Age 18, I'm in KCMO
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Not necessarily. Sometimes a parent's bad behavior is a perfect example of what not to do. Sometimes, a child will inherit the morals instilled in them by one or the other parent. No one can state with any degree of certainty which parent a child will emulate or even if a child will grow up to emulate either parent.
Unless otherwise designated, yes. These kind of petty arguments are common.
If that is what the orders say, or you have moved the child to another state without modifying the orders. In that case, you must provide the child at the previous address on the regular access schedule, for the other parent to pick up.
If the guardian parent gives permission any one can watch the child for a time.
contact the court
Yes, custody days are meant to nourish the child/parent bond, not some legal agreement that must be kept. If the parent can not or will not pick up the child then there is nothing legally wrong with it. It becomes an inconvience to pack up the child and everything for nothing, but it is not illegal in any form.
You do not have the legal authority to make that decision on your own. You may find yourself in legal trouble if the other parent takes the matter to court. If the child's father has court ordered supervised visitation that means your child is under the jurisdiction of a state family court. You should seek legal advice before you pick up and move the child out of state. All states have reciprocal agreements to honor orders rendered by other state courts when they affect children. In the normal course of one parent wanting to move the child out of state that parent would need court approval and consent by the other parent.You do not have the legal authority to make that decision on your own. You may find yourself in legal trouble if the other parent takes the matter to court. If the child's father has court ordered supervised visitation that means your child is under the jurisdiction of a state family court. You should seek legal advice before you pick up and move the child out of state. All states have reciprocal agreements to honor orders rendered by other state courts when they affect children. In the normal course of one parent wanting to move the child out of state that parent would need court approval and consent by the other parent.You do not have the legal authority to make that decision on your own. You may find yourself in legal trouble if the other parent takes the matter to court. If the child's father has court ordered supervised visitation that means your child is under the jurisdiction of a state family court. You should seek legal advice before you pick up and move the child out of state. All states have reciprocal agreements to honor orders rendered by other state courts when they affect children. In the normal course of one parent wanting to move the child out of state that parent would need court approval and consent by the other parent.You do not have the legal authority to make that decision on your own. You may find yourself in legal trouble if the other parent takes the matter to court. If the child's father has court ordered supervised visitation that means your child is under the jurisdiction of a state family court. You should seek legal advice before you pick up and move the child out of state. All states have reciprocal agreements to honor orders rendered by other state courts when they affect children. In the normal course of one parent wanting to move the child out of state that parent would need court approval and consent by the other parent.
If the parent is busy with something else the child can call a friend or relatives to come and pick them up. the child can also call and older sister or brother, older cousin's, uncles or aunt, grandparent's, or friends that are older then then.
The answer can vary depending on the state. If it is a non custodial day, but the parent that had custody that asked them to, and they are on the daycare's pick up list, it should be fine. If the parent that had custody that day did not give prior permission, or make the request of the step parent, it could potentially be interfering with child custody. The rules of child custody can vary a lot, not only per state, but also per case. A lot can come down to who your judge is. Your best bet is to contact your family attorney, and fill him or her in on everything that happened.
A parent always needs to be at the family fitness center with the child. However, if the child is in a class, the parent can leave and come back to pick up their child afterwards.
Many times, a child can pick which parent they want to live with around the age of 14. It will depend upon both parents and if the judge doesn't think they should move.