A 16 year old is not an adult, regardless of how many children she has.
Guardians have been appointed? Sounds like the court has taken away parental rights.
No as that would be considered child abandonment.
That depends on the legal guardians or adoptive parents who may not want you to complicate their life. Once you "sign off" your parental rights you have no rights regarding the children. TheThat depends on the legal guardians or adoptive parents who may not want you to complicate their life. Once you "sign off" your parental rights you have no rights regarding the children. TheThat depends on the legal guardians or adoptive parents who may not want you to complicate their life. Once you "sign off" your parental rights you have no rights regarding the children. TheThat depends on the legal guardians or adoptive parents who may not want you to complicate their life. Once you "sign off" your parental rights you have no rights regarding the children. The
In the US, parents have no rights over an adult child unless that adult child has been declared mentally incompetent by the court and the parents were appointed guardians as a result of that.
The right of any other US citizen. If you are not legally emancipated by the courts you are considered to be under the authority of your parents or guardians.
Their rights start where the parents' rights begin. If the parents are actively parenting, the child is thriving and nothing illegal is going on, then the grandparents are honor bound to support, not supplant, the parents. If the parents are out of the picture, the grandparents can certainly apply to become guardians of the child.
In Georgia, an 18-year-old is considered an adult and is no longer considered a minor. As a result, parents may have limited legal rights over decisions made by an 18-year-old child living at home. However, parents may still have a say in house rules and expectations as long as the child is living under their roof.
Minors have legal rights such as education, protection from abuse, and access to healthcare. They also have responsibilities to follow laws, attend school, and obey their parents or guardians.
A teen parent living at home with their parents has the right and responsibility to raise their child and not leave it up to the grandparents to do it.
If both parents have legal guardianship (rights) to be with the child, either parent can claim the cellular.
No. The child has to file for emancipation (divorce her parents), or her parents would have to sign off parental rights and / or make the new parents legal guardians.
The first step to dissolving parental rights is to petition the court. The petition needs to include the child's age, legal name, domicile and the names and domicile of living parents, guardians, custodians, and the people who are standing in for the parents. The reason why the parent is taking this step needs to be included as well. After all needed data has been included, the document is signed and delivered to the court for consideration.
An individual living in their parents' house has the right to be treated with respect and dignity, to have a safe and secure living environment, and to have their basic needs met. They also have the right to privacy and autonomy within reasonable limits set by their parents.