowed to decide where and whom you live with. Some states will allow you to file for emancipation as early as 15. Your parents are your legal gaurdians, you must abide by their terms and live with them until it is legal. Every teenager goes through rough stages where they don't get along with their parents. If there is abuse, report it. If it is just that you don't get along, you will grow out of that.
The owner of the house can kick anyone out unless they pay rent but your mother can not kick her minor child out. That is illegal. So this would be on her shoulders, not his.
She lived with her mother and (occasionally her father was there) in her grandparents house.
Her grandparents house was in Atchison, Kansas.
I don't know where you live but where I live there is no such thing as grandparents rights.
My grandparents' house was burglarized.I inherited my grandparents' 1946 car.Children need their grandparents' attention.A child's grandparents' wisdom and guidance are often useful.
Yes, you would use an apostrophe after "s" to indicate possession when referring to the house belonging to two grandparents. It would be written as "grandparents' house."
Nuclear family is father mother and children.Extended family is father mother children plus some other relatives like grandparent(s) or aunt or uncle
To get your uncle out of your grandparents' house, find him another place to stay, one that he can afford and will comfortable living in.
Please help me as soon as possible . Thanks
Cannot answer completely without knowing the state iof residence. As a GENERAL RULE - a minor cannot unilaterally decide which parent to live with if their custody has been awarded by the court.
at home, at a hotel, your grandparents house, in the car, etc.
He did'nt like his stepfather.