Unless you have sole custody and the other parent has no visitation rights, you need their consent and court approval. If you move without court approval you will be in contempt of the court order regarding visitation.
Unless you have sole custody and the other parent has no visitation rights, you need their consent and court approval. If you move without court approval you will be in contempt of the court order regarding visitation.
Unless you have sole custody and the other parent has no visitation rights, you need their consent and court approval. If you move without court approval you will be in contempt of the court order regarding visitation.
Unless you have sole custody and the other parent has no visitation rights, you need their consent and court approval. If you move without court approval you will be in contempt of the court order regarding visitation.
Unless you have sole custody and the other parent has no visitation rights, you need their consent and court approval. If you move without court approval you will be in contempt of the court order regarding visitation.
The state the child is in.
Not if there's court orders for visitation or custody. He/she would need yours and the courts consent.
No, you cannot move a child out of state if you have joint custody.
Most states lean toward Joint Legal Custody with primary residential custody
That depends on which state retains jurisdiction.
YES, IF SHE HAS SOLE CUSTODY OF THE CHILD AND THERE WAS NO AGREEMENT TO STAY IN THAT STATE. OR IF NEITHER PARENT HAS LEGAL CUSTODY EITHER PARENT COULD DO THAT
What is the intent and does it involve married or single parents?
no, but the father could file for custody see links below
The guidelines are basically the same in every state but obviously there are a few minor differences. Joint custody consists of Primary Custody & Secondary Custody. The parent with primary custody is who the child lives with & the other parent has secondary custody. Depending on the age of the child & the state in which they reside, the court may let them determine where they choose to live. Or if both parents agree on the child's decision then the child can live with either parent.
It's complicated, get a lawyer, it is worth the $$$ if you love your kids.
No. When a minor has been remanded to the custody of the state only the court can assign legal guardianship or take action against the rights of the biological parent(s).
That depends on the state(s) you are in, and the custody settlement.