The other parent has to be willing to take them as well. The child does not ever have the power to make this choice on their own. As with any situation, the parties have to agree. It is not always possible for the other parent to take a child back into their home, especially when a custody battle was fought and won based on false allegations of abuse against the non-custodial parent.
Not on taxes no. The parent the child lives with has the main right to claim the child. But if that parent can't or doesn't want to then the other parent can
If that is what the parent wants, they can do so. The parent can decide where the minor lives.
It depends on the child's age and where he or she lives.
A divorce with the custody of a child involved can get very tricky when one parent lives abroad. It is almost impossible to force the absent parent to pay child support, and if the parent takes the child to some countries it may be impossible for the US parent to get the child back,
of course
The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.The child lives with you and you are entitled to child support from the non-custodial parent.
Domiciliary custody refers to the parent who has physical custody. It's the parent with whom the child lives.Domiciliary custody refers to the parent who has physical custody. It's the parent with whom the child lives.Domiciliary custody refers to the parent who has physical custody. It's the parent with whom the child lives.Domiciliary custody refers to the parent who has physical custody. It's the parent with whom the child lives.
The State where the child lives.
In Australia there is no certain age that a child can decide which parent they live with. The judge will take age and maturity into consideration when making a decision, but the main factor that the judge will look at is which environment would be better for the child.
Yes, it does not matter where the child lives, you still have to pay it. The child does not stop being yours just because he/she lives in another state.
The parent who is considered the custodial parent.
Primary residential