That is dependent of custody orders, but even without, the other parent could file an injunction.
if you have medicare,retired but spouse works.spouse ins is primary and medicare secondary. if you are a child both parents has anthem,birthday rule has to apply. the parent who is born first is primary and the parent who is born later is secondary does not matter if parents are married or not
No, not without a court order.No, not without a court order.No, not without a court order.No, not without a court order.
It goes off the month in which the parent was born! Who ever was born 1st is primary. It does not go off the age!
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 would be the biological parent, in this case, the father
Not without the permission of the primary residential parent. see links
Yes most definately! It does not matter who has "primary placement". It is based on which parents birthdate comes first in the year. If you were born Jan 3rd and the other parent was born April 18th, your ins would be the primary. That is a national general rule.
No, a child cannot have two primary insurance policies. Typically, one policy will be considered primary, and the other will be secondary. The primary insurance is responsible for covering expenses first, while the secondary insurance may cover additional costs not paid by the primary policy, subject to coordination of benefits rules. It's important to check with both insurance companies to determine which is primary based on factors like the child's age and the parent's policy details.
Standard coordination of benefits goes in the following order for an active employee, not a retiree: Employee: Policy in which you are the subscriber is the primary. If you are the policyholder on more than one policy, whichever policy has been in effect the longest is primary. Dependent children: For natural parents still married, or without court order, coordination of benefits follows birthday rule. The parent who's birthday falls first within the year (goes by month, not year) is primary. For parents with court order, the parent named is primary. For parents divorced/separated with spouses and no court order, custodial natural parent is primary, then spouse of custodial parent, then non-custodial parent, then spouse of non-custodial parent. If dependent children are also covered by the state, state health policies always are last in line to pay benefits. For retirees (65+) still on employer policies and covered by Medicare, Medicare is primary and employer policies are secondary.
If a single father with no court orders, than none. see link
With joint legal, one is still primary and thus has the authority to do so, but not without first discussing it with the other parent.
The parent you primarily reside with. The parent with physical custody.